By Kirk Shinkle
Economic punditry tends to fall broadly into glass-half-full or
half-empty categories. Then there are those who see a cracked glass,
teetering on the edge of a table just moments from a shattering fall.
Enter Peter Schiff, the permabear president of brokerage Euro Pacific
Capital and coauthor of last year's Crash Proof: How to Profit From the
Coming Economic Collapse. Schiff spent the past decade urging brokerage
clients to jump ship from the American economy ahead of what he views
as inevitable pain caused by a toxic cocktail of lax monetary policy,
wayward spending, and tougher competition from all corners of the globe.
Even with some pain already felt as America's economy stumbles, Schiff
saw nothing but downside in a recent chat with U.S. News. You'll want
to buckle up for some characteristically apocalyptic talk from one of
the gloomiest market watchers around. Excerpts:
Say something positive about the U.S. economy.
There's nothing good to say about our situation. The policies both the
Fed and government are pursuing are making the situation worse. We've
been getting a free ride on the global gravy train. Other countries are
starting to reclaim their resources and goods, so as Americans are
priced out of various markets, the rest of the world is going to enjoy
the consumption of goods Americans had previously purchased. This is a
natural consequence of this phony economy. If America had maintained a
viable economy and continued to produce goods instead of merely
consuming them, and if we had saved money instead of borrowing, our
standard of living could rise with everybody else's. Instead, we gutted
our manufacturing, let our infrastructure decay, and encouraged our
citizens to borrow with reckless abandon.
So what are you doing about it?
I'm getting my clients' money outside of the United States as fast as
they can send it to me. I've been recommending that to my clients for
close to 10 years. You've got to own resources and energy. I was saying
oil was going to $200 a barrel in 2002. I've been buying gold, silver,
industrial metals, and all kinds of stocks. My main theme is the global
economy will survive and the U.S. economy is a disaster. Everything is
about how you benefit from the increased purchasing power and rising
standard of living in the rest of the world.
OK, where are the best non-U.S. markets this year?
I still like Singapore, Hong Kong. Asian markets are the place to be. I
like resource markets like Scandinavia. I'm spreading my chips around
the world. I'm just avoiding the United States.
What are your best or worst calls through this downturn?
I've been bearish on bonds. U.S. bonds have lost a lot of real value
but not nominal value. I still think that's going to be proven to be
correct. While the housing bubble was inflating, I was telling people
to rent. I was telling people to get out of tech stocks in 1998 and
1999. They kept rising, but then they collapsed, and I turned out to be
right. The reality is I don't think I've been wrong on anything.
Most people disagree with that sort of pessimism. If you're staying in
the United States, how do you invest?
If you want to be in U.S markets, you avoid anything connected with the
American economy. You avoid retailers, the home builders, the
financials-anything having to do with consumers buying something or
paying back the money they borrowed. If you want to invest in U.S.
markets, stick with exporters and resource companies. I've been saying
that for five or six years; I haven't gotten anything wrong. We shorted
subprime mortgages. I have clients that made 10 times their money.
We've never sold an oil stock. We've never sold a gold stock.
Why don't you think soaring oil, grains, or commodities prices are the
next bubble?
These prices do not constitute bubbles. They simply constitute the
repricing of goods to reflect the diminished value of our money. The
way you can tell there's not a bubble is that these markets are
clearing. People are buying food and eating it. They're buying gasoline
and using it. Speculators aren't buying gasoline and warehousing it in
big facilities because they think the price is going to go up. At the
same time, we've increased the supply of money dramatically, and the
Fed is increasing it even faster now to deal with the bursting of the
housing bubble. The only thing that can happen is for prices of
commodities to rise to reflect the equilibrium of a greater supply of
money. It's not even that oil prices are going up. Oil prices are
staying the same. What's happening is the value of money is
diminishing, so we need more units of currency to buy the same amount
of oil or wheat or corn or whatever.
How about some predictions?
• I think the stock market is headed lower. Gold is going to be $1,200
to $1,500 by the end of the year. That puts the Dow at a
less-than-10-to-1 price ratio to gold. Right now, it's about 13 to 1.
That's another 30 percent drop in the real value of stocks by the end
of the year if you price them in gold. The Dow was worth 43 ounces of
gold in 2000. It'll get to 10 by the end of the year and continue to
fall from there.
• Oil prices had a pretty big run and might not make more headway by
the end of the year. But we could see $150 to $200 next year. I don't
think oil will hit $250 because there will be enough destruction of
demand in the United States to keep it from doubling. The big problem
for us is if the Chinese substantially allow their currency to rise. It
could increase at least fivefold against the dollar over the span of a
year or two. That reduces the price of oil by 80 percent for 1.3
billion Chinese. Consumption would go through the roof, and that will
drive prices through the roof for us.
• At a minimum, the dollar will lose another 40 to 50 percent of its
value. I'm confident that by next year we'll see more aggressive
movements to abandon the dollar by the [Persian] Gulf region and by the
Asian bloc. That's where the stuff really hits the fan.
You're a Ron Paul adviser. He's out of contention, so who wins the
election, and what happens then?
The Obama presidency will be like the Jimmy Carter presidency on
steroids. I'm pretty sure it's Obama because the economy will be so bad
into the election that as damaged a candidate as the guy is, I don't
think a Republican could beat him. I think Ron Paul could've had a slim
chance because he was different enough.
So how bad do you think this economy will get?
The other problem we'll have during those years is civil [unrest].
There will be a big increase in crime. People are going to be hungry.
People are going to be cold. There's a sense of entitlement in this
country, and when a lot of people used to having things suddenly don't,
everybody looks for someone to blame.
Really?
We're going through a very rough period in our history. In many ways,
it's going to be worse than the Depression.
Original
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