Peter Schiff: “I know that we’re headed for this huge collapse.”

Published:

Peter Schiff, Euro Pacific Capital’s CEO and Chief Global Strategist, talks about what motivates him to work hard, and why he feels the U.S. government needs to be blamed for what he believes is a pending economic disaster. He also weighs in on what he expects will be a surprise move this year by the U.S. Federal Reserve, why he’s convinced the gold price suppression is doomed to fail, and how the small retail investor can benefit.

Interview transcription

Mark Thorburn: Welcome, Peter. You’ve been successful throughout your

career. What motivates you to work hard these days?

Peter Schiff: In theory, I could retire right now. I mean, I could just

live off of what I’ve earned, but . . . And I’m also spending a lot of

my time though just trying to get a message out there, get my

perspective heard. A lot of my time, quite frankly right now, is devoted

to activities that aren’t necessarily making money. Now, it’s possible

that I could start making money in the future from the things that I’m

doing on my radio show, for example. But right now, it takes a lot of

time, and there’s no real financial upside, at least so far. At least,

the money that I earn in my other businesses, my asset management

businesses, my US broker dealer, my Canadian broker dealer, my asset

management company, my offshore bank, my precious metals company, these

companies do make money, and they give me the opportunity to spend time

on things like my radio show, which right now, costs money.

But I am trying to get a message out there, get a perspective out there,

because the dialogue, you know, the understanding that permeates our

culture today, particularly at our institutions, central banks, Wall

Street, academia, I’ve never heard so much complete nonsense, so many

people, so many otherwise smart people, believing in such complete

nonsense when it comes to economics. And so, I want to do my best to try

to educate the public, especially, you know . . . I know that we’re

headed for this huge collapse, and I don’t want it to be blamed on

Capitalism or the free markets. I need government to be blamed for

what’s going to happen, and so I want to get this information out there

in advance so that I have a little bit more credibility when I talk

about it, and so the free markets have more credibility when free market

advocates like myself accurately diagnose the problems.

Mark Thorburn: You’ve been an outspoken critic of the U.S. Federal

Reserve. If you don’t believe the Fed. will continue to taper and raise

interest rates in 2015, what do you think their next move will be,

seeing they’re printing more money isn’t creating the economic growth it

desires?

Peter Schiff: Well, they’ll just print more. I mean, that’s been the

problem. The Fed. doesn’t learn from its mistakes, which is unfortunate

because, you know, it makes so many mistakes. But I think that the

Federal Reserve is going to taper the taper and eventually reverse it

before it manages to get down to zero. You know, right now, we have a

first quarter GDP that even by the government’s initial estimates was

flat. But I think when they come up with the revisions, we’re going to

see that the U.S. economy contracted in the first quarter. And of

course, I think the size of the contraction is a lot larger than what

the government will acknowledge, because I believe we’re understating

the true rate of inflation.

But apart from that, we’re going to have a contraction in the first

quarter. Now, Janet Yellen, and pretty much everybody else, seems to

believe that that phenomena is strictly the result of the weather. We

had a colder-than-normal winter with more snowfall than normal, and

theoretically, that’s why the economy contracted. If it wasn’t for the

cold weather, then we would have had 3% or more GDP growth. Now, I don’t

believe that for a second. I’m not even sure if the Fed. believes that,

but that’s what they’re saying. But I think what’s going to happen is as

we get more data from the second quarter, and that data continues to

disappoint both Wall Street and the Fed., at some point, Janet Yellen,

whether it’s going to be towards the end of the spring or early in the

summer, as we start to get more of the spring data, Janet Yellen is

going to have to change her tune and come up with an excuse as to why

the economy needs more stimulus, why she cannot continue the taper, why

first they have to pause and then ultimately, I think they’re going to

rev the QE back up. I think ultimately, Yellen is going to be back above

$85 billion a month.

I think we’re going to be at a higher level of QE than where we were

when the Fed first began to taper. Another reason I think that’s going

to happen is because if the Fed continues to remove the punchbowl and

ultimately does no QE, we’ll be in a bare market in stocks. I mean,

there’s no question that the stock market will be considerably lower.

The downturn in housing that has already begun will accelerate, and

we’ll be back in a deep recession. The only reason the Fed felt

confident to begin the taper process in the first place was because they

believed their recovery had been created, built on the foundation of the

wealth effect from the stock market and the real estate market. Well, if

it’s a recovery based on stock market wealth and real estate wealth, if

the wealth effect works in reverse because the Fed stops propping up the

markets, then we’re right back in recession. And of course, how does the

Fed fight recession? Well, more stimulus. So, you know, you can’t create

a recovery based on stimulus, and then take the stimulus away and expect

the recovery to continue. It can’t continue without the stimulus. It’s

like me living off of life support. You pull the plugs, you die. They

build an economy, of QE by QE, and you know, it lives by QE, and it dies

by QE.

Mark Thorburn: I know you really like gold. There’s been a lot of

speculation that the gold price is being suppressed. If this is true,

then what’s to stop the suppression from continuing well into the

future? Can’t the U.S. and its allies use political pressure to force

other countries to sell their gold to meet Asian demand?

Peter Schiff: Well, eventually the other countries will run out of gold.

There is a limit, you know, to the extent that there is a concerted

effort to suppress the price of gold. It will not last. I mean,

obviously the price of gold has risen over the last decade. Gold was

under $300 an ounce. Yes, you know, it’s down from its highs, but it’s

not down to $300 or lower. So, the price has risen, even if there were

forces that were trying to prevent it from happening. It happened

anyway. You know, the government can slow things down, but it can’t stop

it, you know. If the central banks are going to keep creating inflation

. . . The ECB came out today and said that the strong euro is a concern

because it might mean that they don’t have enough inflation. Japan is

trying to create inflation. America is trying to create inflation.

We have a situation now where all the world’s central banks have

embraced inflation. Inflation is no longer an enemy to be fought. Right?

But it’s a comrade, you know, to be coveted, you know. We embrace it.

Inflation is our best friend. We need inflation in order to have

economic growth. That is the mantra of the day. According to central

bankers, the worst thing that can happen to an economy is that prices

don’t go up, that the cost of living doesn’t increase, or worst yet,

that you can actually buy stuff for less money than the year before.

That would be, you know, the equivalent of, you know, economic poison.

It’s like, you know, a tornado or a hurricane destroying your economy if

the cost of living were to go down. So, central bankers want to do

whatever they can to make sure that the cost of living goes up and that

money loses value every year. Well, that is a perfect environment for

gold. There’s never been an environment that is so conducive to owning

gold as the one that exists today. You also have the central banks

around the world that are loaded up with dollars or Euros or yen, when

the central banks that create those currencies have guaranteed that

anybody holding those currencies is going to lose purchasing power.

So, not only do individuals need gold to protect their wealth, central

banks need gold to protect the value of their reserves. So, I think

you’re going to see an overwhelming demand for gold, and there’s no way

to suppress it indefinitely, unless the central bankers are willing to

dramatically raise interest rates, sell government bonds, and allow

their economies to implode, allow stock markets to crash and real estate

markets to crash and force U.S. . . . and force governments to default

on their sovereign debt. Unless the central banks are willing to do all

those things, gold’s only got one direction to go, and that’s up.

Mark Thorburn: If you were forced to buy just one precious metal right

now, what would it be? And why?

Peter Schiff: Well, I don’t know. I mean, you’re never forced to buy

just one. Gold is easier to store, you know. You can concentrate a lot

of your wealth in a small area. So, if I could only buy one, I guess I

would just buy gold. But I do think that silver potentially has more

upside. So, depending on how much money you have. If you only have a

small amount of money, if you’ve got $5000 or $10,000, then you might

want to just go all in on silver.

Mark Thorburn: Do you think the U.S. dollar will stop being the world’s

reserve currency some time during the next decade? And if so, what do

you think its replacement would be?

Peter Schiff: Yeah. I mean, it’s certainly a possibility that it will

cease to be the reserve currency within the next 10 years. I mean, it’s

probably a pretty strong possibility. I don’t know exactly what kind of

probability number to assign it, but I do think it’s going to happen. As

far as what will replace the dollar, I hope nothing replaces the dollar.

I don’t think there’s any currencies right now that deserve to replace

the dollar, and I don’t know that there’s any currency that will instill

the type of confidence that would be required to be a reserve currency.

Remember, the only reason the dollar became the reserve currency was

because it was convertible to gold, and there are no other currencies

today that are convertible to gold. Also, we enjoy a positive balance of

payments. We were a net creditor nation on a scale that no other country

can match today.

So, there’s no country that has really the economic might that America

had at the time that the dollar became the reserve currency. So, I don’t

know that another currency is going to replace it. But, you know, could

the euro do it? I mean, maybe. I mean, temporarily or certainly

regionally. It could act as a reserve, but a lot of that might depend on

what the ECB does. But I think that what is more likely is that gold

will rise in importance as a reserve asset, that more central banks will

be looking to expand their gold reserves. Because remember, the whole

idea behind the dollar as a reserve was the dollar was as good as gold,

because it was backed by gold and redeemable in gold. So, when central

banks held dollars, they, in effect, held gold.

But now, the dollar is redeemable in nothing. So, by holding dollars,

you hold nothing. So, I think that since you can’t hold gold indirectly

anymore by holding the dollar, more and more central banks will have to

just own gold directly and cut out the middleman. I think that’s what

they’re going to do. Now, people are speculating maybe the Chinese will

back their currency by gold. And if so, then maybe the Chinese RNB could

service a reserve currency. Maybe if they do back it by gold by then and

have it free floating, it’s possible that the Chinese could create a

situation where their currency could be a reserve currency. But they

have a lot of gold to buy, and I’m not sure how much they bought. We

know they’ve been buying a lot of gold, and I think the longer the price

of gold is suppressed, the more gold the Chinese are going to own.

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