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Economists shouldn’t underestimate the power of a good story

Financial Times/Gillian Tett/8-25-2022

graphci image of a sheep posing as a lion before a computer screen

“Fair enough. However amid this frenzy of number-crunching, investors should also take note of some intriguing research floating around the edge of the Jackson Hole meeting about the importance of storytelling in monetary policy.”

USAGOLD note: Tett concludes that the Fed should continue with its promise to keep raising rates until inflation is under wraps. Storytelling aside, as we have mentioned before, it all comes down to a matter of degree. Will the pace of the rate increases be enough to subdue inflation? During the 1970s, central bank officials consistently presented themselves as inflation fighters, as prices blew through one milestone after another. The Fed, in the end, will be judged by what it does, not what it says.

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Financial markets are bracing for what could be a ‘very hawkish’ Jackson Hole speech by Fed’s Powell

MarketWatch/Vivien Lou Chen/8-24-2022

photo of Fed chair Powell at podium answering questions“Financial markets are bracing for Friday’s widely-anticipated Jackson Hole speech by Federal Reserve Jerome Powell and expecting that he’ll signal the continued need for aggressive interest-rate hikes to combat inflation despite the risks to economic growth.”

USAGOLD note: Not sure if there will be any market reaction worth noting. The press may be giving this speech way more attention than it deserves. The markets seem to believe that circumstances and events will dictate Fed policy, not the other way around. In a rapidly changing economic environment, what the Fed chair says now, may not reflect where he’ll be a month or two from now.

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Gold firms as dollar eases in run up to Jackson Hole – CNBC

  1. Gold firms as dollar eases in run up to Jackson Hole  CNBC
  2. Gold, silver up; focus on Jackson Hole Fed confab  Kitco NEWS
  3. Gold Heads for Narrow Weekly Gain as Investors Brace for Powell  Bloomberg
  4. Gold Price Forecast: Pinned Near Trendline Resistance – Levels for XAU/USD  DailyFX
  5. Gold hits one-week high as dollar dips; Jackson Hole symposium in focus  Business Standard
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News
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Gold Price Forecast: XAU/USD bears getting prepared to pounce, eye $1,747 – FXStreet

  1. Gold Price Forecast: XAU/USD bears getting prepared to pounce, eye $1,747  FXStreet
  2. Gold tallies a 3-session gain as dollar, Treasury yields pull back  MarketWatch
  3. Gold Rises as Traders Await Key Speech by Powell for Rate Clues  Bloomberg
  4. Price gains in gold, silver as U.S. dollar backs down  Kitco NEWS
  5. Gold rises as dollar, Treasury yields fall after poor U.S. data  CNBC
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News
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Gold ETFs Could Still Find a Place in a Diversified Portfolio – ETF Trends

Gold ETFs Could Still Find a Place in a Diversified Portfolio  ETF Trends
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Gold Fields Gets Positive Feedback on $7 Billion Yamana Deal – Bloomberg

Gold Fields Gets Positive Feedback on $7 Billion Yamana Deal  Bloomberg
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Who Will Forgive the Government’s Debt?

So much for “inflation reduction.”

Just a few days after signing Green New Deal legislation, rebranded as the Inflation Reduction Act, President Joe Biden has moved to completely undo its core promise by pumping hundreds of billions of dollars into another new bailout package.

On Wednesday, Biden announced the government would forgive student loan debt for around 20 million borrowers.

Student Debt

This debt jubilee is expected to cost upwards of $300 billion.

Not even an army of 86,000 new IRS agents is likely to extract that much revenue back from taxpayers – which means, of course, that the free rides given to millions of borrowers will function as yet another deficit-financed stimulus scheme.

The COVID-related stimulus programs and bailouts pushed through in 2020 helped push inflation to a 40-year high in 2022. Now the Federal Reserve is raising interest rates to try to contain inflation.

Even as the Fed is punishing borrowers and trying to restrain the growth of money and credit, the Biden administration is doing the opposite.

Whatever progress the central bank has made in containing inflation could be lost due to the government’s unwillingness to contain government borrowing and spending.

A budget model by the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business projects that student loan forgiveness will add $330 billion to the deficit – exceeding the deficit shrinkage promised to come from increased revenues via the Inflation Reduction Act’s IRS enforcement buildup.

Economists warn that student debt cancellation will also raise college tuition costs, which in recent years have been rising at four times the official inflation rate.

Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, who also once served as Harvard University’s president, stated, “Student loan debt relief is spending that raises demand and increases inflation. It consumes resources that could be better used helping those who did not, for whatever reason, have the chance to attend college. It will also tend to be inflationary by raising tuitions.”

When college costs are artificially subsidized by government, they have less incentive to trim their sprawling administrative offices, identity group coddling, and ideological indoctrination programs.

Universities feel less pressure to prove to students that their pricey diplomas will pay off in the jobs market when Uncle Sam will bail out those who end up with worthless degrees.

Instead of the government-inflated bubble in college outlays bursting, it will continue to be artificially pumped up at the expense of everyone who chose not to incur education debt.

That includes people who worked multiple jobs to pay for college tuition as well as those who avoided college entirely and are now struggling to make ends meet amid persistently rising costs of living.

Investors will also pay the price for Washington D.C.’s inflationary bailout schemes.

They should expect their money market accounts and bond holdings yielding less than the inflation rate to continue generating negative real returns. And they shouldn’t necessarily expect to stay ahead of inflation via the stock market – especially if the economy continues on a downward trajectory.

Investors who had hoped inflation would be transitory must now face the reality that the political demand for more inflation is insatiable.

Politicians who seek to buy votes will never get behind any serious efforts to reduce inflation. That would mean reducing the supply of borrowed cash available for them to spend.

Most lawmakers give no thought to ever paying down the $31 trillion national debt. As interest rates rise, though, servicing costs alone could soon become fiscally unmanageable. Will the Treasury Department beg China and other governments that hold Treasuries in large quantities to grant debt forgiveness?

It likely won’t come to that. Instead, the government can write off its own IOUs through the inflationary erosion of real interest and principal owed.

The largest holder of U.S. debt is, in effect, the government itself by way of the Federal Reserve. Conveniently, the Fed can create currency and buy government bonds in unlimited quantities to avert a formal default.

What the Fed cannot do is simultaneously monetize government debt by the trillions while also fulfilling its mandate to ensure price stability.

The risk is that the declining purchasing power of U.S. dollars morphs into a dollar crash. Given that “inflation reduction” as touted by politicians is a total sham, investors should at least be prepared for the possibility that inflation accelerates from here.

The ultimate alternative to rapidly falling fiat currency is incorruptible hard currency – represented for thousands of years by gold and silver.

      
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Comex Update: House Accounts See Largest Net Delivery Volume on Record

Gold saw the largest delivery volume in 2022 with 33,593 contracts delivered so far and 244 remaining in open interest. Since 2020, only December and February last year recorded larger volumes. Figure: 1 Recent like-month delivery volume Unlike past months, the large volume was not really driven by mid-month net new contracts. Activity was well […]

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Peter Schiff: Washington Goes Full Orwellian

An audacious communications campaign from Democrats in Washington is currently underway that is attempting to convince the public that: There is no recession Inflation has been vanquished Even if inflation is still alive, targeted new Federal legislation will kill it As strange as these claims sound to anyone with even the most casual grasp of […]

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Getting Technical: A Metal Exchange Interview

Over the last several months, you may have noticed a new series of articles with a data-driven focus here at SchiffGold. In this Metal Exchange interview, host Mike Maharrey talks to the man behind those posts. Mike and Tony dig into the ins and outs of technical, data-driven analysis and how it can expand our […]

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