Books by Rickards, James
- Rickards, James.
Currency Wars.
New York: Portfolio / Penguin, 2011.
ISBN 978-1-59184-449-5.
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Debasement of currency dates from antiquity (and doubtless from
prehistory—if your daughter's dowry was one cow and
three goats, do you think you'd choose them from the best
in your herd?), but currency war in the modern sense first
emerged in the 20th century in the aftermath of World War I.
When global commerce—the first era of globalisation—became
established in the 19th century, most of the trading partners
were either on the gold standard or settled their accounts
in a currency freely convertible to gold, with the British
pound dominating as the unit of account in international trade.
A letter of credit financing a shipload of goods exported from
Argentina to Italy could be written by a bank in London and
traded by an investor in New York without any currency risk
during the voyage because all parties denominated the transaction
in pounds sterling, which the Bank of England would exchange for
gold on demand. This system of global money was not
designed by “experts” nor managed by “maestros”—it
evolved organically and adapted itself to the needs of its
users in the marketplace.
All of this was destroyed by World War I. As described here, and in
more detail in
Lords of Finance (August 2011),
in the aftermath of the war all of the European powers on both
sides had expended their gold and foreign exchange reserves in
the war effort, and the United States had amassed a large fraction
of all of the gold in the world in its vaults and was creditor in
chief to the allies to whom, in turn, Germany owed enormous reparation
payments for generations to come. This set the stage for what the
author calls Currency War I, from 1921 through 1936, in which central
bankers attempted to sort out the consequences of the war, often
making disastrous though well-intentioned decisions which, arguably,
contributed to a decade of pre-depression malaise in Britain, the
U.S. stock market bubble and 1929 crash, the
Weimar Germany hyperinflation,
and its aftermath which contributed to the rise of Hitler.
At the end of World War II, the United States was in an even more
commanding position than at the conclusion of the first war. With
Europe devastated, it sat on an even more imposing hoard of gold,
and when it convened the
Bretton Woods conference
in 1944, with the war still underway, despite the conference's list
of attendees hailing from 44 allied nations, it was clear that the
Golden Rule applied: he who has the gold makes the rules. Well, the U.S.
had the gold, and the system adopted at the conference made the U.S. dollar
central to the postwar monetary system. The dollar was fixed to gold
at the rate of US$35/troy ounce, with the U.S. Treasury committed to exchanging
dollars for gold at that rate in unlimited quantities. All other currencies
were fixed to the dollar, and hence indirectly to gold, so that
except in the extraordinary circumstance of a revaluation against the
dollar, exchange rate risk would not exist. While the Bretton Woods system
was more complex than the pre-World War I gold standard (in particular,
it allowed central banks to hold reserves in other paper currencies in
addition to gold), it tried to achieve the same stability in exchange rates
as the pure gold standard.
Amazingly, this system, the brainchild of Soviet agent
Harry Dexter White
and economic charlatan
John Maynard Keynes,
worked surprisingly well until the late 1960s, when profligate
deficit spending by the U.S. government began to cause foreign
holders of an ever-increasing pile of dollars to trade them in
for the
yellow metal.
This was the opening shot in what the author deems Currency War II,
which ran from 1967 through 1987, ending in the adoption of the present
system of floating exchange rates among currencies backed by nothing
whatsoever.
The author believes we are now in the initial phase of Currency War III,
in which a perfect storm of unsustainable sovereign debt, economic contraction,
demographic pressure on social insurance schemes, and trade imbalances
creates the preconditions for the kind of “beggar thy neighbour”
competitive devaluations which characterised Currency War I. This is, in
effect, a race to the bottom with each unanchored paper currency trying to
become cheaper against the others to achieve a transitory export advantage.
But, of course, as a moment's reflection will make evident, with currencies
decoupled from any tangible asset, the only limit in a race to the bottom is
zero, and in a world where trillions of monetary units can be created
by the click of a mouse without even the need to crank up the printing
press, this funny money is, in the words of Gerald Celente, “not
worth the paper it isn't printed on”.
In financial crises, there is a progression from:
- Currency war
- Trade war
- Shooting war
Currency War I led to all three phases. Currency War II was arrested
at the “trade war” step, although had the Carter administration
and Paul Volcker not administered the bitter medicine to the U.S. economy
to extirpate inflation, it's entirely possible a resource war to seize
oil fields might have ensued. Now we're in Currency War III (this is the
author's view, with which I agree): where will it go from here? Well,
nobody knows, and the author is the first to acknowledge that the best a
forecaster can do is to sketch a number of plausible scenarios which might
play out depending upon precipitating events and the actions of decision
makers in time of crisis. Chapter 11 (how appropriate!)
describes the four scenarios Rickards sees as probable outcomes and
what they would mean for investors and companies engaged in international
trade. Some of these may be breathtaking, if not heart-stopping, but
as the author points out, all of them are grounded in precedents which
have already occurred in the last century.
The book begins with a chilling wargame in which the author participated.
Strategic planners often remain stuck counting ships, troops, and
tanks, and forget that all of these military assets are worthless
without the funds to keep them operating, and that these
assets are increasingly integrated into a world financial system
whose complexity (and hence systemic risk, either to an accidental
excursion or a deliberate disruption) is greater than ever before.
Analyses of the stability of global finance often assume players
are rational and therefore would not act in a way which was ultimately
damaging to their own self interest. This is ominously reminiscent
of those who, as late as the spring of 1914, forecast that a general
conflict in Europe was unthinkable because it would be the ruin of
all of the combatants. Indeed, it was, and yet still it happened.
The Kindle edition has the table of contents and
notes properly linked, but the index is just a list of unlinked terms.
November 2011
- Rickards, James.
The Death of Money.
New York: Portfolio / Penguin, 2014.
ISBN 978-1-59184-670-3.
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In his 2011 book Currency Wars (November 2011),
the author discusses what he sees as an inevitable conflict among
fiat currencies for dominance in international trade as the dollar,
debased as a result of profligate spending and assumption of debt by
the government that issues it, is displaced as the world's preeminent
trading and reserve currency. With all currencies backed by nothing
more than promises made by those who issue them, the stage is set for
a race to the bottom: one government weakens its currency to obtain
short-term advantage in international trade, only to have its
competitors devalue, setting off a chain of competitive devaluations
which disrupt trade, cause investment to be deferred due to uncertainty,
and destroy the savings of those holding the currencies in question.
In 2011, Rickards wrote that it was still possible to avert an era
of currency war, although that was not the way to bet. In this volume,
three years later, he surveys the scene and concludes that we are now
in the early stages of a collapse of the global monetary system, which will
be replaced by something very different from the status quo, but whose
details we cannot, at this time, confidently predict. Investors and
companies involved in international commerce need to understand what is
happening and take steps to protect themselves in the era of turbulence
which is ahead.
We often speak of “globalisation” as if it were something new,
emerging only in recent years, but in fact it is an ongoing trend which
dates from the age of wooden ships and sail. Once ocean commerce became
practical in the 18th century, comparative advantage caused production and
processing of goods to be concentrated in locations where they could be
done most efficiently, linked by the sea lanes. This commerce was
enormously facilitated by a global currency—if trading partners
all used their own currencies, a plantation owner in the West Indies shipping
sugar to Great Britain might see his profit wiped out if the exchange
rate between his currency and the British pound changed by the time the
ship arrived and he was paid. From the dawn of global trade to the
present there has been a global currency. Initially, it was the British
pound, backed by gold in the vaults of the Bank of England. Even commerce
between, say, Argentina and Italy, was usually denominated in pounds and
cleared through banks in London. The impoverishment of Britain in World War I
began a shift of the centre of financial power from London to New York,
and after World War II the Bretton Woods conference established the U.S.
dollar, backed by gold, as the world's reserve and trade currency. The
world continued to have a global currency, but now it was issued in
Washington, not London. (The communist bloc did not use dollars for
trade within itself, but conducted its trade with nations outside the
bloc in dollars.) In 1971, the U.S. suspended the convertibility of
the dollar to gold, and ever since the dollar has been entirely a
fiat currency, backed only by the confidence of those who hold it that
they will be able to exchange it for goods in the future.
The international monetary system is now in a most unusual period. The
dollar remains the nominal reserve and trade currency, but the fraction
of reserves held and trade conducted in dollars continues to fall. All
of the major currencies: the dollar, euro, yen, pound, yuan, rouble—are
pure fiat currencies unbacked by any tangible asset, and valued only
against one another in ever-shifting foreign exchange markets. Most of
these currencies are issued by central banks of governments which have
taken on vast amounts of debt which nobody in their right mind believes
can ever be paid off, and is approaching levels at which even a modest
rise in interest rates to historical mean levels would make the interest
on the debt impossible to service. There is every reason for countries
holding large reserves of dollars to be worried, but there isn't any
other currency which looks substantially better as an alternative. The
dollar is, essentially, the best horse in the glue factory.
The author argues that we are on the threshold of a collapse
of the international monetary system, and that the outlines of what will
replace it are not yet clear. The phrase “collapse of the international
monetary system” sounds apocalyptic, but we're not talking about
some kind of Mad Max societal cataclysm. As the author observes, the
international monetary system collapsed three times in the last century:
in 1914, 1939, and 1971, and life went on (albeit in the first two cases,
with disastrous and sanguinary wars), and eventually the financial system
was reconstructed. There were, in each case, winners and losers, and
investors who failed to protect themselves against these turbulent changes
paid dearly for their complacency.
In this book, the author surveys the evolving international financial
scene. He comes to conclusions which may surprise observers from
a variety of perspectives. He believes the Euro is here to stay,
and that its advantages to Germany coupled with Germany's economic
power will carry it through its current problems. Ultimately, the
countries on the periphery will consider the Euro, whatever its costs
to them in unemployment and austerity, better than the instability of
their national currencies before joining the Eurozone. China is seen as
the victim of its own success, with financial warlords skimming off the
prosperity of its rapid growth, aided by an opaque and deeply corrupt
political class. The developing world is increasingly forging bilateral
agreements which bypass the dollar and trade in their own currencies.
What is an investor to do faced with such uncertainty? Well, that's far
from clear. The one thing one shouldn't do is assume the present
system will persist until you're ready to retire, and invest your
retirement savings entirely on the assumption nothing will change.
Fortunately, there are alternative investments (for example, gold and
silver, farm land, fine art, funds investing in natural resources, and,
yes, cash in a variety of currencies [to enable you to pick up bargains
when other assets crater]) which will appreciate enormously when
the monetary system collapses. You don't have to (and shouldn't)
bet everything on a collapse: a relatively small hedge against it will
protect you should it happen.
This is an extensively researched and deep investigation of the present
state of the international monetary system. As the author notes,
ever since all currencies were severed from gold in 1971 and began
to float against one another, the complexity of the system has
increased enormously. What were once fixed exchange rates, adjusted
only when countries faced financial crisis, have been replaced by
exchange rates which change in milliseconds, with a huge superstructure
of futures, options, currency swaps, and other derivatives whose
notional value dwarfs the actual currencies in circulation. This is
an immensely fragile system which even a small perturbation can
cause to collapse. Faced with a risk whose probability and consequences
are impossible to quantify, the prudent investor takes steps to
mitigate it. This book provides background for developing such a plan.
June 2014