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How Mervyn the Magician and Helicopter Ben are Destroying Your Dollar
April 24, 2008


Thursday, April 24, 2008 - Vol. 10, No. 98

How Mervyn the Magician and Helicopter Ben are Destroying Your Dollar

Today's comment is by John Pugsley, best-selling author and Chairman of The Sovereign Society since its inception.

Dear A-Letter Reader,

As you know, the biggest banks worldwide have owned up to enormous losses, now more than US$300 billion and still counting, over the last year. That includes the failure and bailout of the fourth largest U.S. investment bank, Bear Sterns.

But against this background of staggering losses by the big banks, only five small banks have failed in the last 12 months. These are...

1. Metropolitan Savings in Pittsburgh
2. Douglass National Bank in Kansas City, Missouri
3. Miami Valley Bank in Lakeview, Ohio
4. NetBank in Alpharetta, Georgia
5. Hume Bank in Hume, Missouri

It Only SEEMS like the Banking System is Relatively Sound

In truth, that number is deceptively low compared to crises of the past. In fact, the list of possible problem banks remains at historically low levels. There are only 76 institutions on the FDIC's "watch list." In 1990, as the S&L crisis unfolded, there were close to 1,500 banks on the list, and 800 failed between 1990 and 1992.

However, while it might seem that the banking system is sound, federal banking regulators are gearing up for potential problems. The FDIC announced that it plans to hire at least 140 new employees to deal with a possible increase in bank failures over the next year.

You Have to Treat the Disease - Not the Symptoms

Dealing with economic problems is like treating a disease. Treating your symptoms without finding the cause of the symptoms can lead to disaster.

You could treat a mild headache with aspirin. But if an undetected brain tumor is causing your headache, then failure to identify and treat the cause will be fatal.

What is the cause of the recent failures of both large and small banks? Simply put, it is the monetary policies of central banks, the very entities that now are struggling to solve the crisis. Unfortunately, they are prescribing exactly the same medicine to cure the problems that caused the problems in the first place.

Central Bankers Are Passing Out Placebos to Cure This Crisis

This past week Mervyn King, Governor of the Bank of England, announced that the bank was prepared to swap £50 billion (US$100 billion) in government bonds for securities backed by mortgages and credit card debt. On this side of the Atlantic, Ben Bernanke has loaned triple that amount, US$360 billion, to troubled banks again, against collateral made up of securities backed by sub-prime IOUs.

The Federal Reserve was the first central bank to begin discounting the sub-prime securities that triggered the widespread banking problems of the past months. But now, other central banks are following suit as the ripples of the crisis spread in ever-widening circles around the world. Some observers suggest that these loans secured by sub-prime debts will rise above US$1 trillion. That could be just the beginning.

So what caused this credit crisis disease? It's simple. But to fully understand it, you have to step back and view the evolution of the U.S. dollar over the past 200 years.

The Evolution of the Falling Dollar...
That Led Us to This Mess

In the 19th century, the dollar was defined as 1/20th of an ounce of gold. At the time, banks simply took deposits in gold and issued their own private IOUs in the form of banknotes redeemable in gold on demand. This process naturally restricted credit expansion, because you had to have tangible gold to back your dollars.

Then Congress created the Federal Reserve in 1913. Congress gave the Fed a monopoly on printing U.S. dollars. Also, initially, the Fed held reserves of gold to back its issues of Federal Reserve Notes.

However, eventually, the U.S. government wanted to break free of the restrictions on credit expansion. So they gave the Fed the authority to "discount" commercial paper from banks. In other words, the Fed could buy IOUs and pay for them with newly printed dollars.

Eager for profits, banks made loans, then sold the IOUs to the Fed, and then made more loans. The federal government financed its expenditures for World War I through borrowing from banks. Banks sold enough of those federal IOUs to the Fed to keep the credit supply growing.

The banks also loaned to businesses, investors and speculators, ultimately financing the asset frenzy called the Roaring Twenties.

As loan demand grew, the amount of notes rose against the fixed amount of gold the Fed held in reserve. Eventually, the speculative frenzy drove stock and real estate prices to unsustainable levels, and the bubble popped in 1929.

A credit contraction ensued as borrowers began to default on debts they shouldn't have held in the first place. This should have turned into a short-lived economic correction that purged bad loans and punished those that made them. But the government stepped in to stop this healthy correction and wound up seeding the Great Depression.

So Similar it's Scary

Today's credit crisis is essentially identical to the 1930s. It's a consequence of failed monetary policies. Just like the Roaring Twenties, those in power refuse to allow the bad loans to be purged from the system. The federal government allows central banks to buy these loans for newly printed money.

And meanwhile, Mervyn the Magician and Helicopter Ben ensure that their currencies will drop in value and the economy will suffer.
As mentioned, a century ago the dollar would buy 1/20th of an ounce of gold. Today it will buy only 1/950th of an ounce. In truth, it should buy less than half of that. Gold is underpriced. This is clear when we recognize that the dollar has lost far more purchasing power in terms of other goods.

The dollar today will buy what a nickel would buy at the turn of the last century. If you factor in productivity growth from advances in technology, then today's dollar is worth less than 1% of what it was then. This is all the consequence of 10 decades of relentless credit expansion.

Back in the Good Old Days - Before the Fed

The tie between the dollar and gold governed inflation in the first century of this nation's existence. But that restraint fell away in the 20th century - and within just two short decades of when the Fed began.

Even the idea that the dollar is backed by the government's IOUs (aka "Treasury bonds") has evaporated. We now move into the final phase: The backing of the U.S. dollar with the IOUs of sub-prime auto loans and sub-prime mortgages.

In other words, your dollars are backed by the full faith and credit of that guy who couldn't handle his mortgage or car payments on the other side of town.

Decades of relentless credit expansion have given birth to the same speculative monster that characterized the Roaring Twenties. Today is just like every credit crunch of the past. Still the pundits fail to identify or simply ignore the original cause of the boom that led to failure.

As always, they blame the free market itself. The inevitable result? We are in store for fresh, new layers of government regulation, and those, in turn, will lead to even deeper long-term problems. What form will those problems take? If history is our guide, inflation is in our future.

What Can You Do to Avoid this Mess?

What can an individual do to survive financially in a world of constantly depreciating currency? Doing battle to change the system, and abolish the Federal Reserve System's ability to debase the currency, is a noble cause, and is one possible action.

Congressman Ron Paul has argued for abolishing the Fed during his campaign for the Republican nomination for President. Unfortunately, the odds of overthrowing the current system through the democratic process is negligible to none.

The only practical solution for the average individual is self defense.

Real values are in the tangible things we all need and use, and in the companies that create those things. Defense requires searching for assets that will retain value-those include better managed foreign currencies, commodities that will rise in value as money falls in value and ownership of profit-making companies that are fundamentally sound.

These are the solutions that have been consistently advocated by The Sovereign Society. For a decade we have presented them in our flagship publication " The Sovereign Individual," and through our seminars and books.

The ultimate fallout from this latest round of monetary expansion is inevitable, and it's heading our way. Take refuge now.

JOHN PUGSLEY, Chairman

P.S. Take your financial fate out of the Fed's irresponsible hands. Consider joining us this May 14-17 in Panama for literally dozens of ways to save your purchasing power and protect your assets from "that guy who couldn't handle his mortgage or car payments on the other side of town." Click here for details.

Also, to learn more about these questionable banking policies be sure to read my colleague, Eric Roseman's comments on banks debasing their own shares at the bottom of today's A-Letter.


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Offshore:

Why 400,000 Americans Are Saying
"So Long" to the U.S. Part II

China's GDP Growth Chart

As I noted yesterday, we at the Sovereign Society often wrote that each year upwards of 400,000 U.S. citizens and resident aliens leave America to make a new home in some other nation.

A large part of those migrating 400,000 are wealthy people who pay more than the lion's share of taxes in this country. That's why many leave - they're escaping this rising tax tyranny.

Two years ago, I referred readers to Kevin Phillip's latest book, American Theocracy: The Peril and Politics of Religion, Oil and Borrowed Money in the 21st Century. In it, Phillips outlines how America transformed from a true democracy into an imperial power.

Now, Phillips has a new book - only this time, he's covering the slow migration of wealthy Americans moving out of the United States for the same reason the first Americans moved here - to escape political tyranny.

In his new book, Bad Money, Reckless Finance, Failed Politics and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism (Viking Press 2008), Phillips is writing about what one security analyst called "one of the slowest moving train wrecks" in history.

Phillips gives an overview of the current debt debacle. He notes that the 1980s were the start of "three profligate decades." That's when expanding mortgage credit and financial instruments like collateralized debt obligations (CDO's) led to an orgy of leveraging and irresponsible speculation.

Greenspan's Federal Reserve kept the bubble afloat with easy money, while federal regulators and credit and bond ratings agencies looked the other way.

By 2007, total American indebtedness was three times the size of the gross domestic product. That actually surpasses the record set during the Great Depression. From 2001 to 2007 alone, domestic financial debt grew to US$14.5 trillion from US$8.5 trillion and home mortgage debt ballooned to almost US$10 trillion from US$4.9 trillion, an increase of 102%.

Fortunately, there is a solution to this mess. With the dollar shrinking in value daily, with American freedoms and civil liberties curtailed more every year, with deficit government spending continuing unchecked, is it any wonder reasonable Americans are considering life elsewhere?

We said this was coming 10 years ago. That's how The Sovereign Society came into being.

We offer our members a detailed road (and trans-oceanic) map to profitable offshore investments and greater freedom offshore. We give you step-by-step guides for legal ways to protect your assets, lower taxes, and - yes - even how (and where) to move your residence and/or citizenship offshore - if that's what you want.

Wherever real freedom can be found, that's where freedom lovers should be.

BOB BAUMAN, Legal Counsel

P.S. To find out all about places where you may be able to lower or avoid taxes legally, click here.


Wealth:

What Happens When Banks Water Down Their Own Shares

The United Kingdom's second-largest bank is about to follow Union Bank of
Switzerland (NYSE-UBS) down the same path of shareholder dilution.

Spokesmen for the Royal Bank of Scotland or RBS (NYSE-RBS), just announced the bank wants to raise a hefty US$23.8 billion and book a US$8.6 billion write-down in 2008.

Though the distressed bank stocks will eventually lead the upcoming rally in world markets following months of protracted declines, the longer term picture for investors looks increasingly bleak. More banks are pounded by credit woes. So they are literally selling off their future earnings through equity dilution or rights offerings. In other words, these banks are destroying their shareholders net worth just to survive.

Royal Bank of Scotland Looks to Follow UBS'S Path...Down

$SSEC Chart

The United Kingdom and Switzerland have been among the hardest hit countries since sub-prime caused credit markets to explode last July. Although this sub-prime mess has NOT affected most Swiss banks, UBS holds the booby-prize responsible for about 20% of total sub-prime write-downs or about US$38 billion.

More banks in the United Kingdom and in the United States are expected to announce rights issues this quarter. In some cases, these banks might even cut dividends.

Citigroup, UBS, Wachovia and Washington Mutual have already sliced or omitted dividends over the last several weeks. There is more to come as banks struggle to conserve capital amid a continuing rash of write-downs.

Despite the tidal wave of rights issues this year, some banks are worth buying ahead of a powerful, liquidity-based rally later this year.

I am focusing on those banks that will continue paying dividends and that have little or no sub-prime mortgage exposure. My favorites include U.S. Bancorp (NYSE-USB), Lloyds TSB (NYSE-LYG) and Toronto-Dominion Bank (NYSE-TD). In the interest of full disclosure, I own all three in my retirement account.

ERIC ROSEMAN, Investment Director


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