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"We have, in this country, one of the most corrupt
institutions the world has ever known. I refer to the Federal Reserve Board.
This evil institution has impoverished the people of the United States and
has practically bankrupted our government. It has done this through the
corrupt practices of the moneyed vultures who
control it".
~ Congressman
Louis T. McFadden in 1932 (Rep. Pa)
The above
quote coming from the Honorable Louis T. McFadden is a quite prescient
statement as it relates to arguably the most evil enterprise in American
history.
The Federal
Reserve through its various monetary mechanisms has a major impact on the
value of the U.S. Dollar and over time has destroyed the purchasing power of
the fiat base currency used in the United States.
Interestingly
enough, the following quote comes directly from the Federal Reserve's website
regarding one of its primary mandates, "In setting monetary policy, the
Committee seeks to mitigate deviations of inflation from its longer-run goal
and deviations of employment from the Committee's assessment of its maximum
level."
The chart
below illustrates the horrific job the Federal Reserve has done of protecting
the purchasing power of the U.S. Dollar since its creation.
 
In light of
the longer-term malaise seen above, the Dollar Index futures have recently
rallied sharply higher as Europe continues to flail in a slow and agonizing
decline which will ultimately lead to a complete fiscal disaster.
Sovereign
debt concerns continue to mount regardless of what the European technocrats
spew publicly and the U.S. Dollar has been the primary beneficiary of these
seemingly growing concerns.
This brings
me to the purpose of this article. Most of the articles I write are focused
on option based trades, but I decided it was time to put forth a more
comprehensive scenario that could unfold over the next few years as a result
of excessive monetary stimulus through various quantitative easing mechanisms
developed by the Federal Reserve Bank. "A mild change" to say the
least . . .
As discussed
above, the U.S. Dollar Index futures have moved higher throughout most of
2012. Any significant increase in the U.S. Dollar is a growing concern among
central bankers as it correlates toward deflation. Deflation is the Fed's
biggest enemy, besides themselves of course.
Next week the
Federal Reserve will release statements relating to the economic condition of
the United States. Furthermore, the Fed also will discuss if it will initiate
another dose of monetary crack for a capital market place that is addicted to
cheap money and zero interest rates. At this point, the so-called marketplace
is the antithesis of free by all standard measures.
Consider the
long-term monthly chart of the U.S. Dollar Index futures illustrated below:
 
The U.S.
Dollar Index futures are in an uptrend that dates back to mid
2011. The orange line illustrates the uptrend and represents a key
price level for the U.S. Dollar Index. For those unfamiliar with basic
technical analysis, the rising orange trendline
will act as buying support until the Dollar eventually breaks down through it
signaling the bullish move higher has ended.
This brings
us to a rather interesting potential observation. Today Mario Draghi, Chairman of the European Central Bank (ECB), made
public comments regarding the readiness of the ECB to act if need be to
safeguard the European Union. The Dollar Index Futures plummeted on the
statement and remained under selling pressure most of the trading session on
Thursday.
If a mere
comment from the ECB can have such a damaging impact on the valuation of the
Dollar, what would happen to the Dollar if the Fed initiated a new easing
mechanism?
The answer is
simple, the U.S. Dollar would immediately be under
selling pressure. Selling pressure in the U.S. Dollar Index generally leads
to a rally in risk assets such as equities and oil futures. Over the
longer-term, a weak Dollar is also positive for precious metals and other
hard assets.
As an example
to illustrate the power of Quantitative Easing as it relates to the price of
both gold and oil, consider the following chart:
 
Obviously the
price action is pretty clear that Quantitative Easing has a positively
correlated impact on the price performance of hard assets, specifically gold
and oil. Now consider a price chart of the Dollar Index shown below courtesy
of the Federal Reserve Bank, the annotations are mine.
 
The chart
above tells an interesting story about the impact that Quantitative Easing
has on the Dollar. How can the Federal Reserve claim to be protecting the
purchasing power of the U.S. Dollar when its actions have a direct negative
correlation to the greenback's price?
Furthermore,
based on the chart above I am of the opinion that Quantitative Easing III is
a foregone conclusion. The current price of the Dollar Index is clearly above
the previous high where QE2 was launched.
So far, the
rally in the Dollar Index has not pushed equity prices considerably lower.
However, should the Federal Reserve refrain from initiating additional easing
measures it is likely based on the chart above that the U.S. Dollar Index
will rally.
Upon the
conclusion of both QE and QE2, the Dollar Index rallied sharply higher. With
the Fed announcement coming closer by the hour, financial pundits will
attempt to predict the future action of the Fed.
I have no
interest in making predictions about what the Fed will do. It is a certainty
that QE3 will take place at some point in the future whether it be sooner or later.
The Federal
Reserve simply has no choice, otherwise the Dollar would continue to rally
and we would begin to go through a deflationary period which the Federal
Reserve simply cannot tolerate.
The scenario
that I would urge inquiring minds to consider would be as follows. If the Fed
does nothing we can likely assume that the U.S. Dollar Index will continue to
rally to the upside.
Based on the
price chart of the U.S. Dollar Index shown above, we can expect that sellers
would certainly step in around the 86 - 88 price range based on previous
resistance.
If the U.S.
Dollar makes it anywhere near the 86 - 88 price range without the Federal Reserve
initiating QE3 it would be expected that risk assets would be under
considerable selling pressure somewhere along the way.
Should the
Fed act to break the Dollar's rally either through more easing or
"other" mechanisms, the result would be a potentially monster rally
for risk assets, at least initially.
Equities,
oil, and precious metals would rally on a falling Dollar as shown above. The
question then becomes what if this is the last gasp rally before a monster
selloff ensues in the Dollar Index?
If the Fed
breaks the rally early or initiates a monster-sized easing program, the
initial reaction will be quite positive, especially for equities. As the
selloff in the Dollar Index worsens, equities would eventually begin to
underperform as oil prices would surge putting pressure on the economy.
In addition
to oil rallying on the weaker Dollar, we could also see sellers start to show
up in droves dumping U.S. Treasury's to any buyer left standing.
International debt holders would especially have incentive to sell Treasury's
as the real purchasing power of the bonds' interest payments would decline as
the Dollar fell in value.
The way I see
it, whether the Fed launches QE3 now or later, the outcome will not change.
An extremely weak Dollar could wreak havoc across a variety of assets and the
broader economy. Imagine where gasoline prices would be if oil prices hit
$125 / barrel. The average price in the U.S. would be well above $5 / gallon
based on current prices and possibly higher.
What happens
to the economy if interest rates start to react violently to the price action
in the Dollar? What if Treasury's start to sell off viciously and interest
rates start to rise wildly and volatility among bond holdings runs rampant?
Are we to
believe that the very entity that has created boom and bust cycles through
easy monetary policies and has been oblivious to the bubbles that it has
created is capable of solving the issues that would potentially arise from a
currency crash in the U.S. Dollar?
The track
record of the Federal Reserve is quite clear. They are generally late to the
party and rarely are able to forecast events in the future with any clarity.
Do you really think they will know what to do? The free market wants to
destroy debt through deflationary pressure and price discovery and the
Federal Reserve continues to get in the way.
The free
market will win as it always does, but the American people will lose. This
process may take months, years, or even decades to play out. Eventually the
game will end.
There is only
one certainty should any portion of the scenario discussed above come to
fruition, when the Dollar is inevitably broken the only safe place to hide
during the potential currency crash will be in physical gold and silver.
Paper money and paper assets will come under extreme selling pressure and in
some cases will simply . . . disappear.
Here's to
hoping I am totally wrong!
Chris Vermeulen
Editor, the
Gold and Oil Guy
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