See Search Box
lower down this column for searches of Finfacts news pages. Where there may be
the odd special character missing from an older page, it's a problem that
developed when Interactive Tools upgraded to a new content management system.
Welcome
Finfacts is Ireland's leading business information site and
you are in its business news section.
Gold hit a record high of $850 an ounce in January 1980 after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and months after the commencement of the Iranian Islamic revolution. Today's inflation-adjusted high for the record price is $2,309, according to The Wall Street Journal. Thursday's price in New York is $1,235 - - Finfacts.
Dr. Peter Morici: Gold prices are soaring because of growing inflation fears-- both the European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve seem to be on the path to permanently easy money with the Greek bailout and huge US budget deficits.
Neither the reforms attached to the Greek bailout nor banking legislation in Congress get at the structural problems that caused failures in Athens and on Wall Street. Soft reform is no reform--investors are fearful too much money will undermine the value of euro bonds and US Treasuries -- even if those bonds don't outright default.
The bailout for Greece and aid for other debt ridden Mediterranean economies provides hard commitment of assistance but does not address the fundamental structural problems that cause Greece, Portugal, Spain and other less prosperous EU states to spend too much. Namely, over the last forty or fifty years, economic integration in Europe has increased public expectations that social safety nets - - health care, retirement benefits, job security, unemployment assistance, etc -- would be as strong and generous in poorer EU states as in rich ones.
Unlike the United States, the EU does not have well developed mechanisms for taxing high-income states to provide low-income states with the same level of social expenditures. The EU can’t tax Germany to subsidize Greece, as Washington taxes New York to subsidize Mississippi.
Consequently, Mediterranean governments spend too much and push costs on private sectors those can’t bear, and higher inflation results. When those countries had their own currencies they could let those slip in value against the mark, over time, but now with the euro as legal tender, governments do not have this option. Instead, they borrow to the point of default, and pose the veiled threat of leaving the euro zone if aid is not forthcoming.
The Greek bailout does not address the underlying fiscal problem—the absence of EU taxing and spending authority. The $750bn fund is merely a down payment on even bigger future bailouts.
Simply, the European Central Bank will have to print lots more money to buy European government bonds to keep the system afloat and a weak euro, inflation and rising interest rates will follow.
In the United States, President Obama’s budget projections are much more optimistic than economists or investors believe. The CBO (Congressional Budget Office) has just concluded, for example, health care reform will cost the federal government much more than originally projected.
With new health care legislation, US federal deficits will exceed $1 trillion for many years to come, even with repeal of the Bush tax cuts for families over $250,000 and the interest and dividend tax. The President’s pledge not to raise taxes on families under $250,000 puts Washington in a fiscal box.
Also, the banking legislation moving through Congress does not fix fundamental problems in the securitization market, and it does not fix too big to fail for the largest US banks. In the current crisis, the FDIC had resolution authority with regard to Citigroup and Bank of America, and Treasury has the same regarding AIG, but it proved impossible to sell off these firms’ good businesses in a crisis to save the taxpayer from sinking hundreds of billions in bailout funds. Quick rinse bankruptcy procedures, as proposed in the banking reform legislation, won’t fix that.
Hence, large deficits and more bailouts are likely over the next decade, and that will ultimately drive up interest rates on long US bonds, and drive down, five years from now, the prices of 20- and 30-year Treasuries purchased today.
Overall, neither euro denominated assets nor US Treasuries are a good investment in such a potentially explosive inflationary environment.
Investors, fearing the worst, are hedging by putting more of their portfolios into gold, and the price of gold rises.
What's behind the rush to buy gold, with John Rutledge, former Reagan Economic adviser and James DiGeorgia, Gold & Energy Advisor?