TIP097: CHINA AND THE HISTORY OF THE US DOLLAR

W/ RICHARD DUNCAN

1 July 2016

In this episode of The Investor’s Podcast, Preston and Stig invite Mr. Richard Duncan. Richard provides a detailed lesson about how China and the United States are in a tricky situation based on the events that have evolved since 1971.  Once the US decided to come off the gold standard and abandoned the Bretton Woods Agreement, the US dollar was no longer pegged to anything.  As a result, countries around the globe began to print enormous amounts of fiat currency in order to create trade surpluses that benefited their domestic interests.  This situation has evolved by driving up the prices of all US dollar-denominated assets, but more importantly, it has caused US bond yields to drop to almost nothing.  This situation is potentially causing an ultimate bubble in asset prices around the world and could result and very large economic instability moving forward.

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IN THIS EPISODE, YOU’LL LEARN:

  • Why and how bubbles are created by credit
  • How international central banks manipulate currencies
  • Why the US government benefits from the FED artificially keeping the interest rates low
  • Why the monetary system had changed fundamentally since the Bretton Woods agreement was broke
  • How the private investor should react to the new monetary system

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TRANSCRIPT

Disclaimer: The transcript that follows has been generated using artificial intelligence. We strive to be as accurate as possible, but minor errors and slightly off timestamps may be present due to platform differences.

Preston Pysh  0:39  

Hey, hey, how’s everybody doing out there? This is Preston Pysh. I’m your host for The Investor’s Podcast. And as usual, I’m accompanied by my co-host Stig Brodersen out in Denmark. 

Today, we’re joined by a guest that I am a static to have on our show. His name is Richard Duncan. Richard appears frequently on CNBC, CNN, BBC ,and the Bloomberg Television Channel. He’s been a guest speaker at the World Economic Forum, the World Knowledge Forum in Seoul, South Korea, and many others. And so, Richard got his start as a stock analyst in Hong Kong back in 1986. Since that time, he’s held some really tremendous jobs. He’s worked at the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, or IMF. He currently works as an economist for Black Horse Asset Management. And he also has his own company, Macro Watch, which is RichardDuncanEconomics.com. 

So Richard is the author of numerous books to include his newest, which is “The New Depression: The Breakdown of the Paper Money Economy,” and “The Dollar Crisis,” which was an international bestseller. 

So the reason we’re so excited to have Richard on our show is because Stig and I run this forum, the Warren Buffett Forum. Here, we’ve been talking a lot of macro on our show and we get just the best handoffs from the people that listen to our show. We had one individual on our forum, he said, “If you want to learn macro, he’s like, there’s one person you have to read, and that is Richard Duncan.” 

So I was reading your book, and I was just totally blown away at the content in your book. So I sent an email to Stig and I said, “Stig, I know we do audiobooks because we were strapped for time.” We really struggle to do hardback books. So most of everything we read is all Audibles or audiobooks when we’re driving in the car. I said, “Stig, I know this isn’t an audiobook. But you have to read this.” And so Stig starts reading it and he writes me back. Like, we got to get this guy on the show. I said, I know we got to get this guy on the show. So Stig reached out to Richard. And Richard, we’re so grateful for you to take time out of your busy day to talk to us about some of these ideas and these concepts because I know for a fact our audience is going to benefit from this tremendously. So thank you, Richard, for coming to our show.

Richard Duncan  3:00  

Preston and Stig, thank you for inviting me on the show. Nice to meet you guys.

Preston Pysh  3:05  

It’s fantastic to meet you in person here. So tell us about your background. Why did you become so fascinated by financial markets?

Richard Duncan  3:14  

I’m American. I grew up in Kentucky and went to Vanderbilt. And after Vanderbilt, kind of by chance, I ended up backpacking around the world for a year. So in early 1984, I spent a couple of months in Asia: Thailand, Malaysia, and Singapore. I realized it was booming economically and that it was the land of opportunity. Go East young man was very clear. So I went back to business school at Babson College for my MBA. When I finished that, in 1986, I flew to Hong Kong and found a job. Really lucky timing. 

Hong Kong’s economy was growing by 13% that year. The first 12 months I was there, the stock market went up 100%. I found a job with a local Hong Kong Chinese stock broking company as the key analyst and I worked there for a couple of years in Hong Kong, doing research on the listed Hong Kong companies, a number of different industries. Then, they sent me to Singapore for a year to run a small research department there. I did research on the Singapore companies. And after a year and again in Hong Kong, they sent me to Bangkok to be the head of their research team in Bangkok in 1999. And so by the time I turned 30, I had lived in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Thailand, looking at equities as a securities analyst. And when I reached Bangkok, I was the head of research with a very large team of analysts working for me, so I could do anything that I wanted. 

By that time, I became more and more interested in economics and what was driving the economies. I’ve seen a number of different economies at that point. So I started doing a lot of reading to try to understand what drove the macro side of the markets. And that’s the thing that really fascinated me because at that point, all of these economies were just on fire. Thailand was growing by 10% a year. I stocked with the stock market was the flavor of the month for all the international fund managers. And so I was in a fantastic opportunity to see a number of different economies going through similar cycles, but not exactly the same cycle. So I became very interested in macroeconomics. 

As time went by, after a few years of this incredible, fundamentally quite solid economic boom in Thailand, the Thai boom started turning into a bubble. And by 1994, it was clear things were running completely out of control here. I knew from the work my analysts were doing that it wasn’t just the property sector that was booming in that way. Every industry was expanding its capacity, doubling capacity, and quadrupling capacity. And it was it became pretty obvious pretty quickly that there just wouldn’t be enough purchasing power in Thailand to absorb all that capacity. 

So at that point, I started doing a lot of reading of all the classical economic theory to try to understand what was going on here. I actually became quite bearish on Thailand’s economy. I started writing reports saying it would slow down to just 6% or 7% GDP growth, whereas all of my competitors are thinking with a double-digit growth forecast. 

So it was in Bangkok in Thailand, that I had my education and bubble dynamics. The Thai economy went into crisis in 1998, the GDP contracted by 10%. And something similar happened in South Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Thai stock market. Well, 95% in dollar terms from peak to trough. So it was really a wonderful opportunity for me to see this in such a short space of time, this extraordinary boom and bust cycle, and to have the time to think about it, and to try to understand what was causing it. And what was causing it was credit. 

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