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When
priced in US dollars, the US stock market appears to have rallied
significantly since the beginning of the year - it's now up 18.31% since
January 1st. However, since the dollar has fallen 5.82% since the beginning
of the year, if we subtract the dollar decline during this same time period,
the 18.31% gain drops to a 12.49% gain. This is a more honest means of
interpreting this rise, for as we all know, a gain in real wealth is not
determined by solely having a greater amount of a certain currency but also
by adjusting for the increase or decrease of that currency’s purchasing
power.
Looking
at the below graph, since gold has been considered a currency for thousands
of years, if we price the behavior of the S&P 500 in terms of gold, the
gain in the S&P 500 since the beginning of the year shrivels to a 3.92%
rise.
 
Silver,
too is deemed a currency by many countries - many countries also mint silver
coins. When we price the behavior of the S&P 500 in terms of silver, as
we can see above, the gain in the S&P 500 evaporates and becomes a 21.36%
loss.
So
depending on what currency you would like to hold in the future, your
perspective of the current rally in US markets will change dramatically based
upon the currency lens through which this rally is viewed (even if you
don’t believe the compelling evidence that the US Federal Reserve and
government have been tampering excessively in US stock markets this past
summer to artificially manufacture this current rally. Personally, for the
past several years, I’ve preferred to hold currencies with zero counterparty
risk).
 
Finally,
I’ve produced one chart above where I’ve superimposed the the US
dollar (daily) over the chart of the S&P 500 (daily) since the beginning
of the year. I haven’t taken the time to adjust the scales of both
graphs to accurately represent percent moves for comparative purposes because
I only wish point out that the chart patterns of the S&P 500 and the US
dollar have been near perfect inverse images of each other for this entire
year.
As
I’ve stated before, as long as Wall Street computers keep using low
summer-like trading volumes to manipulate this market higher, the market can
continue to melt up on the back of a devaluing dollar before it will
eventually melt down. And as long as the US Federal Reserve continues to try
to appease public anger by giving the public greater amounts of a worthless
currency in a monetary game the public, by and large, fails to understand, I
will continue to hold my currencies in forms that have zero counterparty
risk. This, despite the fact that we are due for some strong short-term
volatility in gold and silver for which we will take appropriate hedges.
J.S. Kim
SmartKnowledgeU
JS Kim is the Managing
Director and Founder of SmartKnowledgeU, a fiercely independent investment
consulting and research firm that devises investment strategies to protect
Main Street from the fraud of Wall Street.
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