Exclusive
Interview:
Jim Rogers Predicts Bigger Financial Shocks Loom
Fueling a Malaise That May Last for Years
By Keith Fitz-Gerald
Investment Director
19/08/08 "
Money Morning/The Money Map
Report"
--- - VANCOUVER, B.C. – The U.S. financial crisis has
cut so deep – and the government has taken on so much debt in
misguided attempts to bail out such companies as Fannie Mae (FNM)
and Freddie Mac (FRE)
– that even larger financial shocks are still to come, global
investing guru Jim Rogers said in an exclusive interview with
Money Morning.
Indeed, the U.S. financial debacle
is now so ingrained – and a so-called “Super Crash” so likely –
that most Americans alive today won’t be around by the time the
last of this credit-market mess is finally cleared away – if it
ever is, Rogers said.
The end of this crisis “is a
long way away,” Rogers said. “In fact, it may not be in our
lifetimes.”
During a 40-minute interview
during a wealth-management conference in this West Coast
Canadian city last month, Rogers also said that:
- U.S. Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben S. Bernanke should “resign” for the bailout
deals he’s handed out as he’s tried to battle this credit
crisis.
- That the
U.S. national debt – the roughly $5 trillion held by the
public– essentially doubled in the course of a single
weekend because of the Fed-led credit crisis bailout deals.
- That U.S. consumers and
investors can expect much-higher interest rates – noting
that if the Fed doesn’t raise borrowing costs, market forces
will make that happen.
- And that the average
American has no idea just how bad this financial crisis is
going to get.
“The next shock is going to be
bigger and bigger, still,” Rogers said. “The shocks keep getting
bigger because we keep propping things up … [and] bailing
everyone out.”
Rogers
first made a name for himself with The Quantum Fund, a hedge
fund that’s often described as the first real global investment
fund, which he and partner George Soros founded in 1970. Over
the next decade, Quantum gained 4,200%, while the
Standard & Poor’s 500 Index climbed about 50%.
It was after Rogers "retired" in
1980 that the investing masses got to see him in action. Rogers
traveled the world (several times), and penned such bestsellers
as "Investment Biker" and the recently released "A
Bull in China." And he made some historic market calls:
Rogers predicted China’s meteoric growth a good decade before it
became apparent and he subsequently foretold of the powerful
updraft in global commodities prices that’s fueled a year-long
bull market in the agriculture, energy and mining sectors.
Rogers’ candor has made him a
popular figure with individual investors, meaning his
pronouncements are always closely watched. Here are some of the
highlights from the exclusive interview we had with the author
and investor, who now makes his home in Singapore:
Keith Fitz-Gerald (Q):
Looks like the financial train wreck we talked about earlier
this year is happening.
Jim Rogers:
There was a train wreck, yes. Two or three – more than
one, as you know. [U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S.]
Bernanke and his boys both came to the rescue. Which is going
to cover things up for a while. And then I don’t know how long
the rally will last and then we’ll be off to the races again.
Whether the rally lasts six days or six weeks, I don’t know. I
wish I did know that sort of thing, but I never do.
(Q):What would Chairman
Bernanke have to do to “get it right?”
Rogers:
Resign.
(Q): Is there anything
else that you think he could do that would be correct other than
let these things fail?
Rogers:
Well, at this stage, it doesn’t seem like he can do it. He
could raise interest rates – which he should do, anyway.
Somebody should. The market’s going to do it whether he does it
or not, eventually.
The problem is that he’s got all
that garbage on his balance sheet now. He has $400 billion of
questionable assets owing to the feds on his balance sheet. I
mean, he could try to reverse that. He could raise interest
rates. Yeah, that’s what he could do. That would help. It
would cause a shock to the system, but if we don’t have the
shock now, the shock’s going to be much worse later on. Every
shock, so far, has been worse than the last shock. Bear-Stearns
[now part of JP Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM)]
was one thing and then it’s Fannie Mae (FNM),
you know, and now Freddie Mac (FRE).
The next shock’s going to be
even bigger still. So the shocks keep getting bigger because we
kept propping things up and this has been going on at least
since
Long-Term Capital Management. They’ve been bailing everyone
out and [former Fed Chairman Alan] Greenspan took interest rates
down and then he took them down again after the “dot-com
bubble” shock, so I guess Bernanke could try to start
reversing some of this stuff.
But he has to not just reverse
it – he’d have to increase interest rates a lot to make up for
it and that’s not going to solve the problem either, because the
basic problems are that America’s got a horrible tax system,
it’s got litigation right, left, and center, it’s got horrible
education system, you know, and it’s got many, many, many
[other] problems that are going to take a while to resolve. If
he did at least turn things around – turn some of these policies
around – we would have a sharp drop, but at least it would clean
out some of the excesses and the system could turn around and
start doing better.
But this is academic – he’s not
going to do it. But again the best thing for him would be to
abolish the Federal Reserve and resign. That’ll be the best
solution. Is he going to do that? No, of course not. He still
thinks he knows what he’s doing.
(Q): Earlier
this year, when we talked in Singapore, you made the observation
that
the average American still doesn’t know anything’s wrong –
that anything’s happening. Is that still the case?
Rogers:Yes.
(Q): What
would you tell the “Average Joe” in no-nonsense terms?
Rogers:
I would say that for the last 200 years, America’s elected
politicians and scoundrels have built up $5 trillion in debt.
In the last few weekends, some un-elected officials added
another $5 trillion to America’s national debt.
Suddenly we’re on the hook for
another $5 trillion. There have been attempts to explain this to
the public, about what’s happening with the debt, and with the
fact that America’s situation is deteriorating in the world.
I don’t know why it doesn’t sink
in. People have other things on their minds, or don’t want to
be bothered. Too complicated, or whatever.
I’m sure when the [British
Empire] declined there were many people who rang the bell
and said: “Guys, we’re making too many mistakes here in the
U.K.” And nobody listened until it was too late.
When Spain was in decline, when
Rome was in decline, I’m sure there were people who noticed that
things were going wrong.
(Q):
Many experts don’t agree with – at the very least don’t
understand – the Fed’s current strategies. How can our leaders
think they’re making the right choices? What do you think?
Rogers:
Bernanke is a very-narrow-gauged guy. He’s spent his whole
intellectual career studying the printing of money and we have
now given him the keys to the printing presses. All he knows how
to do is run them.
Bernanke was [on the record as
saying] that there is no problem with housing in America.
There’s no problem in housing finance. I mean this was like in
2006 or 2005.
(Q): Right.
Rogers:
He is the Federal Reserve and the Federal
Reserve more than anybody is supposed to be regulating these
[financial institutions], so they should have the inside scoop,
if nothing else.
(Q): That’s
problematic.
Rogers:
It’s mind-boggling. Here’s a man who doesn’t understand
the market, who doesn’t understand economics – basic economics.
His intellectual career’s been spent on the narrow-gauge study
of printing money. That’s all he knows.
Yes, he’s got a PhD, which says
economics on it, but economics can be one of 200 different
narrow fields. And his is printing money, which he’s good at,
we know. We’ve learned that he’s ready, willing and able to
step in and bail out everybody.
There’s this worry [whenever you
have a major financial institution that looks ready to fail]
that, “Oh my God, we’re going to go down, and if we go down, the
whole system goes down.”
This is nothing new. Whole
systems have been taken down before. We’ve had it happen plenty
of times.
(Q):
History is littered with failed financial institutions.
Rogers:
I know. It’s not as though this is the first time it’s
ever happened. But since [Chairman Bernanke’s] whole career is
about printing money and studying the
Depression, he says: “Okay, got to print some more money.
Got to save the day.” And, of course, that’s when he gets
himself in deeper, because the first time you print it, you prop
up Institution X, [but] then you got to worry about institution
Y and Z.
(Q): And
now we’ve got a dangerous precedent.
Rogers: That’s
exactly right. And when the next guy calls him up, he’s going
to bail him out, too.
(Q): What
do you think [former Fed Chairman]
Paul Volcker thinks about all this?
Rogers:
Well, Volcker has said it’s certainly beyond the scope of
central banking, as he understands central banking.
(Q): That’s
pretty darn clear.
Rogers: Volcker’s
been very clear – very clear to me, anyway – about what he
thinks of it, and Volcker was the last decent American central
banker. We’ve had couple in our history: Volcker and William
McChesney Martin were two.
You know, McChesney Martin was
the guy who said the job of a good central banker was to take
away the punchbowl when the party starts getting good. Now [the
Fed] – when the party starts getting out of control – pours more
moonshine in. McChesney Martin would always pull the bowl away
when people started getting a little giggly. Now the party’s out
of control.
(Q): This
could be the end of the Federal Reserve, which we talked about
in Singapore. This would be the third failure – correct?
Rogers: Yes.
We had two central banks that disappeared for whatever reason.
This one’s going to disappear, too, I say.
(Q):
Throughout your career you’ve had a much-fabled ability
to spot unique points in history – inflection points, if you
will. Points when, as you put it, somebody puts money in the
corner at which you then simply pick up.
Rogers:
That’s the way to invest, as far as I’m concerned.
(Q): So
conceivably, history would show that the highest returns go to
those who invest when there’s blood in the streets, even if it’s
their own.
Rogers:
Right.
(Q): Is
there a point in time or something you’re looking for that will
signal that the U.S. economy has reached the inflection point in
this crisis?
Rogers: Well,
yeah, but it’s a long way away. In fact, it may not be in our
lifetimes. Of course I covered my shorts – my financial shorts.
Not all of them, but most of them last week.
So, if you’re talking about a
temporary inflection point, we may have hit it.
If you look back at previous
countries that have declined, you almost always see exchange
controls – all sorts of controls – before failure. America is
already doing some of that. America, for example,
wouldn’t let the Chinese buy the oil company,
wouldn’t let the [Dubai firm] buy the ports, et cetera.
But I’m really talking about
full-fledged, all-out exchange controls. That would certainly
be a sign, but usually exchange controls are not the end of the
story. Historically, they’re somewhere during the decline. Then
the politicians bring in exchange controls and then things get
worse from there before they bottom.
Before World War II, Japan’s yen
was two to the dollar. After they lost the war, the yen was 500
to the dollar. That’s a collapse. That was also a bottom.
These are not predictions for
the U.S., but I’m just saying that things have to usually get
pretty, pretty, pretty, pretty bad.
It was similar in the United
Kingdom. In 1918, the U.K. was the richest, most powerful
country in the world. It had just won the First World War, et
cetera. By 1939, it had exchange controls and this is in just
one generation. And strict exchange controls. They in fact
made it an act of treason for people to use anything except the
pound sterling in settling debts.
(Q): Treason? Wow, I
didn’t know that.
Rogers:
Yes…an act of treason. It used to be that people could use
anything they wanted as money. Gold or other metals. Banks
would issue their own currencies. Anything. You could even use
other people’s currencies.
Things were so bad in the U.K.
in the 1930s they made it an act of treason to use anything
except sterling and then by ’39 they had full-exchange
controls. And then, of course, they had the war and that
disaster. It was a disaster before the war. The war just
exacerbated the problems. And by the mid-70s, the U.K. was
bankrupt. They could not sell long-term government bonds.
Remember, this is a country that two generations or three
generations before had been the richest most powerful country in
the world.
Now the only thing that saved
the U.K. was the
North Sea oil fields, even though Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher likes to take credit, but Margaret
Thatcher has good PR. Margaret Thatcher came into office in 1979
and North Sea oil started flowing. And the U.K. suddenly had a
huge balance-of-payment surplus.
You know, even if Mother Teresa
had come in [as prime minister] in ’79, or Joseph Stalin, or
whomever had come in 1979 – you know, Jimmy Carter, George Bush,
whomever – it still would’ve been great.
You give me the largest oil
field in the world and I’ll show you a good time, too. That’s
what happened.
(Q):
What if Thatcher had never come to power?
Rogers: Who
knows, because the U.K. was in such disastrous straits when she
came in. And that’s why she came to power…because it was such a
disaster. I’m sure she would’ve made things better, but short
of all that oil, the situation would’ve continued to decline.
So it may not be in our
lifetimes that we’ll see the bottom, just given the U.K.’s
history, for instance.
(Q): That’s
going to be terrifying for individual investors to think about.
Rogers: Yeah.
But remember that America had such a magnificent and gigantic
position of dominance that deterioration will take time. You
know, you don’t just change that in a decade or two. It takes a
lot of hard work by a lot of incompetent people to change the
situation. The U.K. situation I just explained…that decline was
over 40 or 50 years, but they had so much money they could have
continued to spiral downward for a long time.
Even Zimbabwe, you know, took 10
or 15 years to really get going into it’s collapse, but
Robert Mugabe came into power in 1980 and, as recently as
1995, things still looked good for Zimbabwe. But now, of course,
it’s a major disaster.
That’s one of the advantages of
Singapore. The place has an astonishing amount of wealth and
only 4 million people. So even if it started squandering it in
2008, which they may be, it’s going to take them forever to do
so.
(Q): Is
there a specific signal that this is “over?”
Rogers: Sure…when
our entire U.S. cabinet has Swiss bank accounts. Linked inside
bank accounts. When that happens, we’ll know we’re getting
close because they’ll do it even after it’s illegal – after
America’s put in the exchange controls.
(Q): They’ll move their
own money.
Rogers: Yeah,
because you look at people like the Israelis and the
Argentineans and people who have had exchange controls – the
politicians usually figured it out and have taken care of
themselves on the side.
(Q):
We saw that in South Africa and other countries, for
example, as people tried to get their money out.
Rogers:
Everybody figures it out, eventually, including the
politicians. They say: “You know, others can’t do this, but
it’s alright for us.” Those days will come. I guess when all
the congressmen have foreign bank accounts, we’ll be at the
bottom.
But we’ve got a long way to go,
yet.
[Editor’s note: After
interviewing legendary investor Jim Rogers at his home in
Singapore back in March, Investment Director Keith Fitz-Gerald
caught up with Rogers again in July – this time in Vancouver,
where both were speaking at the Agora Wealth Symposium. Rogers
talked extensively about the ill-advised bailouts of Bear
Stearns, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the potentially ruinous
fallout from the financial “Super
Crash” that’s about to engulf the U.S. market. To find out
how to get a report on the
once-in-a-lifetime profit plays that will emanate from this
so-called "SuperCrash" – and to also get a free copy of noted
market analyst Peter D. Schiff’s New York Times
bestseller "Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse"
– please
click here. And look for Part 2 of
Money Morning’s
latest interview with Jim Rogers tomorrow (Wednesday).]
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