Currency

The End Is Near, Part 1: The “War On Cash”

UnknownAs the saying goes, you can know a person by the quality of his or her enemies. This is also true of societies, where moral evolution can be traced by simply listing the things on which they declare war. Not so long ago, for instance, the world’s good guys — the US, Europe’s democracies and a few others — fought existential battles against fascism and communism. Then they went after poverty and discrimination. They were, at least in terms of their ideals, on the side of personal freedom and opportunity and against institutionalized control.

But then came the war on drugs, in which the US imprisoned millions of non-violent people guilty only of voluntary transaction. Not long after that we declared war on “terror,” using the enemies created by our own incompetent foreign policy as an excuse for a vast expansion of surveillance and police militarization.

And now, seemingly out of nowhere, comes a new enemy: cash. Around the world, governments and banks are making it harder to save and transact with paper and coin. The ultimate goal seems to be the elimination of private tools of commerce, in favor of transparent (to governments and banks) plastic, checks and online payment systems. The following excerpts are from longer articles that should be read in their entirety:

The Death of Cash

(Bloomberg) – Could negative interest rates create an existential crisis for money itself?

JPMorgan Chase recently sent a letter to some of its large depositors telling them it didn’t want their stinking money anymore. Well, not in those words. The bank coined a euphemism: Beginning on May 1, it said, it will charge certain customers a “balance sheet utilization fee” of 1 percent a year on deposits in excess of the money they need for their operations. That amounts to a negative interest rate on deposits. The targeted customers—mostly other financial institutions—are already snatching their money out of the bank. Which is exactly what Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon wants. The goal is to shed $100 billion in deposits, and he’s about 20 percent of the way there so far.

Pause for a second and marvel at how strange this is. Banks have always paid interest to depositors. We’ve entered a new era of surplus in which banks—some, anyway—are deigning to accept money only if customers are willing to pay for the privilege. Nick Bunker, a policy analyst at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, was so dazzled by interest rates’ falling into negative territory that he headlined his analysis after a Doors song, Break on Through (to the Other Side).

Now comes the interesting part. There are signs of an innovation war over negative interest rates. There’s a surge of creativity around ways to drive interest rates deeper into negative territory, possibly by abolishing cash or making it depreciable. And there’s a countersurge around how to prevent rates from going more deeply negative, by making cash even more central and useful than it is now. As this new world takes shape, cash becomes pivotal.

The idea of abolishing or even constraining physical bank notes is anathema to a lot of people. If there’s one thing that militias and Tea Partiers hate more than “fiat money” that’s not backed by gold, it’s fiat money that exists only in electronic form, where it can be easily tracked and controlled by the government. “The anonymity of paper money is liberating,” says Stephen Cecchetti, a professor at Brandeis International Business School and former economic adviser to the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland. “The bottom line is, you have to decide how you want to run your society.”

As long as paper money is available as an alternative for customers who want to withdraw their deposits, there’s a limit to how low central banks can push rates. At some point it becomes cost-effective to rent a warehouse for your billions in cash and hire armed guards to protect it. We may be seeing glimmerings of that in Switzerland, which has a 1,000 Swiss franc note ($1,040) that’s useful for large transactions. The number of the big bills in circulation usually peaks at yearend and then shrinks about 6 percent in the first two months of the new year, but this year, with negative rates a reality, the number instead rose 1 percent through February, according to data released on April 21.

Bank notes, as an alternate storehouse of value, are a constraint on central banks’ power. “We view this constraint as undesirable,” Citigroup Global Chief Economist Willem Buiter and a colleague, economist Ebrahim Rahbari, wrote in an April 8 research piece. They laid out three ways that central banks could foil cash hoarders: One, abolish paper money. Two, tax paper money. Three, sever the link between paper money and central bank reserves.

Abolishing paper money and forcing people to use electronic accounts could free central banks to lower interest rates as much as they feel necessary while crimping the underground economy, Buiter and Rahbari write: “In our view, the net benefit to society from giving up the anonymity of currency holdings is likely to be positive (including for tax compliance).” Taxing cash, an idea that goes back to German economist Silvio Gesell in 1916, is probably unworkable, the economists conclude: You’d have to stamp bills to show tax had been paid on them. The third idea involves declaring that all wages and prices are set in terms of the official reserve currency—and that paper money is a depreciating asset, almost like a weak foreign currency. That approach, the Citi economists write, “is both practical and likely to be effective.” Last year, Harvard University economist Kenneth Rogoff wrote a paper favoring exploration of “a more proactive strategy for phasing out the use of paper currency.”

Pushing back against the cash-abolition camp is a group of people who want to make cash more convenient, even for large transactions. Cecchetti and co-author Kermit Schoenholtz, of New York University’s Stern School of Business, suggest a “cash reserve account” that would keep people from having to pay for things by sending cash in armored trucks. During the day, funds in the account would be payable just like money in a checking account. But every night they’d be swept into cash held in a vault, sparing the money from the negative interest rate that would apply to money in an ordinary checking account. In a way, physical cash would take on a role similar to that played by gold in an earlier era of banking.

The “War on Cash” Migrates to Switzerland

(Acting Man’s Pater Tenebrarum) – The war on cash is proliferating globally. It appears that the private members of the world’s banking cartels are increasingly joining the fun, even if it means trampling on the rights of their customers. 

We just come across a small article in the local European press (courtesy of Dan Popescu), in which a Swiss pension fund manager discusses his plight with the SNB’s bizarre negative interest rate policy. In Switzerland this policy has long ago led to negative deposit rates at the commercial banks as well. The difference to other jurisdictions is however that negative interest rates have become so pronounced, that it is by now worth it to simply withdraw one’s cash and put it into an insured vault.

Having realized this, said pension fund manager, after calculating that he would save at least 25,000 CHF per year on every CHF 10 m. deposit by putting the cash into a vault, told his bank that he was about to make a rather big withdrawal very soon. After all, as a pension fund manager he has a fiduciary duty to his clients, and if he can save money based on a technicality, he has to do it.

A Legally Murky Situation – but Collectivism Wins Out
What happened next is truly stunning. Surely everybody is aware that Switzerland regularly makes it to the top three on the list of countries with the highest degree of economic freedom. At the same time, it has a central bank whose board members are wedded to Keynesian nostrums similar to those of other central banks. This is no wonder, as nowadays, economists are trained in an academic environment that is dripping with the most vicious statism imaginable. As a result, withdrawing one’s cash is evidently regarded as “interference with the SNB’s monetary policy goals”.

One large Swiss bank recently responded to a pension fund’s withdrawal request with a letter stating: “We are sorry, that within the time period specified, no solution corresponding to your expectations could be found.”

Although we all know that fractionally reserved banks literally don’t have the money their customers hold in demand deposits, the contract states clearly that customers may withdraw their funds at any time on demand. The maturity of sight deposits is precisely zero.

Some thoughts

 

  • A well-run economy operating without cash would require a trustworthy government. That is, the people who know where we are and what we’re buying and selling 24/7 would have to be decent, competent and honest. Otherwise we’re giving near-absolute power to folks who might use it for their own enrichment at our expense. Which is of course to state the blindingly obvious. The fact that power both corrupts and attracts the already corrupt means that the more power we hand the government, the further we push it towards absolute evil. A cashless society would pretty much guarantee a dictatorship in a single generation.
  • If a cashless society is a means to the end of total government control of interest rates, i.e., the price of money, then the resulting deeply-negative rates would distort the pricing signals that make capitalism work. The system would devolve into a centrally-planned malinvestment-fest resembling bigger, more chaotic versions of the past century’s collectivist experiments, all of which crashed and burned in short order.
  • An environment in which cash is illegal and interest rates are negative would be both insanely good and catastrophically bad for gold. Good because the removal of cash leaves only gold and silver as historically-trusted private stores of value. Terrified capital would pour into bullion, sending its relative price through the roof. But then of course it would become an overt (rather than a covert) target of the same forces that made cash illegal. When “the war on gold” begins, the world as we knew it will have already ended.

 

Price Waves That Signal Market Direction

Question: Do price waves answer the Continuation or Reversal question?

More from RTT Tv

Answer: Yes when you understand Wyckoff logic, more so if you understand Richard Wyckoff law off ‘Effort vs Results’ and how it supports the Richard Wyckoff law of ‘Supply and Demand’.

AMZN price chart with waves colored (the daily price waves are the same formula as PnF wave/bar calculation below, allows sync of price action).

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Auto PnF chart from our Swing Pop out charts.

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NOTE: readtheticker.com does allow users to load objects and text on charts, however some annotations are by a free third party image tool named Paint.net

Investing Quote…

“Success in trading means excess of profits over losses. If anyone tells you they can almost be invariably successful, put him down as trying to impose on your credulity.” ~ Richard D Wyckoff

“If past history was all there was to the game, the richest people would be librarians.” ~ Warren Buffett

Art, Land, or Gold

imagesThe chief executive of the world’s largest asset management corporation made comments this week that suggested gold was passé. He said gone are the days where gold acts as the de facto store of wealth. Instead, those with excess cash flow are looking to acquire condominiums in international cities or are making a bid for contemporary art; however, gold is being viewed as nothing more than a relic of the past.

Blackrock’s CEO, Larry Fink might be regarded as one of the most sought after minds in international finance. And for a man that preaches a long term view that suggests all investors remain fully invested in the stock market, as that is the asset class that boasts positive returns over the long run, he is taking a rather myopic view on gold.

The rationale for owning precious metals like gold is simple when looking to acquire and retain wealth. Governments can confiscate land. Art is subject to fashion trends or current fads. But the allure of gold is something that has been time tested throughout history. It may go in or out of favor in the near term, and of course caries the characterization and negative stigmatization for those over focused on the asset known as “gold bugs,” but its relationship holds as a long term store of value, and a natural hedge to the world’s reserve currency.

The uptrend in the US dollar is only something that looks set to continue. To close the week the Wall Street Journal published an article that examined a world burdened with oversupply. Whether its commodity markets, laborers, or capital, there is no natural shortage in any of the aforementioned markets acting as a driver of demand. An oversupply in commodity markets is prompting selling pressure for the globe’s energy and mineral rich export countries. Youth and millennials despite advanced education struggle to make gains in competitive labour markets. And savers are essentially punished for being adverse to risk and thus are forced to accept a rate of return less than inflation.

Naturally this would create an environment where gold as a store of wealth struggles. Obviously gold is no longer the front-page asset that is garnering the excitement of investors because we are not in an environment where a level of overall risk requires increased diversification for alternative asset classes. Alternatively, the malaise of other financial markets has prompted investors (since 2009) to look elsewhere for returns and hence fears arise of bubbles in real estate and there are questionable valuations for modern art.

To digress, the luxuries of private versus public ownership in investment decisions are not made dependent on results in the next fiscal year or quarter. They are decisions that are based on the long term with only a limited number of shareholders to answer to. The same can be said for gold. Larry Fink may be right that overall market demand may be waning for the yellow metal as prices sits rather dormant. The point he is missing, or failing to comprehend is that gold has been around longer than the skyscrapers of Manhattan or the most recent piece of modern art.

To repeat: land is subject to taxes and confiscation. Modern art goes out of style. Gold is time tested and has remained coveted throughout history.

Robert Levy

Border Gold Corp | www.bordergold.com

15234 North Bluff Road, White Rock, BC V4B 3E6

(Tel) 1-604-535-3287

(TF) 1-888-312-2288

(Fax) 1-604-535-3259

The Three Most Popular Articles of the Week

Most Read this week:

Legendary trader Paul Tudor Jones: Prepare to Make Money When the US Stock Bubble Pops

Hedge fund billionaire Paul Tudor Jones is well known for tripling his money on Black Monday in 1987. 

Mr. Tudor is now warning of an even more dangerous bubble than October 1987, and he views a decline as a move just as profitable as an advance. Video

…..read more HERE
 
The 10th Man: Pascal’s Wager 

by Mauldin Economics

Why believe in something for which there is no evidence? The answer lies in decision theory.

If you believe in God and you’re right, you go to heaven. Let’s call this “infinite gain.”

If you believe in God and you’re wrong, the only thing you lose is whatever time you spent in church and/or money you donated. It’s a finite loss.

If you don’t believe in God and you’re right, there is no God, you get to be smug. That is a finite gain.

If you don’t believe in God and you’re wrong, you go to hell. Let’s call this infinite loss.

Here it is in table format:

Table 1 20150423 10thMan

As it turns out, Pascal’s Wager is all over the place in markets.

 
….read more HERE
 
 

The Calm Before The Enormous Storm

2008 For Bonds

Inflation may not burst the Bond Bubble. But something will. Soon…
 
THERE was once a time, perhaps, when unprecedented things happened only occasionally, writes Tim Price on his ThePriceOfEverything blog.
 
In today’s financial markets, unprecedented things are commonplace.

 
…..continue reading HERE

 

Todd Market Forecast

“The S&P 500 made an all time high, joining the NASDAQ Composite and the advance decline at that august level.”

DOW                                             + 21 on 50 net advances

NASDAQ COMP                            + 36 on 200 net declines

SHORT TERM TREND                    Bullish

INTERMEDIATE TERM TREND       Bullish

 STOCKS:  The S&P 500 made an all time high, joining the NASDAQ Composite and the advance decline at that august level.

       The reason seems to be that earnings are somewhat better than originally thought and continued weak economic data should stay the Fed’s hand when it comes to raising rates.

GOLD: Gold lost another $16. This time the theory is that a rally in tech stocks encouraged investors to get out of a safe haven and get into stocks. I wonder how they know that. Volume on the NYSE was pathetic. The lowest of 2015.    

CHART: The NASDAQ 100 looks like it’s really taking off. It’s overbought, but so far that doesn’t matter. Price itself is the most important indicator.

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BOTTOM LINE:  (Trading)

Our intermediate term system is on a buy from Feb. 20, 2015. We are long the SPY from 206.43.            

GOLD  We are in cash. Stay there.     

News and fundamentals:  Durable goods orders rose 0.6%, more than the expected rise of 0.4%. On Monday we get the Dallas Fed Mfg Survey.

Interesting Stuff  Iron rusts from disuse. Water loses its purity from stagnation. Inaction saps the vigor of the mind. Leonardo Da Vinci.

TORONTO EXCHAN GE:Toronto gained 16.

S&P/TSX VENTURE COMP: The TSX was down 2.

BONDS: Bonds rebounded.          

THE REST:   The dollar was lower. Silver continues to sag. Crude oil lost marginally.   

We’re on a sell for bonds as of April 22.                   

We’re on a buy for the dollar and a sell for the euro as of March 30.                    

We’re on a sell for gold as of April 14.                      

We’re on a sell for silver as of March 30.                      

We’re on a sell for crude oil as of today April 21.                           

We’re on a buy for the Toronto Stock Exchange as of March 16.   

We’re on a sell for the S&P\TSX Venture Fund as of October 30.

 

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