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February 23, 2011; Interview with Dr.

Marc Faber:

Posted on 25 February 2011.

The McAlvany Weekly Commentary


with David McAlvany and Kevin Orrick

Kevin: David, before we go to our guest today, Marc Faber, the oil market is really on
It is very volatile. We are starting to see it hit those kinds of
numbers that we were seeing a couple of years ago.

David: Here in the states we have West Texas Intermediate above 90, we have Brent at
108. We have gold, which is up in recent days, as much as 40 dollars. It is moving
above that $1400 level. Silver, impressively, above $34. Kevin, something very
significant is happening in the metals market, which is worthy of note for all of our
listeners. We have been in a trading range with the gold-silver ratio above 45, going back
to 1983, and we just broke through this last Friday. We are trading at around 42
currently.

The question is: Will it hold? Will silver maintain its advantage in the marketplace? We
want to get an international perspective, not just on the precious metals and commodities
today, but on a number of things. Our guest has grown up in Europe, and has lived for
the last 30 years in Asia, so he brings, certainly, an international flavor.

Kevin: This is why we have Dr. Marc Faber on the program today. He is, of course,
publisher of the Gloom, Boom, and Doom Report. He always has very insightful ideas as
to the way we should be looking at the news right now.

David:
Germany. This was the second
major upset following Westphalia last year. We had the German election in Baden-
Württemberg in late March, in which we watched the dominance of the Christian
Democratic Party relinquished.
How does that play into the future of the EU, the
strength of the currency, or the strength of the union, itself?

Marc Faber: I am not a political expert about European matters, and you should ask a
politician about this. But in general, the point is simply this: The German public is
probably not particularly happy about the fact that Germany bails out the PIIGS, in other
words, Portugal, Ireland, and so forth. So there is great opposition to Germany being part
of the EU, and Germany supporting governments, including Greece, which have abused
the system by not maintaining fiscal restraint.

David: It seems that the pressures remain for Europe. The debts remain for the
individual countries. As you mentioned, Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain, and
as long as the debts remain, the issues, whether it is insolvency or fiscal pressure, are a
real burden, still, yet to bear.
What we would like to also look at is the U.S. equities market. The developed world has
had a decent run in prices since March of 2009, and the emerging markets have not done
as well, relatively speaking. Maybe you can speak to over-valuation and under-valuation,
vulnerability in the equities markets.

Marc: fantastic run. The S&P has doubled, and


in emerging markets we have price increases that are far better than a doubling of the
indices. In general, emerging economy stock markets since 2003 have way outperformed
the S&P. So we had unbelievable moves in markets. In the U.S. we only had on two
previous occasions a move such as we had in the last 27 months from 666 on the S&P to
over 1300, and that was in 1934, coming off a major low when the market had declined
by 90% between 1929 and 1932, and then another move into between 1934 and 1937,
and that was then followed by renewed extreme weakness in the markets.

So stocks have done fantastically well, and I was fortunate to be relatively positive about
equities between October 2008 and March 2009.
I would have thought
the market would rebound, maybe by 40-50%, but not a doubling.

The markets in the world, between March 2009 and today, have done actually much
better than anybody had expected. Starting in November 2010, the American market
started to weaken, and I think that we have just begun a more significant correction in the
U.S., whereby I expect the fact that international investors over-weighted the American
economic stock market until recently, and under-weighted the U.S., and now money is
flowing back into the U.S. I think emerging stock markets will go down further, but I
would probably just stay out of the U.S.

David: As you look at the cyclically-adjusted price-earnings ratio for the S&P, it recently
hit 24, which is very similar to what we saw in 1928, very similar to what we saw at the
market peak in 1937, and also in the massive bull market run up until 1966, where
valuations were clearly overdone. But what that implied was underperformance for a
number of years following, not necessarily a cataclysmic collapse, but certainly
underperformance.

So if investors are expecting a healthy rate of return in equities over the next ten years, it
would certainly be difficult to argue for that, based on the cyclically-adjusted price-
earnings multiples. What you are suggesting is that emerging markets and developing
world markets are really in the same boat, which would imply that the whole concept of
decoupling is not necessarily one that you would agree with?

Marc: I think that there will be some decoupling, and whenever you look at the markets,
different sectors perform differently, but generally speaking, in the same direction. So if
someone were to take a very bearish view about emerging stock markets, I do not think
he should go into European stocks or U.S. stocks. I take a more balanced view. I think
we are in a money-printing environment. If something happens in China, they will print
even more than the U.S. prints. If something in happens in Europe, they will also print
money.
They are going to print money everywhere, and with interest rates, essentially on short-
term deposits, being zero, or below zero, inflation-adjusted, in other words, if inflation
rates everywhere in the world are higher than the interest rates on short-term deposits, I
-

I think that you cannot make a very bullish case for stocks, but I think you can make a
more bullish, or more positive, case for stocks than say, for U.S. government bonds,
because the specifics in the U.S. will stay very high, and the quality of the banks will
diminish and the interest payments as a percent of tax revenues will go up, and so forth.
and world growth, or if you
believe in disaster, in either case you are probably better off in equities than in bonds.

In terms of returns, I agree with you, I do not think that the returns will be fantastic, but if
you print money it is very difficult to say what the returns will be, because it is not stocks
that adjust on the downside, but it is the currency that adjusts on the downside. So in
theory, it is possible that the Dow could double if you print money, or it could even go up
10 times, depending on how much money you print, and with Mr. Bernanke at the Fed, I
think it is quite likely that a lot of money will be printed.

David: That is a critical observation, that what is happening is really a degradation of


global currencies. Certainly we saw that in Germany in 1919-1923, when the German
stock market went up nearly 14 times, yet in terms relative to gold, still diminished
significantly, so it was a better bet than buying German bonds, or sitting in German
marks, but on the other hand, it was still a relative loser, you could say.

I guess one of the critical issues today, for investors, is existing in a world of negative
real rates of return, where you have both an increase in taxation that is a potential, but the
reality of money-printing and inflation, which strip away any of your real returns. With

into assets like gold and silver?


rates of return otherwise?

Marc: An investor has the choice to invest in real estate, in equities, in bonds, in
commodities, and I separate precious metals from commodities, from industrial and
agricultural commodities, because I consider it money. Also we can buy art, and stamps,
and other collectibles.

I have a large subscriber base for my Gloom, Boom and Doom Report, and I asked each
one of them to let me know if they have the impression that the cost of living increases,
in other words, the percentage of how much they pay every year, more, for their families,
is less than 5%. So far I have not received a single email, so I think inflation is around
5%. The return on deposits is essentially zero. And then people begin to worry, because
paper money is no longer a store of value, and at the same time, it is a bad unit of
accounts, because it is debased by the central bank.

So people buy paintings, they buy real estate, they buy stocks, they buy, to some extent,
bonds last year, we had large inflows into bond funds and they buy precious metals.
The problem with all these easy monetary policies and artificially low interest rates, is
that not everything goes up at the same time. In other words, we had a bubble in the
NASDAQ in 1997 to March 2000, then the bubble burst. Then we had a real estate
bubble 2000-2006. Then in September 2007 and July 2008, oil went from $78 to $147
and the CRB went ballistic, so we had a commodities problem. In 2008 everything
collapsed. Oil, in an unprecedented move, went, in July 2008, from $147 to a low of $32
in December 2008. In other words, in six months, oil fell from $147 to $32 a barrel.

These kinds of moves are brought about by the Federal Reserve monetary policies, and
for the investor, there is no point to be overly dogmatic. From 1999 to 2007 and 2008,
gold outperformed equities by a huge margin. Also, silver outperformed equities by a
huge margin. In 2009, equities outperformed gold, and from here onward, it is going to
be the same pattern. There will be suddenly other assets that appreciate, and some assets
go down.

I happen to think that some prices will go down, but they have become oversold on a
near-term basis, because over the last three months, the whole world became overly
enthusiastic with the inflation phase, so the thinking was, government bonds are bad, and
equities are good. That may reverse for a little while, but I think long-term if you look at
ten years, one of the worst investments will be long-term U.S. government bonds.

David: What measures might the Fed and the Treasury employ to defend the bond
market as it is so critical to the financing of our deficits and our way of life in America?

Marc: I think they do not necessarily want to support the bond market, because the debt
issuance is so huge, they almost have to monetize part of the debt. I have read Treasury
reports in 2010 by Tim Geithner saying the U.S. government debt increased by more than
2 trillion dollars during that period of time. The deficit, in my opinion, mathematically,
cannot come down, because 80% of the budget is mandatory expenditures, in other
words, you cannot cut them. Legally, they have to be met.

Of the remaining 20%, you can cut a little bit, but not that much, because then services
collapse. In my view, the fiscal deficit of the U.S. will stay around 1½ trillion dollars for
as far as the eye can see, and maybe even go to 2, or 2½ trillion dollars, and then the
interest expenditures on the debt go up. So actually, over time, in my view, unless taxes
are increased significantly, and spending is cut significantly, not by a little bit here, a
little bit there, the budget will never again be balanced, and that will then necessitate, in
time, QE-III, QE-IV, and QE-V. Taxes cannot be increased dramatically, because if you
increase them very substantially, we will go straight back into a recession.

David: It seems like perhaps one of the best strategies that they have to employ is a
manipulation of the CPI numbers so that people assume that real-world inflation is 2 to
2½%, while running at a 5% rate, essentially cutting the debts in half over a long enough
period of time. If real-world inflation is, as John Williams of ShadowStats has said,
closer to 8%, then we are alleviating a lot of our existing stock of debt, at a rapid rate.

Marc: Correct. But you understand, you are not really helping the economy, you are

money and keep it in the banking system, who simply do not want to speculate. So, it is a
but it will become obvious one day, when with their money they can buy less and less. In
other words, the purchasing power of money goes down. That is why I am telling
everyone, if you already own cash, consider gold and silver to be a component of your
cash portfolio, and own some of it, because the government can appropriate it, but
otherwise they cannot fiddle around with it in terms of increasing the supply.

David: You made that distinction earlier, that precious metals you do not put in the same
category as commodities in general, because you consider it money. Is that only the case
when money that we are used to, here in the U.S., for example, U.S. dollars, or in
Is that the
environment where you treat precious metals as a cash alternative?

Marc: Yes, and also, I would s


collapse in the Chinese economy, which is not necessarily my prediction, but some
people say there is a horrendous bubble. I agree, if we define a bubble as artificially low
interest rates, and excessive credit growth, then we have a colossal bubble in China. But
it may go on for another 2-3 years.

Then it will have a very negative impact on the demand


for industrial commodities. And we may get, at some stage, in some sectors of the
economy, the risk of deflation. In other words, the demand for industrial commodities
could, for a year or two, decline, and so, obviously, the price of copper, and of nickel, and
also, to some extent, oil although this would depend very much on political
developments would go down.

In that environment, there will be more money-printing. If the S&P drops 20%, all the
people that are now criticizing Mr. Bernanke for QE-II will go back to their old pattern,
as they have done between 1980 and 2007, to encourage the Fed to print money, because
they all benefitted from rising asset prices. But as soon as the S&P drops 20%, the
American policy-makers will all again be for further monetary policy measures and
further fiscal measures.

At that time, obviously, you could end up with a global economy that is very weak, but
where prices go up for certain commodities, such as gold and silver.
because of an oversupply situation, but they move because they are a safe currency.
They become the proper unit of account. In all hyper-inflation economies, eventually
people give up their own currencies as a unit of account.

If you had gone to Zimbabwe during their hyper-inflation, or if you had gone to Germany
during their hyper-inflation, or Mexico during their hyper-inflation, nobody in those
countries calculated prices anymore in their domestic currency, it was all then becoming
a dollar standard, or gold standard. That is why I think that people should have some of
their money in gold and silver.

David: Let me ask a question about silver, because this is a bit of a tricky juncture. From
1983 to the present, we have seen the gold and silver prices fluctuate in a relationship
between 100-to-1 on the high side, down to 40-to-1 on the low side. You would have to
go back to the 1960s and 1970s to find a different pattern of behavior, where those metals
favored silver even more greatly, and the ratio traded between 20 and 50. Are we in a
transition back to that earlier period, where silver perhaps continues to outperform?

And as a part of that question, too, let me throw China into the mix. You mentioned the
possibility, not that it is your position that we will see a collapse in China, but if that were
to happen as a result of rapid credit expansion, cheap capital, large-scale fraud, the
incentives that have been there to ignore risk, if we do see a collapse in China over the
next 2-3 years, does that impact silver negatively, because of its industrial component, or
is that such a marginal factor, when gold and silver are being treated as money?

Marc: First of all, I think that gold and silver will move in the same direction, but as I
tried to explain earlier on, when you print money, essentially, everything goes up, but at
different times, and with different intensities. In a bull market, usually, toward the tail
end of the bull market, silver tends to grossly outperform gold. So, yes, maybe it will
outperform gold, but I stick to gold because my safe deposit box is not large enough to
put enough silver in it, whereas, it is large enough to put enough gold in it.

Different people have different takes on this, and my friend Eric Sprott, who knows the
silver and gold markets extremely well, thinks that silver will go ballistic. Yes, maybe
that is true, but I do not think that silver will go up alone, without gold also moving. The
direction will be same. Concerning China, yes, I suppose that silver would have a larger
industrial component than gold, but as I pointed out, if China collapses and there is a
huge deflationary scare, I suppose that it is the real industrial commodities, like copper
and nickel and so forth, would be more vulnerable than gold and silver.

David. Coming back around to the U.S. markets, we have seen, for at least 12 months
now, record insider selling. That has been very pronounced at the banks, starting in about
November of 2009, where there has been a disproportionately high degree of selling by
insiders, as opposed to buying. Would you combine that with other indicators, like
liquidations from bear funds?

Marc: I would just like to say about the insider selling, this is also something that I
follow and that concerns me. But having said that, and being on the boards of different
companies, let me explain to you what happens.
company and I get stock options, and I exercise the stock options and then to diversify, I
may sell some of the shares I own in that company through my stock option plan, and
then I may go and buy other stocks in the market, or make other investments.

Because of the proliferation of option plans in the last twenty years or so, there is a
natural tendency that when a CEO sells shares, it is reported, but when he invests with
hedge fund management, or buys shares in other companies, it is not reported. I think
there has been a change in the validity of this statistic. But I agree with you, at the
present, the ratio is so huge between selling and buying, that it is a rather negative
indicator. Then, when you combine that with other indicators that are also negative, a
hugely over-bought market, for instance, I think some caution is in order.

David: To look toward the end of our conversation today, one of your recent reports you
What would you suggest is the end-game? Are we
talking largely about the credit markets, interest rate reversals, and an end to the
shenanigans that have been played for 30-40 years in those credit markets? What is your
area of greatest concern, and what would be some practical things that investors can do in
these harrowing transitions?

Marc: I think we are all doomed. I think what will happen is that we are in the midst of a
kind of a crack-up boom that is not sustainable, that eventually the economy will
deteriorate, that there will be more money-printing, and then you have inflation, and a
poor economy, an extreme form of stagflation, and, eventually, in that situation, countries
go to war, and, as a whole, derivatives, the market, and everything will collapse, and like
a computer when it crashes, you will have to reboot it.

For the investor, the question is: How do I navigate through this complete disaster that is
going to unfold? And I think if you look at different asset classes real estate, equities,
bonds, cash, precious metals I suppose that you have to be diversified. I think real
estate in the U.S. may go down another 10% or so, or even 15%, but I am always telling
people, if you can buy the piece of land or the house you like, what do you actually care
if it does down another 10%? If everything I bought in my life had only gone down 10-
15%, I would be very rich, because a lot of things became worthless, especially loans to
friends, and bonds, and so forth.

Look at the history, for example, of Germany, for the last 100 years. They had World
War I. They had the hyper-inflation in World War II. The bond-holders got wiped out
three times. If you owned Siemens, and you still own Siemens today, it was not a
fantastic investment, but at least you still have something. You were not wiped out. I
think that in equities you will be better off because you have an ownership in a company,
than by being the lenders to companies, and the lenders, especially, to governments.

David: Do you anticipate an entry point into equities that perhaps rivals what we saw in
1932, or perhaps 1949, or more recently, 1982, as we launched into a massive bull
market? Do you anticipate seeing values even remotely close to that?

Marc: In a money-printing environment, it is very difficult to know what is actually


cheap and what is expensive. Is the price of wheat high, or is it low? Inflation-adjusted,
it is extremely low. In nominal terms, it is relatively high. I believe that, in March 2009
when the S&P was at 666, the market was actually much cheaper than is generally
perceived, because of the money-printing, and I do not anticipate that we will see 666 on
the S&P again, in nominal terms.

In other words, they are going to print so much money that the S&P could be at, perhaps,
2000, but in real terms, it could be down below the lows of March 6, 2009. Maybe in
gold terms, we could one day reach a ratio of Dow Jones to gold of 1-to-1, as we were in
1980. In other words, the Dow could be perhaps at 10,000 or 12,000, and gold could be
at the same level.

That is why I am advising people to accumulate gold. Can gold have a correction? Yes,
there has been a little bit too much euphoria about gold, and we may have a correction,
but I do not think we are in a bubble in the price of gold. In fact, I could make a case that
gold, at this level of $1400 an ounce, is cheaper than in 1999, when I look at the
unfunded liability growth of the U.S., at the credit growth of the U.S., and at the
household growth, and at the money printing, and at all the wealth creation that happens
in China and Russia.

Just consider, when I started to work in the 1970s, it was said there were two billionaires
in the world. One was Rockefeller, and the other one was Mr. Ludwig. Then in 1980
there were, I think, six or eight billionaires. Now you have thousands of billionaires.
The paper money has become of lower value, and in that environment, it is conceivable
that actually stocks do not go down a lot, in nominal terms, but they go down inflation-
adjusted, and not inflation-adjusted by what the government is publishing, but in
inflation-adjusted terms, as John Williams points out. He says inflation is running at 8%
per annum. I have it slightly lower, depending also on the household, whether you have
children, or no children, and where you live, but I would say between 5-10% in America
is probably a realistic figure, and between 8-12% in countries like India, China, Viet
Nam.

David: Thank you for joining us today. We will look forward to touching base with you,
perhaps, later in the year, for your insights and they are particularly welcome, with an
international emphasis. You have lived in Asia for a long time. We will have some
questions, perhaps, as we move into the summer months, specifically, on China, as we
explore some of the issues relating to that particular market. You have been writing on
that since 2004 in your book, , and we want to unpack that with you a
bit more in a future program, but thanks for joining us today.

Marc: Sure, my pleasure. Thank you very much. Bye-bye.

David: Have a good night.

Kevin: David, as always, that was a fascinating interview with Dr. Faber. Something
that he brought out that I thought was fascinating, is that we look at things in nominal
value in cash, but in reality, we have talked over and over with people, to let them know
that they need to be dividing the value of something in something that would be, what Dr.
Faber termed, a proper unit of account. He said he thinks gold will be the proper unit of
account.

David: Kevin, it has been that, classically, but I think that point is so critical, because as
we discussed with Dr. Faber today, it is being in a money-printing environment that
distorts all realities. You really do not know what you have in equities. You really do
not know what you have in real estate. You really do not know what you have in bonds
or cash deposits. These things become really irrelevant if you are still looking at your
monthly statements or going through a personal balance sheet and coming up with
nominal figures. That is a real challenge, Kevin, to shift your thinking to real terms, but
it is absolutely critical if investors want to walk through the next 5-10 years relatively
unscathed.

Kevin: David, something that will really make you stop and ponder, he did say that gold,
at $1400 today, is still cheaper than it was in 2009, when it was hundreds of dollars less
than it is, just given the amount of money that has been printed.
David: Kevin, as I go back through his worst-case scenario step-sequence, it really does
follow a similar pattern to what we have discussed in general terms, financial crises
becoming economic, becoming political, becoming geopolitical, wherein stagflation leads
to an environment where individual countries focus on their individual problems to the
exclusion of the rest of the world, and world trade suffers as a result. That is an
environment that is ripe for conflict war.

We did not get a chance to discuss this with him, but when you look at the recent merger
of the German bourse and the New York Stock Exchange, it is interesting that this creates
the largest derivative clearinghouse in the world, and the profits of both bourses, when
you are looking at derivatives traded, come, primarily, from trading and derivatives, and
not the underlying products. In other words, if you are looking at the volume of stocks
traded on the New York Stock Exchange, it now is trivial, by comparison, to the profits
generated from hybrid products.

Kevin: They are not real.

David: They are loosely connected to those real companies. So, Kevin, it is just bizarre
when you think about some of the best companies in the world, whether it is a Nestles,
whether it is a Proctor and Gamble, whether it is an Intel, the derivative products and
investment themes that surround it actually are more important today in the financial
world than that product, itself. That is a clear distortion of where Wall Street has gone,
and where the financial markets have gone, but it also speaks to how dangerous these
markets are, and he suggests that at the tail end of our interview today, wherein you have
a collapse in the derivative market, because it truly is the greatest fiction we are living
with today.

Kevin: It reminds me of smaller fictions that we have been through in the past, David. In
the late 1990s we started to see this tech stock boom get to the point where companies
that did not produce a profit or a single product, were worth more than United Airlines,
because they had dot.com behind their name. That was false. That collapsed.

And talking about derivatives, remember, just a couple of years ago, when we were
having the show when we saw that the derivatives market, combined with the
commodities, and currencies, and equities, passed a quadrillion dollars. That was
unfathomable. Then, of course, we had the collapse.

David: You stack that number against the roughly 1 trillion dollars that is available, at
any price, in the gold market, and you can realize that when things come unglued, and
that includes the derivatives market, as well, just financial securities, the real stuff in the
financial securities markets, stocks and bonds, is over 200 trillion, but again, relative to
such a small, minute space.

I think one of the things that he mentioned today is a critical reminder that gold and silver
are more and more being traded as currency, rather than a commodity, and that takes
place, particularly in those countries that are experiencing currency crises, to some
degree. He mentions India, China, and Vietnam, experiencing inflation rates of between
8 and 12%, and our inflation rate in the U.S. being somewhere between 5 and 8%! Is it
right.

Kevin: The other thing that is amazing is, look at how few people, still, are actually
saying that. We have talked about this over the last couple of weeks, how few people are
actually participating in the only market that is protecting them from this inflation.

David: He mentions, in his most recent report of the Gloom, Boom, and Doom Report,
that he has spoken to a group of hedge fund managers in Singapore, a group of private
investors in South Korea, over 1000 people, and then very man-in-the-street type

Kevin: Even Switzerland.

David: Even Switzerland, and in each instance, in a roomful of over 1000 people, only 3-

It is surprising, Kevin.
silver in a b Who is participating in driving it higher?

The classic reality, Kevin, when you are dealing with a bull market and its bubble
dynamics, is that the bull market ends when the last person who has capital, and interest,
can actually come into the market. The reality is, we are so far from that, when you look
at the stock of capital that exists in the world today. The theme today: Money-printing
impacting all financial markets, in disproportionate ways. There is a lot of money, and a
lot of people But I think
that we are on the cusp of that changing.

Kevin: That makes gold, still, the best kept secret in the world.

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