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Europe’s doomed experiment with
the politics of austerity went down in flames over the weekend as voters across
the region veered sharply to the left in savaging incumbents. Elections in
six European nations on Sunday promised to end any pretense of fiscal sanity.
However, it remains to be seen how quickly and drastically the new leaders
will act to further unbalance their nations’ books, ostensibly in the
name of economic growth. Whatever they decide, there’s a Catch-22 that
could make any promises of budget-busting relief for pensioners and public
workers impossible to keep. Recall that even the socialists in Greece’s
parliament were forced to support austerity measures a few months ago,
because without such measures the country would have been unable to borrow
enough cash to meet payroll.
In fact, despite several bailouts in the
last two years, Greece remains so close to the edge financially that even
hard-core socialists might find themselves forced to play ball with the
bankers. The “middle way” for them, as has been the case all
along, will be to talk austerity while practicing fiscal profligacy. Eurobank president Draghi
offered a preview of how this would be done, cribbing a page from
Goebbels’s handbook. At a “whisper campaign” meeting in
Barcelona over the weekend, he was quoted as saying (whispering?) that Europe
could hammer out a “growth compact” to go along with deficit
reduction. Like Bernanke, he evidently thinks people are stupid enough to
believe such claptrap. But even if it is unworkable as policy, it will used
to “manage expectations” in the same cynical way that the Fed
chairman manages them. Draghi’ s task will be
more difficult, however, because he will be at odds not only with
Germany’s conservative bankers, but with a German press that harbors no
useful idiots like Nobelist Paul Krugman to zealously advocate ruinously inflationary
fiscal policies and Big Guvvamint management
of…everything.
Bullish for Gold, Silver
Although the foregoing has bullish
implications for gold and silver, the effect is likely to be muted because it
will also be quite bullish for the dollar, at least initially. European
investors will be seeking a “safe haven” more desperately than
ever, implying that in the weeks and months ahead, they will be diving into
Treasury paper and other dollar-denominated instruments that are perceived as
relatively safe. Rick’s Picks has been predicting a powerful
rally in the U.S. dollar, and this weekend’s elections in Europe seem
likely to be the catalyst. Under the circumstances, we should also expect the
recent weakness in U.S. stocks to continue over the summer. Bullion will be
feeling the weight of this, but we expect precious metals to correct only
moderately from current levels nonetheless. Of course, it’s also
conceivable that gold and silver will achieve at least middling gains over
that time. In the meantime, although Apple shares remain our bellwether for
U.S. stocks, it’ll be interesting to see, as Europe sinks deeper into
an economic quagmire, whether there’s enough greed and stupidity left
on Wall Street to award Facebook’s May 18 IPO a $100 billion valuation.
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