The Most Important Chart in the World
The barbarous relic is showing signs of life as the US is embarking on unsustainable fiscal deficits
“People that use fiat currency as a store of value — there's a name for them; we call them poor.”
Michael Saylor, Chairman of Microstrategy
For thousands of years, gold was money. But in the West, people forgot about it and stopped saving in it. It was replaced by pieces of paper with the faces of famous people on them, and we were told this was money. Governments, sorry, central banks, can print this fiat money in unlimited quantities. People and markets have to trust that this money won’t be debased too quickly, which would erode its purchasing power. But based on what has been happening in the gold market in recent weeks, the market seems to have doubts about the ability of central banks to protect the value of their fiat currencies.
Over the past five years, the price of gold has gone up by more than 80% in US Dollars, and much more when measured against most other fiat currencies. Did gold suddenly get better? Was an upgrade recently rolled out? Did the supply change? No, no, and no. Gold has remained exactly the same. It is still element 79 on the periodic table, and its symbol is still Au. It hasn’t changed. It’s the money that got worse.
One way to visualize the loss of value of the US Dollar against gold is to flip the chart and show the change in value of the US Dollar against gold. Over the past five years, it has been down more than 40%.
Many of my readers are in Europe, so let me show you how the Euro has done against gold since the Euro was launched on January 1, 1999.
Since it was launched, the Euro has lost more than 87% of its value against gold. Put another way, a European investor that would have just bought gold on January 1, 1999, and not done anything with it for 25 years would have eight times more euros today.
Most people are hardwired to avoid volatility in their own fiat currency. They earned this money, so the thought of seeing the value of their hard-earned money go down, even temporarily, is unbearable. But this is the wrong mindset. Fiat currencies are designed to lose value. Central bankers keep telling you they aim to get inflation to 2%, i.e., they want your money to lose 2% of its value every year.
But in reality, through debasement, the increase in the number of units of the currency, the value of assets has gone up significantly more.
Just because you are paid in a token that central banks can print in unlimited quantities doesn’t mean you have to save in this token…
So what is going on at the moment, and why are investors suddenly rushing to buy gold?
Long story short, the US is on a fiscally unsustainable path. The chart below, prepared by Bank of America, shows that the US government's annual interest expense is projected to reach $1.6 trillion by the end of the year, three times more than it was before Covid-19 and twice the defense budget. For reference, the US Government revenues in 2023 were $4.4 trillion.
Over the past decades, investors were conditioned to think that high real rates, i.e., nominal interest rates minus inflation, were bad for gold because gold doesn’t pay any interest. Gold tended to move in parallel with the price of long-term bonds (government debt). But something broke in 2020. Government deficits went through the roof, and they were financed with freshly printed money. When inflation picked up, which only came as a surprise to people unaware of the work done by Milton Friedman decades ago, the price of government debt went down, and real interest rates became positive again. But gold didn’t go down. It went up.
The chart below shows the change in the price of TLT, an Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) that holds long-term US Government debt, compared to the price of gold since 2017. The market has spoken on which of the two is the better store of value. This is the most important chart in the world at the moment.
Since Covid, central banks have ramped up their gold purchases. They stopped increasing their stock of US Treasuries and instead bought gold. In addition to providing a hedge against currency debasement, gold cannot be seized the way the foreign exchange reserves of the Russian central bank were seized following the invasion of Ukraine. It’s too early to tell to what extent the seizure of these reserves is playing a role in the recent surge in gold purchases by central banks, but it should not be dismissed.
The “barbarous relic,” as John Maynard Keynes called it, may have some life left in it after all.
When you read about the US Dollar strengthening against other fiat currencies, remember that it’s all a relative game. What the market is telling us right now is that, despite paying 5% interest in US Dollar, “cash is trash,” as Ray Dalio famously said a few years ago.
What could be the next step? Let’s bring in ChatGPT to explain debt monetization.
A sovereign debt spiral culminates in debt monetization when a country continuously borrows to finance its debt, eventually forcing the central bank to print more money to cover the obligations, potentially leading to inflation without resulting in default.
ChatGPT
If you want to have an idea of how it could unfold, you can read the IMF paper below that was published in 2011.
Bonus
A short clip of Michael Saylor responding to the question of when he would sell his Bitcoin.
Quiz
Now, reader, I have a quiz for you. I generated two charts showing the change in the value of the US Dollar against a well-known digitally scarce asset over the past five and ten years. Can you guess which one it is?
Of course, it’s the US Dollar against Bitcoin. Not so scary when you look at it from this angle…
Whether investors choose gold or digital gold (Bitcoin) is a matter of generation, personal preference, and tolerance to volatility, but ultimately, it’s the same trade: a hedge against fiat currency debasement.