By Doug Casey
L: Doug, there is considerable disagreement over the significance of
the Cyprus crisis. A lot of people are saying that it’s just a flash in
the pan; Cyprus is a small country, far off, and doesn’t really matter.
Other people are saying it’s very significant. The European Central Bank
took unprecedented steps. What do you think?
Doug: I think this could be the spark that ignites the keg of
dynamite under the current financial system. All banks, all around the
world, are bankrupt, and have been for years. That’s because all the
world’s banks run on a fractional reserve basis.
L: I know what you mean, but we should spell that out: by law and
backed with government guarantees, banks only have to keep a tiny
fraction of the money people deposit on hand. They lend out the vast
bulk of it, and in even in good times, they could not return all
depositors’ money at once, since loans cannot be called in
instantaneously, and most would be defaulted on if they were. In bad
times, the charade is even more hollow, since many loans that banks are
currently owed will never ever get paid.
Doug: Yes, and they are all in that position. It was more serious in
Cyprus because that economy is very leveraged to finance. In other words
Cyprus was a banking epicenter for Europe. It was easier to make
deposits – there were fewer questions asked – making banking the major
business of the country. But I think the trouble will spread from there.
It could spread to Luxembourg or Malta next; both are at least as
leveraged to the financial sector as Cyprus. And from there… who knows?
Anyone with any sense should withdraw whatever cash they have in
European banks, whether in euros or any other currency, immediately.
Cyprus demonstrated that governments are quite willing and able to
confiscate money sitting in a bank account in order to preserve the
banking system. We live in Bizarro World.
L: Why would it spread? Cyprus was said to be particularly vulnerable
because of its strong Greek connections; Cypriot banks had bought of
lot Greek debt. Would people in Luxembourg be as exposed?
Doug: All banks are in effect creatures of the state at this point.
They all own a lot of government bonds, which are considered the most
secure form of capital. Of course, that’s the opposite of the truth; all
these governments are bankrupt as well. The Greek government is just
more overtly bankrupt than most.
Actually, we should take a minute here to discuss what a properly run
banking system looks like. Historically, banks offered two types of
accounts: demand deposits and time deposits. Demand deposits are what we
call checking accounts today, but the original idea was that you’d pay
your bank to store your money securely, and you had the right to
“demand” your deposit back immediately, and to transfer funds via check.
The idea of time deposits, which became savings accounts, was that
the bank would pay you interest when you deposited your money with them
for a specific period of time. That’s why it’s called a “time” deposit;
you lent the bank your money for a given time, as did other depositors,
and the banks would always know how much money they could lend out – at
higher interest rates. Furthermore, loans made against time deposits
were always short term, and also self-liquidating, against receivables,
or excess inventory, for instance.
There were no government guarantees for deposits back then; bankers
needed to capitalize their businesses with their own funds, and if they
miscalculated, they were personally liable – and often did go bankrupt
themselves if they made too many bad loans. Depositors naturally avoided
banks known to make risky or illiquid loans. Banks competed to be known
as the most prudent and solvent.
Both lenders and depositors were cautious. Before the early 20th century,
people might well have laughed at today’s depositors of Cypriot banks.
If they were foolish enough to put their money in banks that made such
stupid loans, they only get what they deserve.
L: Our friend Rick Rule likes to say that the idea that the state can
guarantee everyone’s deposits is just another unaffordable, unbacked
social promise of the 20th century. Just another example of living beyond our means.
Doug: Yes. I don’t think people understand this. People don’t have a
clue, do they? People read editorials by Paul Krugman and neither laugh
nor roll their eyes. It’s like they’re all on Prozac.
L: The nature of real banking is not something they teach in school anymore, that’s for sure.
Doug: Then it’s worth repeating. The distinction between time and
demand deposits is critical. They are completely different, actually
unrelated businesses. Today the distinction has been totally lost. But
it’s much worse, since central banks have allowed the problem to
compound to the nthdegree.
Sound banks never made what we call consumer loans today, because
there is no guarantee, no collateral. Banks in the past made only
short-term commercial loans that were fully covered by the value of the
assets being financed. You never had to rely on the good faith of the
borrower. You simply facilitated short-term – short-term – liquidity.
The idea of a 30-year, a 20-year, or even a 10- or 5-year mortgage was
anathema to sound bankers. A building and loan society might grant a
five-year mortgage to one of its members, with a very significant down
payment; that’s because even though it’s an asset class with value, real
estate is illiquid. Forget about credit cards. Forget about car loans;
if you want a car, save up for one. It’s funny, actually. Car loans
started out with a one-year term and a big down stroke. Then they went
to two years. Now they’re five or more, when people don’t just lease. So
even the family car has gone from a minor asset to a long-term
liability. Subprime loans would have been completely unthinkable in the
past.
L: Many people might say that credit that tight would be impractical today.
Doug: Many people don’t like the idea of having to live within their
means. They feel they have a right to have whatever they want, now.
That’s why the average American has essentially zero net assets. If
everyone had to pay cash for everything, our whole society – from
individuals on the lower rungs to big corporations to the state itself –
would be much, much wealthier. We would not be, individually and as a
society, one paycheck from being forced to live in a cardboard box under
an overpass.
L: Perhaps so, but again, many people think modern high finance is
not just normal, but necessary for civilization today. Big Business
requires Big Credit.
Doug: Nonsense. The way you become wealthy is by producing more than
you consume, and saving the difference. We don’t need a fractional
reserve banking system, we don’t need government guarantees, and we
certainly don’t need to use government IOUs backed by nothing
masquerading as money.
I understand something like 20% of the US economy is financial in
nature. It’s ludicrous; millions of people spending billions of dollars
bundling, swapping, and repackaging imaginary assets. I’d guess that in a
free-market economy, banking and related industries would amount to
about 2%, a tenth as much. Money is essentially just a medium of
exchange and a store of value; it’s problematic when it becomes a
gigantic industry. All these people who spend their days gambling with
ledger entries would have to go out and find something productive to do.
L: Get real jobs.
Doug: Exactly. The whole banking business is corrupt from top to
bottom today. Part of the problem is that banks are no longer financed
by the individuals who start them, putting their personal net worth on
the line. Now, they are all publicly traded entities – just like all
brokerages – playing with Other People’s Money. Management has no
incentive to do anything but pad their wallets, so they pay themselves
gigantic salaries and bonuses, and give themselves options. These people
aren’t shepherding their money and that of clients they know
personally. They’ve got zero skin in the game.
This is true all over the world, not just in the US and Europe. All
these banks are going to blow up, and not just in far-off, little
countries.
L: It’s interesting that a part of the basis for your negative
prognosis for the global financial network is rooted in human psychology
– the perverse incentives of playing with Other People’s Money,
exacerbated by government guarantees and banks mistakenly viewing
government bonds as safe investments.
Doug: Imagine you’re a smart, young trader working for Goldman,
Deutsche Bank, or one of these big financial institutions. It’s actually
in your interest to make incredibly crazy bets. You can win billions of
dollars if red comes up on the financial roulette wheel. If that
happens, you get a multimillion-dollar bonus. You win. But if your bet
doesn’t work out, what then? The bank loses a few billion dollars, and
you just go work for another bank, with more experience on your résumé.
And you do the same thing over again.
L: So what does one do with hundreds of trillions of dollars in derivatives?
Doug: I don’t know, and neither does anyone else. Not even Warren
Buffett. Nobody can possibly keep track of quadrillions of dollars of
derivatives. It’s a daisy chain in which nobody can really know who is
creditworthy. It’s impossible to assess the real counterparty risk. All
these thousands of traders sitting at computer banks, second-guessing
markets; it’s actually quite insane. I can hear them on the phone:
“Hello, New York? Buy! Hello, Tokyo? Buy! Hello, London? New York and
Tokyo are buying. Sell.” It’s an immense waste of productive manpower,
them and the divisions of highly paid lawyers, accountants, and
administrators behind them. Little of this would exist in a free-market
world without central banks spewing trillions of currency units out
every year to support governments. Of course, a gigantic financial
industry arose to deal with it.
In any event, the people who today imagine they run the show may have
put a finger in a dike, but it’s all going to come to very bad end.
One of the interesting things about this Cyprus thing is that,
according to the numbers I hear bandied around, the Russians are
supposed to have had somewhere in between $30 and $60 billion in Cyprus.
Who knows what the real facts are, because you can’t trust what’s
reported in the press… but I’ve been to Cyprus – both Northern Cyprus
and the Republic of Cyprus. It’s true that the place is overrun with
Russians and Russian money.
Now, you’ve got to figure that if you’re a Russian oligarch with a
lot more than 100,000 euros in a bank and the bank tells you you’re not
getting it back – are you going to just sit on your hands and do
nothing? I hate to say what I would do if I were a crony capitalist… but
if I were, I might just send several very burly men with cold steel
strapped under their arms to talk to the banker in question and make it
very clear to him that I will get my money back.
L: I sure wouldn’t want to sell life insurance to Cypriot bankers right now – nor ECB bureaucrats, for that matter.
Doug: I’ve read that just before this crisis hit the papers, billions
and billions of Russian money found its way out of Cyprus. That’s
supposed to be why the Russians were raising hell at one point, and now
they’ve gone quiet. My guess is that the Cypriots heard from their
oligarch depositors or prudently gave them advance warning, and decided
that the most important thing was getting that money back to them. But
everyone else – people who don’t have squads of hit men – gets screwed.
So much for Cyprus. I guess they’ll go back to shepherding, growing
olives, serving ouzo to the occasional hippie tourist, or whatever
subsistence-level activities they did before becoming a banking haven,
because no one anywhere in the world is going to deposit any money in
Cyprus for a very long time. Cypriot businesses can’t even get money out
of the bank to pay their bills – they’ve just been hit with the
financial equivalent of a nuclear bomb.
On the other hand, Cyprus has a little stock market that’s probably
at a washout bottom. Five years ago, at the top of the bubble, its Index
peaked at around 3,300. Now it’s about 100. That’s one of the worst
crashes in history, anywhere. I suspect that there are some very viable
businesses available – companies selling for a tiny fraction of book. A
smart speculator would be on a plane to start sorting through the
wreckage. I think fortunes could be made there, especially since it now
has capital controls. Which, incidentally, will become common
everywhere.
The more important take-away from all this is that no bank in the
world is safe at this point. They are all in exactly the position as
Cypriot banks were before their crash.
L: In today’s world, you almost have to have some money in the bank, if only to pay bills with.
Doug: Just keep enough cash for a few months’ expenses. A bigger
crash is coming, there’s absolutely no question about that in my mind.
The only question is whether it happens later this week, or next week,
or next month, or a few months from now. I don’t know, but it won’t be
long before it all starts unraveling.
I cannot stress strongly enough that I think anyone who chooses to
keep a significant amount of money in any bank is patently stupid. I
mean that in the technical sense of stupidity – being an unwitting
tendency towards self-destruction. And I don’t just mean European banks,
though they are certainly closer to the edge – but it’s true of
Japanese banks, it’s true of American banks, Chinese banks: it’s true of
all of them.
L: So where do you keep your money?
Doug: There is only one answer, as far as I’m concerned: buy gold.
One of the most important financial truths I know is that gold is the
only financial asset that is not simultaneously somebody else’s
liability. This is not an academic distinction. It never was, but the
urgency of it is much more pressing today.
L: Do you really think the Cyprus crisis could spark the unwinding of
the bankruptcy of the rest of the global financial system? Is this the
first domino?
Doug: Well, it could be. But I have to tell you, I’m here in Punta
del Este in Uruguay, and I just had lunch with some Spanish real estate
developers. They have quite substantial assets, actually, and they
didn’t seem worried at all. I was surprised; these are rich,
sophisticated people. But they seemed like most US tax slaves, who think
Bernanke cares about them and can kiss everything and make it better.
These guys see problems, but they think Christine Lagarde and her fellow
bureaucrats are going to sort everything out. They see that real estate
prices are off 50% in Spain, and are thinking that this is the time to
buy. I think it’s way too early, of course. Better to wait for massive
riots. A lot of that property is going to catch fire from Molotov
cocktails.
L: That’s pretty striking. Of all Europeans, it’s the Spanish and
Italians you might expect to be most worried, and these Spanish guys
didn’t seem worried at all?
Doug: They were pretty sanguine. If I were in Europe, I’d run to my
bank first thing. But I haven’t heard of any bank runs in Europe. When
it does happen, however, government printing presses will be running at
even higher capacities than now, and people will have the problem of
what to do with all that cash. A lot – like my Spanish friends I had
lunch with today – are viewing real estate as a place to park wealth
that can’t just dry up and blow away. That’s true, of course. But
property has significant carrying costs, and prices can plummet if there
are no buyers; there’s a huge liquidity risk associated with getting
overweight in real estate. That brings me back to gold again.
L: Some people are saying that increased distrust of banks in Europe
might actually be bearish for gold prices. Europeans needing to move
large amounts of cash will buy dollars, and many people are still
programmed to sell gold when the dollar rises.
Doug: That’s plausible, but I just don’t see gold going down in a big way at this point. I really don’t.
I just met a fellow in Cafayate last
week – a very interesting guy who runs a gold exploration project in
south Kivu province in the DRC. He says that there are Chinese all over
Kivu, buying gold from the artisanal miners, on the order of 40-50,000
ounces per month – and they’re paying London spot prices. Apparently
this is under the auspices of the Chinese government itself, as it
allows them to dump dollars off the market and cart home the gold. The
Chinese are stuck with far more dollars than they can get rid of without
provoking a panic, so this makes perfect sense. It’s quite clever of
them, actually.
And this is just one story, from one place. So no, I don’t see gold going down.
L: Okay. We already know that you say to buy gold for prudence; are there any other investment implications?
Doug: Well, I mentioned the Cyprus stock market. That’s the sort of
thing I might do if I were younger – hop on a plane tomorrow and go
check out the opportunities for crisis investing at a time when there
are almost no other buyers.
More generally, I just have to say again that the trailing half of
the storm is coming, and it’s going to be much worse than 2008.
Investors who don’t rig for stormy weather will go down with their
ships.
You know, another thing my Spanish friends said was that more and
more people they know are thinking of moving to South America. It’s much
cheaper, there’s less crime, less regulation, less taxation, and more
opportunity. I think other Europeans – all Europeans – should think of
following suit.
L: And folks in the US?
Doug: Them too. Things look calmer in the US right now, but the
government in the land that was once America is now much more powerful,
aggressive, arrogant, grasping, and ruthless than the governments in
Europe.
I’d say to all people, all around the world, that the failure of
Cyprus is like the failure of the Credit-Anstalt Bank in Austria that
failed in 1931 and set off the banking crisis that followed the stock
market crash of 1929, and then the Great Depression. You need to plan
for further crisis and the deepening of the Greater Depression that has
already started – and start taking concrete steps now to implement that
plan.
I can’t say exactly when the next big step down is coming, but it is.
L: Okay Doug. Well… another cheerful conversation – but an important one, I think.
Doug: You’re all very welcome.
While Doug Casey isn’t rummaging through the wreckage of the Cypriot
stock market in search of bargains, he is implementing a plan to create
new wealth. It’s a strategy that he, fellow contrarian investing legend
Rick Rule, and others have used to make multiple fortunes over the
years. On April 8 you can hear them reveal exactly how they do it… and how you can too.
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