Monday, 17 May 2010

Steve's note: Our longtime friend Doug Casey is one of the most original thinkers we 
know…He shared his thoughts on the euro crisis this week in the most recent issue of 
Conversations with Casey. Below, you'll find his predictions and a couple ideas on 
how to prepare for…

The Greatest Changes Since the Industrial
 Revolution.............. 


From Conversations with Casey

Monday, May 17, 2010
Louis James: Do you think Greece will default?

Doug Casey: First, you shouldn't talk about "Greece" like that. We're talking 
 about the Greek government's debt. And my view is that not only will they 
 default, but that they should default. Generations of future Greek taxpayers 
should not be turned into serfs in order to pay for the excess of today's Greek 
politicians. And the people who lent the Greek government all that money to do
 stupid things with should be punished for both their lack of foresight and their 
collusion with corruption.

And it would be doubly good if this happened, because it would greatly hamper 
the ability of the Greek government to borrow money in the future, which would 
limit how much it could spend on all the disastrously stupid things governments 
spend money on.
I'll go further and say that all of these struggling governments, including the U.S. 
government, should default on their debts and punish the people foolish enough to 
lend them money. The world would be a better place if governments around the 
globe were unable to borrow money.

L: Okay, that may be what should happen, but will it?

Doug: I think so, sooner or later, but only when those in government see no other 
options. Entirely apart from the fact the nation-state is on its way out. Remember, 
defaults won't destroy what capital there is in the world. Technologies, factories, 
farms, mines, and such will still exist. They will just change hands. Hopefully, that 
will transfer a lot of capital out of public hands and into private hands, where it 
belongs.

L: But the EU has just made it very clear that, like the U.S., they will do "whatever 
it takes" to hold their doomed house of cards together. It doesn't look like they will
let Greece – sorry, the Greek government – or any other government default.

Doug: Well, these idiots can say whatever they want, but they really have only 
two choices; they either default and their currency units might maintain some 

integrity. Or they can print up more currency units, which will destroy their currency. 
I think that's what's most likely to happen. That's why I keep saying that the euro 
is a total dead duck – it doesn't have a prayer of surviving.

L: So, let's inch a little farther out on the limb and put a time frame on this. I realize 
that's tempting the fates, but what the heck – we've got your crystal ball out already, 
what does it tell you?

Doug: Okay, if only for its entertainment value, I'll say that within the next year, we 
will see things noticeably coming unglued. And they'll just keep getting worse and worse, 
until governments finally get out of the way of what must happen to set things right, 
painful as that will be.

And for that to happen, the lapdogs and cheerleaders in the media, and the people 
who listen to them, have got to stop looking to the government for solutions to the 
problem. People have got to stop looking for clever men who will do the "right things
" to make everything better. The government can't solve the problem because the 
government is the problem. It needs to… go away.

L: I don't think I'll hold my breath waiting for the masses to realize that.

Doug: No. The average guy has been educated to think of the government as both a
 cornucopia and his friend. When actually, it's a black hole and his enemy. That's why 
I sound like such a pessimist – I'm not a gloomy person, but the necessary understa
nding
 of economic fundamentals simply isn't out there. What passes for economics in 
mainstream thinking is built on quicksand, totally fallacious premises that guarantee disaster.

The masses of desperate people who think things are getting better are only fooling
 themselves; things are getting worse, not better, no matter what rosy lenses the 
 governments put over the TV cameras around the world.

I'm not predicting the end of the world, but I'm convinced that the changes developing 
now will not only be the biggest changes since the Great Depression, but will result in 
the greatest changes to society since the Industrial Revolution.

L: So what would be some signs that things are really starting to come unglued? 
When will it be time to seriously batten down the hatches, maybe head to Cafayate, 
 Argentina or some other place you've selected to weather the rest of the storm?

Doug: Well within the next few years, we're going to see accelerating destruction of 
the dollar. It may not look that way compared to the euro, but that'll just be because 
the euro is circling down the same toilet even faster, as is the yen. But the euro's 
purchasing power will start dropping by 20 or 30 percent per year, and then we'll 
start to see what's happening in Greece now happening in the U.S.

By then, it will have happened in Spain and Ireland, and with most of its customers 
tightening their belts, it will hit China as well. Americans, who've become used to 
living above their means for decades are not going to like tightening their belts, and
 it's going to get very ugly.

I hate to sound apocalyptic, but the whole world shows every sign of being on an 
economic volcano that's rumbling.

L: We'll need a requiem for the ill-prepared. This will hopefully not include our 
readers. So let's talk about investment implications. You said once that you could
 see the currency crisis actually being good for stock prices, as people fleeing 
 depreciating dollars look for someplace, anyplace to park their wealth…

Doug: Yes. Well, at least notionally, stock certificates represent ownership of real 
wealth. Companies create profit – capital – or they go out of existence. But the 
problem with betting on a general stock market rally in response to a dollar crisis i
s that a lot of company earnings could evaporate, along with the notion that owning
 their stock represents any sort of wealth. So, yes, there could be a panic into the 
stock market, but that could be very short-lived.

L: What might you see as a sign that stocks, in general, are a good buy?

Doug: Needless to say, I want to buy low and sell high. Historically, when the stock 
market bottoms, not just in the U.S., but everywhere in the world, dividend yields 
rise over six percent, up to as high as 15 percent. Book values drop to less than one. 
Price/Earnings ratios drop to less than six to one. By those parameters, the general 
equities markets are still grossly overpriced.

So, yes, we could see stock markets going higher. With governments all over the 
world creating trillions of currency units, they will undoubtedly ignite more bubbles. 
One of those bubbles could be in stocks in general – but I doubt it. Not while there's
 such obvious reason to be pessimistic about corporate earnings. My best guess will
 be no surprise to you; I think the most likely bubble, driven by fear and greed, will
 be in the precious metals…