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Published: October 22, 2010
"We will not devalue the U.S. dollar," U.S. Treasury
Secretary Tim Geithner said this week (or words to that effect).
And by golly, the people believed him!
The dollar soared on his "reassurance." Gold fell.
Wow... I was stunned.
Do THAT many investors NOT know their economic history?
On June 30, 1997, Thailand's leader said, "We will not devalue
our currency." Like Geithner this week, Thailand's leader backed
it up with all kinds of powerful, incontrovertible statements...
like "if the currency is devalued, we will all become poor."
But three days later, on July 3, 1997, Thailand devalued its
currency.
The currency crashed. Check out a chart of Thailand stock market
during the time of the crisis... down 90% in terms of U.S.
dollars:
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Can you imagine a 90% bust?
Thailand is just one well-known example of the "we will not
devalue" speech, followed by a massive devaluation. We've seen
it happen over and over again...
Porter Stansberry and I started out writing investment letters
in the mid-1990s, focusing on emerging markets. The "we will not
devalue" line got to be a joke around the office... As soon as
we heard "we will not devalue" from an emerging-market finance
minister, it was time to bet on a devaluation.
It's like this... "We will not devalue" is the equivalent of
your 7-year-old child hustling into the room and announcing,
"There's no need to count the number of cookies in the cookie
jar!"
It makes you think... "Well, I wasn't worried in the least about
the cookies in the jar. And I wasn't worried about my child
lying, either. But now we'd better seriously check on both. "
Now, the U.S. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner just gave the "we
will not devalue" speech. "No need to count those cookies in the
cookie jar!" he's hustling to tell us. Uh oh.
Our currency can't have a crashing devaluation like we've seen
time and again in emerging markets. We simply have a different
type of currency system in the U.S. than the emerging markets
did when their currencies crashed overnight.
But Geithner just uttered the magic words of future currency
collapse... So far, the market has believed him. The dollar
soared and gold crashed on his comments.
I thought investors were in on the joke...
My instinct - built on years of watching politicians say the
same and end up doing the opposite - is to do the opposite of
what investors did after Geithner's speech. My instinct is to
run from the dollar, for the long run.
The dollar soared and gold crashed after his speech. But the
fate of the dollar was sealed this week. Looking ahead, the
future is bright for gold and bleak for the dollar.
Invest accordingly.
--Steve Sjuggerud
Editor
Daily Wealth
Note: This article originally appeared on
Daily Wealth |