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The end of the de
facto petrodollar standard has profound and lasting implications for the US
dollar, oil, and gold. The US is the epicenter of the global financial crisis
and economic downturn, but the US continues to exercise disproportionate
control of the oil trade and to enjoy the unique status of the US dollar as
the world reserve currency. The inflationary policies of the US government
and Federal Reserve have damaged the US dollar to the point that it is
increasingly seen as a destabilizing force in the world economy. To make
matters worse, it was principally the US that manufactured the financial
derivatives that still menace the global financial system (China has opted out). There is growing recognition that the US economy
is on an unsustainable course and this fact has fueled an international
movement towards a new world reserve currency.
China has emerged
as a major player in the currency chess game and in the gold market, and
China is the second largest consumer of oil. China is the largest US creditor
holding $797.1 billion in US Treasury debt and a net creditor nation with reserves equal to $2.273 trillion.
Nonetheless, China is leading the charge against the petrodollar standard and
the US dollar’s privileged status as the world reserve currency. China
is not merely seizing the opportunity presented to it by the global financial
crisis but is pursuing an ongoing economic strategy that includes a larger
domestic market for its own goods and services, greater influence over the
global economy, a stronger yuan, and a secure energy supply.
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“The good fighters of old first put
themselves beyond the possibility of defeat, and then waited for an
opportunity of defeating the enemy. To secure ourselves against defeat lies
in our own hands, but the opportunity of defeating the enemy is provided by
the enemy himself.” – Sun Tzu, The Art of War, circa
610 BCE
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Developing and
implementing a new world reserve currency is a nontrivial proposition and it
will take time. However, in practical terms, the key factor that stands in
opposition to a new reserve currency is the petrodollar standard. The
petrodollar standard allowed the US to print vast quantities of US dollars
without high domestic price increases because steady international demand
strengthened the US dollar, thus moderating prices in the US, e.g., the
prices of oil and of gold. The petrodollar standard, which can be undone in a
relatively short period of time, is the Achilles’ heel of the US dollar’s
world reserve currency status. What is more important, however, is that
ending the petrodollar standard will put massive upward pressure on prices in
the US: a fact that few have recognized.
While the US
monetary base has roughly doubled since the start of the financial crisis in
2008, the money created to recapitalize US banks remains in the banking
system and has yet to influence prices in the US (aside from the prices of
inflation hedges such as gold and silver, which are in high demand). The most
broad measure of the US money supply (M3), no longer officially measured, has
actually declined according to Berkeley, California-based Shadow Government Statistics. Thus, the most useful monetary inflation analysis is that of Paul
van Eeden, President of Cranberry Capital, Inc. Mr. van Eeden’s Actual Money Supply (AMS) model indicates a 12-month moving average of
8.44%.
Chart
courtesy of Paul van Eeden
The average
monetary inflation rate, estimated at approximately 8% per year over the past
38 years, compounded annually, shows that the US money supply increased by
roughly 1,863% since 1971. However, according to the US government, prices in
the US have increased only 533% since 1971, a 1,330% differential. The number
of US dollars exploded on a global basis to accommodate the growth in US
dollar transactions, i.e., international trade, especially oil, and currency
reserves.
China is the
second largest US trading partner and the primary source of the chronic US
trade deficit. As trading partners, the Chinese and US economies are linked
by the US dollar, but compete for oil, currently priced in and purchased with
US dollars. China needs more oil and wants to buy it with Chinese yuan. By
buying gold and encouraging gold ownership, the Chinese government is betting
against the US dollar and positioning the yuan to become a universally
accepted transaction medium. China is quietly diversifying out of US dollars,
buying resources and hard assets. Ending the petrodollar standard will allow
China to buy oil in yuan and make the yuan a more viable currency
internationally while, at the same time, clearing the way to take on a larger
role in the global economy.
With currencies
being debased throughout the western world in the hope of saving banks,
stimulating economic activity and restoring trade. Until the US reverses
course, or until a new reserve currency is in place, gold will continue to
shine. Gold investment and central bank demand will likely remain strong
because gold can function as a commodity, as a currency and also, unlike the
US dollar, as a store of value immune from the hazards of currency
devaluation caused by monetary inflation. As the only financial asset without
counterparty risk, the historical reasons for holding gold, all but forgotten
during the 1990s, have never been more clear.
The end of the
petrodollar standard and eventually of the US dollar’s world reserve
currency status combined with increased demand for oil and gold, particularly
on the part of China, is a fundamental restructuring of the global economy
already in progress.
US Dollars, Asian Tigers
While commodity
prices, measured in US dollars appear to be rising, one of the fundamental
forces behind the upward trend is the decline of the US dollar. Commodity
prices are not rising as much in real terms as is suggested by their nominal
prices because the US dollar is declining in value. As the US dollar falls,
the prices of commodities, measured in US dollars, rise.
The perfect storm
for the US dollar comprises the consequences of past decades of monetary
inflation punctuated by the dot-com and housing bubbles; excessive levels of
debt in the US economy (hampering a US economic recovery); the poor condition
of US banks whose balance sheets, still burdened with toxic assets, continue
to deteriorate; an expanding Federal Reserve balance sheet that includes
toxic assets; extraordinary spending by the US federal government driven by
Keynesian economic policies and by what are most probably economically
unworkable socialist programs; rapidly declining foreign appetite for US
debt; quantitative easing (“money printing”); near 0% interest
rates and a growing US dollar carry trade; not to mention the imminent end of
the petrodollar standard, and the eventual end of the US dollar’s
status as the world reserve currency. At the start of the global financial
crisis and economic downturn, the US dollar rallied in a global flight to the
then perceived safety of US dollars and US Treasury bonds. However, pressures
on the US dollar have mounted and it has begun a precipitous decline.
Chart
courtesy of StockCharts.com
What is important
about the US Dollar Index (USDX) is that other currencies in the basket (the
Euro, the Japanese yen, the British Pound, the Canadian dollar, the Swedish
krona, and the Swiss franc) are also loosing value as a result of
inflationary central bank and government policies, but not as quickly as the
US dollar.
The USDX was
created in 1973, two years after the US dismantled the Bretton Woods system
(where the value of the US dollar had been pegged to the price of gold and
other currencies were pegged to the US dollar) and one year after former US
President Richard Nixon opened relations between the US and China. Today, the
sleeping giant, noted by Napoleon, is wide awake, and Asian currencies are rising against the US dollar. China is issuing yuan denominated
bonds and growing Asian demand for
key commodities, particularly oil, can be expected to maintain upward
pressure on prices measured in US dollars.
The economic
might of the four Asian Tigers (Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and
Taiwan) would have been inconceivable when the USDX was created. Today, the
Group of Twenty (G-20) Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors includes
representatives from China, India, Japan, South Korea, and Indonesia, and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) includes the so-called BRIC countries
(Brazil, the Russian Federation, India, and China) in addition to Japan and
oil producers Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. Whether the USDX remains today an
accurate or meaningful measure of US economic power from a global perspective
is unlikely. In any case, US and European economies and banks are currently
in quite poor condition compared to those of Asia; a fact that does not
support rising currency values for western countries.
China’s
population of 1.333 billion, compared to roughly 308 million in the US,
represents the largest emerging market in the world, and China’s
already substantial consumption of resources is growing rapidly. With a
population 4.3 times larger than that of the US, Chinese consumption need
reach only 23% of that of the US, on a per capita basis, to equal total US
consumption. Conversely, if the Chinese were to consume half as much as
Americans on a per capita basis, total Chinese consumption would be more than
twice that of the US. Changes in the behavior of Chinese consumers already
have the potential to create disruptive shifts in commodity markets on a
global basis, and China’s rising influence is only just beginning to be
felt, e.g., in the gold market.
The S&P
Goldman Sachs Commodity Index (GSCI), which contains 24 commodities
(including energy, industrial and precious metals, agriculture, and
livestock), is designed to minimize the impact of events that affect
individual commodities and to respond in a stable way to world economic
growth.
Chart
courtesy of StockCharts.com
Interestingly,
from a technical perspective, the GSCI chart exhibits a clear inverse head
and shoulders pattern followed by a breakout to the upside. Spurred by the
financial crisis, China began putting its massive reserves to work in wide
ranging global investments, systematically trading its US dollars for
resources and other hard
assets.
China’s Seven Dragons
The five dragons
of the ancient Chinese zodiac (fire, earth, metal, water, and wood) are
suggestive of China’s tremendous natural resources, which include coal,
iron ore, oil, natural gas, mercury, tin, tungsten, antimony, manganese,
molybdenum, vanadium, magnetite, aluminum, lead, zinc, uranium, as well as
the world's largest hydropower potential.
Chart
courtesy of Mint
Software, Inc.
Together, Asian
countries account for 60% of the earth’s human population and control
major portions of world resources such as corn, cotton, gold, rice, rubber,
silver, water, and wheat to name only a few.
If the Chinese
calendar had been invented more recently it might include more specific
varieties of each animal, such as a gold dragon in the metal category and an
oil dragon in the earth category, thus there would be seven celestial dragons
rather than five.
The Oil Dragon
Total Asian
demand for oil, lead by China’s 7,880,000 bbl/day, exceeds US
consumption. In fact, the consumption of just China, Japan, and the four
Asian Tigers is greater than that of the entire EU. Taken as a whole, Asian
demand for oil is more significant for the price of oil than the US or the
EU. The price of oil in 2009 has risen as Asian economies began to recover,
despite lower US consumption. Rising Chinese demand for oil is now a fixed
feature in the otherwise changing global economic landscape. A weaker US
dollar and a stronger Chinese yuan serve to guarantee that China will have the
oil it needs.
Although not as
hard hit by higher oil prices as less developed countries (which could be priced out of the market entirely) would be, the US economy could be
crippled by high oil prices. As shown by the West Texas Intermediate Crude
Oil index (WTIC), the price of oil is rising sharply.
Chart
courtesy of StockCharts.com
Both the US and
China import roughly twice as much crude oil as they produce. With a weaker dollar, US oil
imports, currently roughly $400 billion annually, will represent a larger
external drain on the US economy, which could prove to be disruptive. The
reactionary US strategy is to increase domestic oil production and to develop
alternative energy sources in order to reduce dependency on foreign oil.
Unfortunately, US oil production cannot increase quickly enough or to high
enough levels to ameliorate the impact of much higher oil prices. Presently,
there is no alternative energy technology that can supply enough energy at a
low enough cost to have a significant impact on US oil consumption in the
near term. An anemic US economy combined with a weaker currency means that
the US is ill equipped to absorb inevitably, much higher oil prices.
The Gold Dragon
Oil is the most
important factor of the US dollar’s value for two reasons. Since the
founding of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in the
1960s (currently Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya,
Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Venezuela), oil has
been priced in and sold in US dollars worldwide. Since the Bretton Woods
system ended, the effect of the OPEC cartel’s price fixing actions has
been to establish an implicit commodity-based value for the US dollar. In
other words, after the Bretton Woods system, the value and the world reserve
currency status of the US dollar was implicitly supported by oil rather than
gold. Any nation accepting US dollars in trade knew what the value of US
dollars was measured in oil.
Once oil is no
longer priced in US dollars, the US dollar, in practical terms, will no
longer be the world reserve currency, i.e., US dollar transactions will
decline sharply on a global basis. This conclusion has already been
recognized by central banks. In the second quarter of 2009, US dollars
accounted for only 37% of new central bank assets, compared with 70% in the past. Rather than US
dollars, central banks favor Euros, Yen, and gold. Central banks have also become net
buyers of gold or are repatriating gold reserves.
Following the
replacement by Iran (the third largest oil producer) of the US dollar with Euros for foreign trade in September, 2009, rumors of secret talks between Arab states, China, Russia, Japan and
France, allegedly regarding replacing the US dollar with a basket of
currencies including the euro, Japanese yen, Chinese yuan, and gold. Talks
between Russia and Iran regarding conducting oil transaction in rubles were officially acknowledged a few days later by Russian Information Agency
Novosti (RIA Novosti). Neither development is at all surprising because world
leaders have been calling for the replacement of the US dollar as the world
reserve currency since 2008. It’s safe to say that all of the BRIC
nations, especially China and Russia (the world’s 8th largest oil
producer), oppose the petrodollar standard and are in favor of a new reserve
currency (Brazil’s largest trading partner, formerly the US, is now
China).
It seems
unrealistic to imagine that currencies tied to growing economies with higher
production and lower levels of debt would not be preferred over those of
stagnated economies. If political strength follows economic strength, the
petrodollar standard will soon take its place in history alongside the
defunct Bretton Woods system.
Setting aside all
other considerations, the price of gold would be $815 per ounce today based
only on US dollar monetary inflation using Paul van Eeden’s AMS model,
i.e., 30% below the spot price (approximately $1,060 US at the time of this
writing). Mr. van Eeden has accounted for the increase in gold over time.
Chart
courtesy of StockCharts.com
It is worth
noting that the price of gold, when adjusted for inflation, is nowhere near its
1980 peak. The current situation is fundamentally different from the brief
but acute 1980 gold price bubble. John Williams of Shadow Government Statistics maintains that the US government has understated inflation and
recently said that “If the methodologies of measuring inflation in 1980
had been kept intact, gold [adjusted for inflation] would have to hit $7,150 to be the equivalent of the
1980 record,”
According to data
from the World Gold Council (WGC) and metals consultancy GFMS, demand for gold
is currently greater than the supply by as much as 1000 tons per year. The
WGC and GFMS have correctly identified two distinct economic spheres
comprising gold supply and demand. In the western economies, jewelry and
industrial demand are weak, but investment demand is strong, while outside
the western economies broad gold demand continues to grow. India remains the
largest buyer, while gold demand in China is rising. China has been
aggressively adding gold to its reserves and has not only made it legal for Chinese citizens
to own gold but is encouraging gold ownership. The potential influence of
increased, long-term Chinese demand on the price of gold cannot be ignored.
Monetary
inflation and supply and demand considerations are not the whole picture.
There is a much deeper reality. For nearly four decades, gold, priced in US
dollars, was implicitly linked to oil and the resulting demand for US dollars
moderated the affects of monetary inflation on prices in the US. The end of
the petrodollar standard and the resulting global decline in demand for US
dollars will cause the price of gold to rise significantly. The value of the
US dollar changed qualitatively after 1971 when it became an
irredeemable pure fiat currency, no longer backed by gold; a fact that has
been masked by the petrodollar standard.
Higher demand for
gold also reflects a growing recognition that the US dollar and other
currencies currently being devalued are not reliable stores of value. In
fact, the US dollar has not been a store of value at all for 38 years during
which massive quantities of fiat money, including trillions of petrodollars,
flooded the global economy. The weakness of the US dollar exposed by the
financial crisis, i.e., its inability to function as a reliable store of
value regardless of its utility as a transactional medium, points exactly to
the strength of gold. The decline in international demand for US dollars,
rejected as a failed store of value, indicates strong demand for gold in the
foreseeable future.
18th-century
French philosopher and writer Voltaire once said that “paper money
eventually returns to its intrinsic value - zero”. Understandably,
Voltaire failed to consider a world where all money was purely transactional
rather than a store of value, and where the relative values of currencies
were managed in a loosely coordinated manner by central banks and governments
through manipulation of the money supply, interest rates, etc. In theory,
such a world could function indefinitely provided that currencies were
relatively stable; provided that currencies were widely accepted and
interchangeable; provided that large trade imbalances did not destabilize the
system; and provided that currencies were not debased excessively, i.e., in a
reckless or irresponsible manner, which would lead to a variety of economic
problems. However, Voltaire’s inability to imagine such a world may be
insufficient cause to dismiss his observation.
It seems possible
that Voltaire’s superficially antiquated understanding was precisely
that “paper money” can never function in the long run as a store
of value, i.e., that it will inevitably, either by accident or by design, be
mismanaged, and that it will always, eventually, be rejected, thus rendering
its intrinsic value clear. History certainly supports Voltaire’s view
in that fiat currencies tend to perish. As recently as 1999, referring to the
sale of British gold reserves, Alan Greenspan, then Chairman of the US
Federal Reserve, said that “Fiat money paper in extremis is accepted by
nobody. Gold is always accepted.” As the Chinese discovered in the 11th
century, money has a qualitative dimension and for “paper money”
that dimension is confidence. In contrast, because it is a tangible
asset that required an investment of human labor and other resources to
produce, the value of gold does not ultimately, in extremis, depend solely on
the unreliable subjective feeling of confidence.
Xiangqi (Chinese Chess)
There is
increasing international recognition of the fact that there is no foreseeable
end point to the devaluation of the US dollar. The inflationary policies of
the US federal government and Federal Reserve have all but exhausted
confidence in the US dollar both at home and abroad, above all as the world
reserve currency. This entirely rational loss of confidence is the root cause
of expanding multinational efforts to end the petrodollar standard and to
eventually establish a new world reserve currency.
A reversal of the
escalating challenge to the petrodollar standard and the movement away from
the US dollar as the world reserve currency would require oil producers and
industrialized nations, including China, to rally in support of the US, but
it is precisely this group (a group that includes OPEC members, the BRIC
countries, members of the G-20, and voting members of the IMF), that is
seeking to free itself from US dollar hegemony. Rather than attributing the
petrodollar standard and the status of the US dollar as the world reserve
currency to the wealth, power and influence of the US, critics assert that
the wealth, power and influence of the US is illegitimate and that it is the
result of undeserved privileges; privileges that have been abused at the
expense of nations that do not enjoy unfair advantages and that must now be
forfeited.
Skeptics
regarding the rise of China as a major economic power doubt that China can
profit from a weaker US dollar through a stronger yuan or develop a
sufficient domestic consumer market quickly enough to offset reduced exports.
However, while China contributes to US consumption as an export-dependent
supplier, as well as a financier, their exposure to losses resulting from a
declining US dollar is limited. A stronger yuan would mean that, after a
period of adjustment, China would import more goods and services and that, in
real terms, wages of Chinese workers would increase, thus supporting a higher
standard of living. What is more important is that a stronger yuan,
implicitly backed by growing gold reserves (not to mention by a large and fully modern navy), is exactly what will guarantee China’s oil
supply.
The struggling US
economy, burdened with excessive levels of debt, cannot support a sustained
rise of the US dollar against the currencies of growing economies in Asia.
Growing demand for resources, especially oil, as well as gold, contrasted
with the inflationary policies of the US, will maintain the upward trajectory
of commodity prices measured in US dollars indefinitely. In the near term,
the end of the petrodollar standard will cause a sharp decline in the value
of the US dollar and a marked increase in the prices of oil and of gold
measured in US dollars.
Ron Hera
Hera Research
Visit his website
Send him mail
Also
by Ron Hera
Ron Hera is the founder of Hera Research, LLC, and the principal author of the Hera Research Monthly
newsletter. Hera Research provides deeply researched analysis to help
investors profit from changing economic and market conditions
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About Hera Research
Hera Research, LLC, provides deeply researched
analysis to help investors profit from changing economic and market
conditions. Hera Research focuses on relationships between macroeconomics,
government, banking, and financial markets in order to identify and analyze
investment opportunities with extraordinary upside potential. Hera Research
is currently researching mining and metals including precious metals, oil and
energy including green energy, agriculture, and other natural resources. The Hera Research Monthly newsletter
covers key economic data, trends and analysis including reviews of companies
with extraordinary value and upside potential.
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