Hyperinflation and the changes it is
going to generate Part II
Continuing from Part 1 of this series;
if you have not read the 1st part please click on the
following link
Hyperinflation Part 1
Power grid
Maintaining and upgrading the power grid
is another sector that will provide many good paying jobs.
Utilities are running low on qualified field personnel who
are able to install and maintain power lines and when the US
decides it’s finally time to upgrade their dying and aging
power grid, the demand for already scare labour will soar
even more. Virtually anything with electricity will do
well, for some positions such as those of an engineer,
degrees are required but for those chaps that work in the
field, repairing and installing new power lines, degrees are
not required, the pay at times is upwards of $50 hr.
There are many reasons why this
hyperinflationary cycle is going to different and possibly
even more vicious than previous cycles. We listed some of
them in the March 24th update.
One of the main reasons things will be
worse has to do with the individual; today’s individual has
become too used to credit, too used to buying something he
cannot afford and to used to believing that he deserves the
lifestyle of a king with the earnings of soldier at best and
a beggar at worst. In the old days it was considered very
foolish to buy something you could not afford, today its
seen as being cool to buy anything and everything on credit.
This kind of mentality can only be broken and disrupted
through brute force and extreme pain and this is exactly
what is going to occur in the years to come. For those who
lived within their means or took our advice and practised
living 1 or 2 standards below their means, the transition
will be relatively easy and they will have many chances to
deploy this extra money into mouth watering plays, for the
rest it could potentially turn out to be their worst
nightmare.
Anything that needs to be dug out or
grown or created from scratch will start to rise in value.
Thus owning a piece of land might not be such a bad idea in
the long run. We are not talking about a farm but lots from
½-5 acres in size.
Companies will continue to lay off long
after the economy starts to improve; they always acts
slowly, they only started to fire when the situation went
from bad, to worse to extremely unbearable; they should have
started cutting back expenses the moment the outlook started
to look dim. This system of mass lay offs creates a domino
effect, 5000 workers fired in one city, means that fewer
will go out to eat, thus many restaurants might close up or
cut the size of their work force down to compensate for the
drop in business, this in turn will affect the car dealer
and the dry cleaner and so on, thus the total loss is much
larger. During moments of fear the reaction is much
stronger than during moments of euphoria, thus when
companies fire, they fire twice as fast as they were hiring
when times were good. This does not mean the situation is
going to be dire and there is no light in sight. Think of
the situation like this, when you buy a car, you know that
one day you are going to have a problem like a flat tire, or
something worse. Now you can sit down and do nothing or you
can make sure that your spare tire is inflated, that you
have the tools to change the tire etc. for other problems
you can take out road side insurance, thus if you break down
the towing fees will be free or very low. You can also
always have the mechanic check your car before you go on a
long trip, etc. Now even if something goes wrong you are
prepared for it, while the other chap who is not prepared is
going to be in a lot of trouble. In the same manner, this
hyperinflationary phase that is going to hit us, should not
be viewed as a disaster but as monumental opportunity for
those that are prepared; meet it with you eyes wide open and
not sealed and you will be amazed at what opportunities you
will spot in the years to come.
Methods
to protect or hedge oneself against the upcoming
hyperinflationary phase
Solution 1
As we stated last week one of the
simplest and easiest methods would be to open
An option for those who cannot or do not
want to travel will to invest via currency ETF’s
FXY= Japanese Yen FXF= Swiss
Franc, FXE= Euro FXC= Canadian Dollar
FXA= Australian Dollar FXS= Swedish
Krona
Finally the last option would be to open
a Pay Pal account, fund it and then activate the currency
option feature. Right now they offer the Euro, Canadian
dollar, Swiss Franc and British Pound.
Asia;
here we favour the Chinese Yuan and the Singapore and Hong
Kong dollar
Europe; our
main choice was the Swiss franc but the Swiss National banks
decision to weaken the Swiss Franc has us a bit worried;
this could possibly be the beginning of a new trend, where
each nation starts to devalue its currency in order to make
its exports more affordable, something we spoke about
several times in the past few years.
Swiss
National Bank decision this week to weaken the Swiss franc
has raised fears that other central banks will follow suit
in a wave of currency devaluations.Since the financial
crisis began two years ago, currency intervention from a
major central bank had been seen as unlikely because foreign
exchange moves were too low a priority to merit attention,
much less a consensus among global policymakers. “The Swiss
have broken the glass on beggar-thy-neighbour exchange rate
policy,” said John Normand, global head of currency strategy
at JPMorgan.
The SNB,
faced with the prospect of deflation, said on Thursday the
Swiss franc’s strength was an “inappropriate tightening” of
monetary conditions. The SNB said it intervened to prevent
any further appreciation.
Full story
Thus instead of having one strong main
choice we now have to lean towards the Euro and the Franc
with equal intensity. To be quite honest we would be more
open to putting this money into the Australian and Canadian
dollars then investing in the Swiss Franc or Euro.
North
America; the Canadian dollar,
with its resource based economy it will do very well when
hyperinflation hits the world.
Solution 2
Put some money into Gold, Silver and
Palladium bullion or any other hard assets such as farm
land, antiques (you should know what you are doing when it
comes to antiques or work with someone who does otherwise
you could be taken for a ride), etc
Palladium bullion is a screaming long
term buy in the 180-220 ranges, and it will remain a good
buy up to 300.
Silver is a screaming buy in the
7.50-8.00, a great buy in the 9.00-9.60 ranges and a good
buy up to 11.00
Gold; if gold dips into the 650-700
ranges it will be a very good buy and it is a good buy up to
the 840 ranges.
Once again individuals should not put all
their money into bullion but only a portion of it.
Another option to consider is to deploy a
small bit into old valuable coins that are selling close to
the price of bullion; examples are Austrian 100 Coronas, $20
St Gaudens, etc; these coins will slowly but surely start to
rise in value significantly faster than Gold bullion; at the
peak we believe the differential between bullion and
Numismatic coins could be as high as 500%.
Solution 3
A portion of your funds should be
deployed into stocks, primarily those in the commodities
sector. Stocks in oil, uranium, natural gas, Gold,
Palladium, Silver, etc, sectors will one day trade to
dizzying heights and we are sure it will create many more
new millionaires.
We have offered 3 solutions, as we are
expecting hyperinflation to be the order of the day in the
not very distant future, holding onto cash will not be a
wise thing and thus the least capital should be deployed
into solution 1, more of ones money should be deployed into
solution 2 and 3.
Trends
In times of extreme hardship, people
want outlets, and we believe that recreational drug usage
will start to take off again. The drug ecstasy will probably
make a strong come back or a new equivalent or potentially
stronger drug might hit the markets. Generally speaking
usage of all drugs will start to rise in the years to come
as individuals look for a means to escape reality. We are
considering putting out a new index and calling it the
recreational drug index, we have been privately keeping tabs
on the situation for the last 9 months, and it appears that
we might be at the crux of a new trend.
Universities and colleges
With the cost of education rising and
with not too many job prospects out there because most are
looking in the wrong fields, the old days of easy money in
the fields of Law, investment banking and soon to join them
the medical sector will be a thing of the past. Thus expect
many colleges to severely cut back on the courses they
offer, start to squeeze more students per class room, etc,
all in a bid to cut down costs. We suspect that many
universities will be forced to shut down also.
Lawyers, Doctors, investment bankers, and
many of those related to the financial sector (Auto dealers,
auto salesman, high end stores, etc).
Individuals in these sectors are going to
get hammered if they have not already been hammered. The
days of the big law firms are numbered, law firms who lived
like parasites by making a living of suing individuals and
companies will find that they will suddenly run out of
clients. Hospitals used to raping patients will find that
less and less are willing to pay; the biggest threat is
going to be medical tourism. Right now the average person
can get the same treatment overseas at 1/10th to a ¼ of the
cost back home and the service is at minimum 2-3 times
better.
Conclusion
It is said that individuals need to be
taught a hard lesson in order to appreciate what they have
and prevent them from ever repeating the mistakes that got
them in the first place. This might be true for say perhaps
one generation and maybe if you push it to two generations.
The majority is ruled by greed and fear and will continue to
be for the foreseeable future. We had so many boom and bust
situations, some extremely bad, some mediocre and some in
between, but despite this, humans continue to repeat the
same mistakes again and again. The current disaster and
the coming hyperinflationary disaster will at most teach
only those that experienced it a lesson, unless of off
course parents sit down and carefully explain to their kids
what occurred and teach them the value of saving and living
within their means; some will do this but the majority will
not.
Thus do not waste time or energy in
thinking that this or any disaster will bring about long
term change; it will not. In the end, we can only change
ourselves, but most think they have the capacity to change
another without even trying to work on themselves first.
Changing oneself is a very hard task, trying to change
another without understanding ones self is a mission
destined for monumental failure. The reason humanity has
not learnt anything from its past lessons is simple (the
message here is esoteric, one needs to take the time to
understand it, for simply handing it out will be of no use,
remember nothing good comes easily, if it does, it was not
worth much in the first place) is because humans fail to
understand one thing; this one thing is that the majority
can do nothing. What do we mean by this?
In order to do one must see, in order to
see, one must know what to look for, so how can one do when
one does not see, worse yet even when one thinks that they
know the answer, they are usually looking a the wrong
picture for they have no concept of what they should be
looking for. Thus trying to do without knowing what you are
looking for, or what you are looking at results in nothing.
If every individual took the time to truly understand how
they function, they would in turn gather valuable data in
terms of how others function. A life time is spent just
telling others what to do, very little is spent on telling
oneself what to do and how to do it.
To show you how incapable we are of
doing anything; make a list of everything you will like to
do next week and then try to do it, 99% of the time you will
find that you have a very hard time fulfilling even half of
everything you put on that list. Another interesting task is
to sit down and try to remember in detail what you did the
week before; here 100% will fail unless they have a
photographic memory, for most the whole week will have been
just a blur and all the upcoming weeks will also be blurred.
Thus one can push things even more and ask the question, are
we really living or alive? If we were truly alive why don’t
we remember in detail what we have done for just one week of
our lives; we must stop here because we are now opening up
another can of worms.
To conclude life in the next 3-6 years
is going to be filled with unprecedented changes; note how
fast the world’s economies crashed, one moment everyone was
partying and having a good time, the next minute almost
everyone was broke. Russian billionaires were lighting
cigars with 500 euro notes in 2007 and early 2008, those
same chaps are now crying tears of blood. Extreme
extravagance always results in extreme pain. When you spend
money, spend money not to show off but to please yourself,
pretend nobody is watching when you are spending, and if you
do not feel happier than you are faking it. Most spend to
impress others, and thus they get trod upon by these very
same people when they fall down and bite the dust.
As we spot changes we will notify our
subscribers of the impending changes and what measures can
be taken to protect ones self and ones assets. Right now
it would be very wise to have some money in another
country. Individuals should also be investing a portion of
their funds into bullion (Gold, Silver and Palladium) and
finally some money should be put aside and invested in
stocks that primarily are in the commodities sector.
As we stated last time a disaster is
nothing but an unprecedented opportunity in disguise; the
trick is to keep your eyes wide open and not allow fear to
seal them shut. It is when the streets are flowing with
blood that one finds the biggest and greatest opportunities
of a life time. Continue to live 1-2 standards below your
means and try to get rid of as much debt as possible.
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