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The Great Treasury Trap...

Technical Analyst & Author
December 8, 2008

One of the more unusual manifestations of the financial meltdown this year has been the dollar spike, that caught a lot of traders by surprise, and was generated in part by a stampede into the percieved safety of short-expiry US Treasuries, which necessitated the purchase of US dollars. This is now arriving at its ultimate conclusion where Treasury yields have been beaten down to zero, which means that in real terms they are negative, resulting in the bizarre situation where investors are now paying the US government for the privilege of lending them money. This is clearly an untenable circumstance that cannot be expected to continue indefinitely, and it has only been occasioned by desperation, as panicked investors have sought safe haven.

Just how extreme this situation now is is readily apparent on the long-term chart for the 3-month Treasury Bill Yield. As we can see the yield has dropped very close to zero, meaning that investors are getting a negative real rate of return. What this means is that investors are completely out of ideas, and are prepared to settle for losing less in Treasuries than they fear losing elsewhere, such as in commodities or the stockmarket. This also suggests that bearish sentiment is at critical lows, which is in itself bullish.

Having driven yields down to zero in short-expiry Treasuries, and thus exhausted their potential for upside price appreciation, the next logical step for the panicked has been to fan out into the more risky long-term expiries, which is why we have seen the 30-year T-Bond price race ahead over the past few weeks and break out and advance vertically to new highs.

The vertical advance in the long bond price is of course having the effect of collapsing its yield, as we can see on the long-term 30-year T-Bond yield chart below. Since the yield could theoretically continue to collapse towards zero, we could yet see further appreciation in the price of this bond, although being already critically overbought, it may pause to unwind the overbought condition first.

Watching investors fleeing into the perceived safety of US Treasuries is akin to watching people board the Titanic in the movie - you know that they are doomed. This is because the United States is totally bankrupt - more than bankrupt in fact, since its debts are physically impossible to repay in any circumstances and what we are witnessing now is the cowards way out - the creation of money in whatever quantity is necessary to prevent total gridlock. The Paulson bailout plan was a Trojan Horse that opened the floodgates to exponentially expanding bailouts that have already ballooned to something like 10 times the original $700 billion. This has one inevitable outcome - hyperinflation, which, incidentally, can take hold even in conditions of deepening recession/depression - and it looks like the US now faces the particularly grim prospect of depression coupled with hyperinflation. Like most assets, Treasuries will be ravaged by hyperinflation and rendered worthless as the dollar is destroyed, with the added ever-increasing risk of default thrown in. Thus, it is clear that those cowering in their perceived Treasury safe haven are in for a very rude shock. They should have bought gold, which has no counterparty risk and whose intrinsic value can never be destroyed, but they have been miseducated to believe that gold is a commodity when it is in fact pure money. By the time they wake up to this fact they will find themselves scrambling to cash in Treasuries whose value will be rapidly evaporating to switch into gold which will be running away from them faster than they can catch it.

Clive Maund, Diploma Technical Analysis
[email protected]
www.clivemaund.com

Copiapo, Chile, 8 December 2008

Clive Maund

Clive P. Maund’s interest in markets started when, as an aimless youth searching for direction in his mid-20’s, he inherited some money. Unfortunately it was not enough to live a utopian lifestyle as a playboy or retire very young. Therefore on the advice of his brother, he bought a load of British Petroleum stock, which promptly went up 20% in the space of a few weeks. Clive sold them at the top…which really fired his imagination. The prospect of being able to buy securities and sell them later at a higher price, and make money for doing little or no work was most attractive – and so the quest began, especially as he had been further stoked up by watching from the sidelines with a mixture of fascination and envy as fortunes were made in the roaring gold and silver bull market of the late 70’s.

Clive furthered his education in Technical Analysis or charting by ordering various good books from the US and by applying what he learned at work on an everyday basis. He also obtained the UK Society of Technical Analysts’ Diploma.

The years following 2005 saw the boom phase of the Gold and Silver bull market, until they peaked in late 2011. While there is ongoing debate about whether that was the final high, it is not believed to be because of the continuing global debasement of fiat currency. The bear market since 2011 is viewed as being very similar to the 2-year reaction in the mid-70’s, which was preceded by a powerful advance and was followed by a gigantic parabolic price ramp. Moreover, Precious Metals should come back into their own when the various asset bubbles elsewhere burst, which looks set to happen anytime soon.

Visit Clive at his website: CliveMaund.com


With gold stolen by Conquistador Francisco Pizarro from the Inca Empire in 1532, Spain financed its conquest of Europe.
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