As investors hope for a Santa Claus rally in the days ahead, the Grinch is looking to steal their holiday cheer.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell announced another interest rate hike on Wednesday – this time by half a percentage point. Although the bump up in rates was smaller than previous hikes this year, it wasn’t exactly the pivot stock market bulls had wanted.
They fear the economy is already heading for a deep recession next year and worry any additional increases in borrowing costs could destabilize the highly leveraged financial system.
Stocks got pounded on Thursday and Friday. Precious metals markets succumbed to the broader selling pressure as well. Metals markets have been performing strongly over the past two months.
This week’s sell-off doesn’t necessarily mark a change in that trend. So far, it’s merely a pullback.
There is, of course, a chance that interest rate jitters could spark further downside volatility in gold and silver prices. But persistent inflation pressures will likely provide a longer-term floor underneath hard asset markets.
Even if the Fed gets inflation rates down, all that means is that the currency will depreciate at a less rapid pace. There is no chance that central bankers will pursue sound dollar policies to restore its lost purchasing power.
Both consumers and businesses are feeling the squeeze from higher prices. At the same time, they are bracing for a hard landing in the economy due to the Fed’s aggressive rate hikes.
Clearly, the public cannot trust central bankers to deliver on their mandate of stable prices. Nor can central bankers be counted on to deliver a stable economy.
At the root of the Fed’s failures is the problem of fiat currency itself. Money untethered to anything but arbitrary policy decisions made by officials is inherently untrustworthy.
Dishonest money that erodes in value leads inevitably to opportunism, corruption, and fraud. It’s no coincidence that the countries with the highest inflation rates tend to be the most corrupt, chaotic, and impoverished.
Recently, we’ve seen chaos in cryptocurrency markets. Earlier this week, former crypto king Sam Bankman-Fried was charged by federal prosecutors with large-scale fraud in the collapse of his FTX exchange. Billions of dollars in digital assets entrusted to FTX may be unrecoverable.
The crypto craze that gave rise to shady characters like Bankman-Fried was a product of zero interest rate policy and the rampant speculation it engendered.
Under a sound money system, people don’t need to speculate on exotic assets to avoid losing purchasing power on their savings. There will always be booms and busts in markets, and there will always be bad actors playing con games to get others to part with their money.
But cheating and scheming get amplified in a regime of dishonest money. We will only ever be able to fix what’s broken in our economy and in markets by first fixing the money itself.
In the retail precious metals market, supply constraints have eased in recent weeks, and premiums have come down some, particularly on silver bars and rounds. Money Meals is not quoting any shipping delays.
If you are seeing broad shipping delays at any dealer right now, it would be wise to avoid doing business with them. The wholesale market is currently well-supplied, so delays should be considered a red flag.
Mike Gleason is a Director with Money Metals Exchange, a national precious metals dealer with over 50,000 customers. Gleason is a hard money advocate and a strong proponent of personal liberty, limited government and the Austrian School of Economics. A graduate of the University of Florida, Gleason has extensive experience in management, sales and logistics as well as precious metals investing. He also puts his longtime broadcasting background to good use, hosting a weekly precious metals podcast since 2011, a program listened to by tens of thousands each week.