From http://www.dnaindia.com/money/interview_an-interview-with-the-mysterious-reclusive-fofoa_1709250
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Halfway through the interview, I ask him where does he see the price of gold reaching in the days to come. “Well, I don’t see gold’s trajectory being typical of what you’d expect to see in a bull market… And I expect that physical gold will be repriced somewhere around $55,000 per ounce in today’s purchasing power. I have to add that purchasing power part because it will likely be concurrent with currency devaluation,” he replies.
Meet Fofoa, an anonymous blogger whose writings on fofoa.blogspot.com, have taken the world by storm over the last few years. In a rare interview – one of his preconditions was he’ll not be photographed — he talks about paper money, the fall of the dollar, the coming hyperinflation and the rise of ‘physical’ gold.
The
world is printing a lot of paper money to solve the economic
problems. But that doesn’t seem to be happening. What are your
views?
Paper
money being printed to solve the problems… this was *always*
on the cards.It doesn’t surprise me, nor does it anger me,
because I understand that it was always to be expected. The monetary
and financial system we’ve been living with—immersed in
like fish in water—for the past 90 years uses
the obligations of counterparties as its foundation.
These obligations are noted on paper. In describing the specific
obligations these papers represent, we use well-known words like
dollars, euro, yen, rupees and yuan. But what do these purely
symbolic words really mean?What are these paper obligations really
worth in the physical world? Ultimately, after 90 years, we have
arrived at our
inevitable destination: the intractable problem of an unimaginably
intertwined, interconnected Gordian knot of purely symbolic
obligations.
A Gordian knot is like an unsolvable puzzle. It cannot be untangled.
The only solution comes from “thinking outside the box”.
You’ve got to cut the knot to untangle it. So, the endgame was
always going to be debasing these purely symbolic units. Anyone
who expected anything else simply fooled themselves
into believing the rules wouldn’t be changed.
Do
you see the paper money continuing in days to come?
Yes,
of course! Paper money, or today’s equivalent which is
electronic currency, is the most efficient primary medium of exchange
ever used in all of human history. To see this, you only need to
abandon the idea of accumulating these symbolic units for your future
financial security. They aren’t meant for that! They are great
for trading in the here-and-now, not for storing for the unknown
future. To paraphrase Silvio Gesell, an economist in favour of
symbolic currency almost a century ago, “All the physical
assets of the world are at the disposal of those who wish to save, so
why should they make their savings in the form of money? Money
was not made to be saved!”
In hindsight, this statement is true whether money is a hard
commodity like gold or silver, or a symbolic word like dollar, euro
or rupee.In both cases, saving in “money” leads to
monetary tension between the debtors and the savers.When money was a
hard commodity, this tension was sometimes even released through
bloodshed, like the French Revolution.So no, I don’t think
we’re swinging back to a hard currency this time.
Do
you see the world going back to the gold standard?
No,
of course not! ‘The gold standard’ means different things
depending on which period you are talking about. But in all cases, it
used gold to denominate credit, the economy’s primary medium of
exchange. Today, we have a really efficient and ultimately flexible
currency. Bank runs like the 1930s are a thing of the past. But
that’s not to say that gold will not play a central role in the
future.It will!The signs of it already happening are everywhere!Gold
is not going to replace our primary medium of exchange, which is
paper or electronic units with those names I mentioned above.
Instead, physical gold will replace paper obligations as the
reserves—or store of value—within the system. Physical
gold in unambiguous ownership has no counterparty. This is a much
more resilient foundation than the tangled web of obligations we have
today.
Can
you give an example?
If
you’d like to see this change in action, go to the ECB
(European Central Bank) website and look at the euro-system’s
balance sheet.On the asset side, gold is on line 1 and obligations
from counterparties are below it.Additionally, they adjust all their
assets to the market price every three months.I have a chart of these
MTM (marked to market) adjustments on my blog. Over the last decade,
you can see gold rising from around 30% of total reserves to over 60%
while paper obligations have fallen from 70% to less than 40%.I
expect this to continue until gold is more than 90% of the reserves
behind the euro.
Where
do you see all this money printing heading to? Will the world see
hyperinflation?
Yes,
this will end.I am pretty well known for predicting dollar
hyperinflation. As controversial
as that prediction is, I think it is a fairly certain and obvious
end. I don’t like to guess at the timing because there are so
many factors to consider and I’m no supercomputer, but ever
since I started following this stuff I’ve always said it
is overdue in the same way an earthquake can be overdue.
As for other currencies, I don’t know. Perhaps yes, for the UK
pound and the yen, but I don’t know about the rupee. The
important things to watch are the balance of trade and the
government’s control over the printing press.
If you’re running a trade deficit and your government can (and
will) print, then you are a candidate for hyperinflation.
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In
that context, what price do you see gold going to?
Well,
I don’t see gold’s trajectory being typical of what you’d
expect to see in a bull market.Instead, it will be a reset of sorts,
kind of like an overnight revaluation of a currency. I’m sure
some of your readers have experienced a bank holiday followed by a
devaluation. This will be similar. And I expect that gold will be
repriced somewhere around $55,000 per ounce in today’s
purchasing power. I have to add that purchasing power part because it
will likely be concurrent with currency devaluation.So, in rupee
terms, I guess that’s about Rs3.2 million (32 lakh) per ounce
at today’s exchange rate.
The
price of gold has been rather flat lately. What are the reasons for
the same? Where do you see the price of gold going over the next
couple of years?
“The
price of gold” is an interesting turn of phrase because I use
it often to express “all things goldish” in the gold
market.In today’s market, “gold” is very loosely
defined. What passes for “gold” in the financial market
is mostly the paper obligations of counterparties.These include
forward sales, futures contracts, swaps, options and unallocated
accounts.I often use the abbreviation “$PoG” to refer to
the going dollar price for this loose financial “gold”.
The LBMA (London Bullion Market Association) recently released a survey of the total daily trading volume of unallocated (paper) gold.That survey revealed a trading flow of such magnitude that it compares to every ounce of gold that has ever been mined in all of history changing hands in just three months, or about 250 times faster than gold miners are actually pulling metal out of the ground. Equally stunning were the net sales during the survey period. The rate at which the banking system created “paper gold” was 11 times faster than real gold was being mined.
What
is the point you are trying to make?
The
point is that gold is being used by the global money market as a hard
currency. But it is being treated by the marketplace as both a
commodity that gets consumed and also as a fiat currency that can be
credited [created?]
at
will. It is neither, and gold’s global traders are in for a
rude awakening when they find out that ounce-denominated
credits will not be exchangeable for a price anywhere near a physical
ounce of gold in extremis—ironically
failing at the very stage where they were expected to perform.
So,
what are you predicting?
But
don’t get me wrong.It is not a short squeeze that I am
predicting.In a short squeeze, the paper price runs up until it draws
out enough real supply to cover all of the paper. But this paper
will not be covered by physical gold in the end. It will be cash
settled, and it will be cash settled at a price much lower than the
price of a real ounce of gold, like a check written by an
overstretched counterparty.It is a tough job to make my case for the
future of the $PoG in just a few paragraphs. The $PoG will fall and
then some short time later we will find that the market has changed
out of necessity into a physical-only market at a much higher
price.If you were holding paper you will be sad.If you were holding
the real thing, you’ll be very happy.
Why
is the gold price so flat these days?
Today’s
surprisingly stabilised $PoG tells me that someone
is throwing money into the fire to delay the inevitable.
Where do I see the $PoG going over the next couple of years? Maybe
to $500 or less, but you won’t be able to get any physical at
that price. I
think that today’s price of $1,575 is still a fantastic bargain
for physical gold.
Franklin
Roosevelt had confiscated all the gold that Americans had in 1933. Do
you see something similar happening in days to come?
Not
at all!The purpose of the confiscation was to stop the bank run
epidemic at that time.There’s no need to do it again. The
dollar is no longer defined as a fixed weight of gold, so the reason
for the last confiscation—and subsequent devaluation—no
longer exists. Gold that’s still in the ground is a different
story, however. Gold mines will likely be considered strategically
important national assets after the revaluation, and will therefore
fall under tight government control.
The
irony
of the entire situation is that a currency like “dollar”
which is being printed big time has become the safe haven. How safe
do you think is the safe haven?
Indeed,
everyone seems to be piling into the dollar. Especially on the short
end of the curve, helping drive interest rates ridiculously low.The
dollar is as safe as a bomb shelter that’s rigged to blow up
once everyone is “safely” inside.You can go check it out
if you want to (sure, from the outside it might look like shelter),
but you don’t want to be in there when it blows up. You’ve
got to realise that it is both economically and politically
undesirable for any currency to appreciate against its peer
currencies due to its use as a safe haven.Remember the Swiss franc?As
soon as it started rising due to safe haven use, they started
printing it back down.The dollar is no different except that it’s
got a whole world full of paper obligations denominated in it.So when
it blows, the fireworks will be something to behold.
What
will change the confidence that people have in the dollar? Will there
be some catastrophic event?
That’s
the $55,000 question.It is impossible to predict the exact pin that
will pop the bubble in a world full of pins, but I have an idea that
it will be one of two things.I think the two most likely proximate
triggers to a catastrophic loss of confidence are a major failure in
the London gold market, or the US government’s response to an
unexpected budget crisis due to consumer price inflation. Most people
who expect a catastrophic loss of confidence in the dollar seem to
think it will begin in the financial markets like a stock market
crash or a Treasury auction failure or something like that.But I
think it is more likely to come from where, as I like to say, the
rubber meets the road.And here I’m talking about what connects
the monetary world to the physical world: prices. I think these
“worlds” are connected in two ways.The first is the
general price level of goods and services and the second is the price
of gold.If one of these two connections is broken by a failure to
deliver the real-world items at the financial-system prices, then we
suddenly have a real problem with the monetary side. So, I think it
will be a relatively quick and catastrophic event, but maybe not as
dramatic as a major stock market crash.It will be confusing to most
of the pundits as to what it really means, so it will take a little
while for reality to sink in
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The
Romans debased the denarius by almost 100% over a period of 500
years. The dollar, on the other hand, has lost more than 95% of its
purchasing power since the Federal Reserve of United States was
established in 1913, nearly 100 years back. Do you think the Federal
Reserve has been responsible for the dollar losing almost all of its
purchasing power in hundred years?
Yes,
inflation was a lot slower in Roman times because it entailed the
physical melting and reissuing
of coins of a certain face value with less metal content than
previous issues. This was a physical process so it occurred on a much
longer time scale.The dollar, on the other hand, has lost nearly 97%
of its purchasing power in roughly a 100 years. Do I think the
Federal Reserve is responsible for this? Well, given that the
lending/borrowing dynamics causes expansion of the money supply, I
think the
government and the people of the world share in the responsibility.
But just
because the dollar has lost 97% of its purchasing power doesn’t
mean that any individual lost that much.
How many people do you think are still holding onto dollars today
that they earned a 100 years ago? How long would you hold dollars
today? As long as the prices of things you want to buy don’t
change during the time you are holding the currency, what have you
lost? So, imagine that you simply use currency for earning, borrowing
and spending, but not for saving.Will it matter how much it falls
over a 100 years?Your earning and spending will happen within a month
or so, and prices won’t change much in a month. Also, your
borrowing will be made easier on you as your currency depreciates.And
your gold savings will rise.So, with the proper use of money, there
is no need for alarm if the currency is slowly falling at, say, 2% or
3% per year.
Do
you see America repaying all the debt that it has taken from the rest
of the world? Or will they just inflate it away by printing more and
more dollars?
The
debts that exist today can never be repaid in real terms. And as I
mentioned before, they are all denominated in symbolic words like
dollars, euro, yen, yuan and rupees. The
debt of the US Treasury, most of all, will of course be inflated
away.
What
does Fofoa stand for?
I
remain anonymous because my blog is not about me.It is a tribute to
“Another” and “Friend of Another” or “FOA”
who wrote about this subject from 1997 through 2001. So FOFOA could
stand for Friend of FOA or Follower of FOA or Fan of FOA.I never
really stated what it stands for, so you can decide for yourself!
Sincerely, Fofoa.
Interviewer Kaul is a writer and can be reached at vivek.kaul@gmail.com