Precious Metals Through History's Prism

 | Oct 08, 2012 01:00PM ET

After the Federal Reserve launched QE3 last month, investors and speculators are growing excited about its future impact on gold and silver. Though the Fed’s QE3 campaign started out relatively small, its open-ended nature is utterly unprecedented. Thus an unknown amount of future inflation will be spawned. Naturally gold and silver thrive in such environments, as they proved during QE1 and QE2.

Euphamistically Speaking
Of course QE stands for quantitative easing. Even as a lifelong student of the financial markets, I don’t recall hearing this term before late 2008’s epic stock panic. Central banks are notorious for trying to cloak their actions. So although “quantitative easing” was universally derided historically, it was known by a different name. Quantitative easing is simply a pleasant-sounding euphemism for debt monetization.

All throughout world history, debt monetization ended in ruin for the countries that foolishly played this dangerous game. And it is exactly what it sounds like. Central banks create new paper money out of thin air to buy bonds, thus monetizing them. The big problem is this grows, or inflates, the money supply. Whoever sold the bonds to the central bank spends this new money, injecting it directly into the economy.

The result is inflation. When the money supply grows faster than the underlying pool of goods and services on which to spend it, their prices are bid up. The more new money the central bank creates to monetize debt, the worse the resulting inflation. Even though its impact on price levels isn’t apparent immediately, it is inevitable. Once unleashed, history has proven inflation will fully run its course.

Inflation is devastating, an insidious plague that stealthily impoverishes the great majority of people whose incomes don’t rise fast enough to maintain real purchasing power. Inflation slaughters the poor, who already struggle greatly to survive even without rising prices. Inflation crushes everyone on fixed incomes, nearly all retired people. And inflation robs savers blind, stealing their lifetimes’ hard-earned surpluses.

Thankfully there is a refuge for the prudent, a safe haven to protect their accumulated wealth from inflation’s vile predations. All throughout history, gold and silver have maintained their real purchasing power as money-supply growth lifted prices all around them. They are like battleships on the seas, no matter how high the ocean of paper currencies under them rises they still float commandingly on top.

Bullish For Precious Metals
The Fed’s brazen debt monetization in recent years has already created massive inflation. This deluge of new dollars that never existed before is already baked into the pipeline, and its economic impact is just beginning to be felt. Yet gold and silver have already seen fantastic gains during the Fed’s initial pair of quantitative-easing campaigns. This new open-ended third one is very bullish for these precious metals.

The best clues as to how gold and silver will perform in this unlimited QE3 era are probably found in how they fared during QE1 and QE2. So let’s dig into the entire history of the Fed’s post-panic debt-monetization campaigns, and then see how gold and silver did within them. This first chart looks at the Fed’s balance sheet, which is where all the debt it has been monetizing ultimately shows up.