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Archive for January, 2012|Monthly archive page

Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 31, 2012 Reporting From: Nassau, Bahamas

In Business, Chile, Constitution of The United States, Continental Travel, currency, Entrepreneurship, Expatriation, Gold, Gold bulion, Government, History, International Diversification, Jobs, John Cobin, Military., Money and Finances, Political parties on January 31, 2012 at 8:38 pm

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 31, 2012
Reporting From: Nassau, Bahamas

Wegelin & Co used to be Switzerland’s oldest private bank. Founded in 1741, they managed to survive every threat across three centuries: revolution, financial disaster, and war… from being invaded by Napoleon to the Sonderbundskrieg civil war to Adolf Hitler.

Every threat except for one, that is: the United States Government.

I say that Wegelin “used to be” Switzerland’s oldest private bank because they’re now finished, courtesy of Uncle Sam. They had no office in the United States, no employees in the United States. They were 100% Swiss, and violated no Swiss law whatsoever.

Yet US authorities believed that a handful of Wegelin’s US clients were hiding assets and not paying taxes. The fact that the bank wasn’t subject to US law was irrelevant. The fact that the bank has zero legal responsibility in ensuring their customers filed tax forms was irrelevant.

The government crushed Wegelin regardless.

By threatening them with lawsuits, investigations, IRS penalties, and criminal charges (levied personally against the bank directors), the US government succeeded in its mission. The scare tactics were enough to chase away the bank’s customers, and Wegelin is now selling what little of its business remains.

It’s another despicable example of the US government doing whatever it wants, wherever it wants without any legal basis of any kind. It gets worse.

On top of this, there’s the new FATCA legislation– Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act. The law effectively requires every bank in the world to make a choice:

1) Accept Americans as customers, but agree to share information with the US government;

2) Close the door to all US citizens and residents forever; or

3) Thumb your nose at the law, but risk becoming the next Wegelin & Co.

Needless to say, most banks are opting for #1 in order to avoid unnecessary scrutiny and disclosures.

This is why it’s getting harder and harder for Americans to do business overseas. Many foreign companies now don’t even want US citizens (or residents) as shareholders, officers, or directors. It’s just too much hassle, too much risk.

As FATCA is rolled out, it will be commonplace for foreign banks to give the ole’ heave-ho to their US customers. And as we have discussed so many times before, having a foreign bank account is one of the most important steps in declaring your financial independence. Briefly,

1) a foreign account takes your hard-earned savings out of the direct control and supervision of your home government’s kleptocrats.

2) A foreign account allows much easier diversification outside of your home currency.

3) And perhaps most importantly, a foreign bank is likely to be safer and better capitalized, devoid of the toxic assets that plague US and European banks.

But are there any options left? You bet. As the saying goes, whenever one door closes, another one opens. OK not exactly. But for every few dozen banks that are closing their doors to US customers, one or two are happy to welcome Americans with open arms.

The US market is huge. And a few banks out there are willing to do the extra work and crawl in bed with Uncle Sam in order to get a slice of that pie. Some of them are right here in the Bahamas, or in nearby Turks & Caicos.

While I’m not at liberty to mention any bank names in this public forum (they really freak out about this), suffice it to say that you won’t have too many problems opening an account with the major international banks in either location.

Just make sure you have your passport, driver’s license, utility bill (or other proof of address) and two bank reference letters (or one letter plus a professional reference from a lawyer or accountant).

It’s a short flight that’s well worth the time and effort.

As a reminder, US taxpayers with foreign accounts are required to file form TDF 90-22.1 to the Treasury Department (not the IRS) each year by June 30th, as well as Schedule B (1040) with their usual return by April 15th. Starting this year, some filers may have to submit form 8938 as well… I’ll write more on that soon.

Until tomorrow,
sig.jpg

Simon Black
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com 

This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
Field
, a free newsletter dedicated to individual freedom,
internationalization, asset protection and global finance. For a
complimentary subscription, visit http://www.SovereignMan.com

Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 30, 2012 Reporting From: Nassau, Bahamas

In Business, Gold, Gold bulion, Gold coins, Government, Interesting places, Social Security, Sovereign Man, Taxes on January 30, 2012 at 4:56 pm

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 30, 2012
Reporting From: Nassau, Bahamas

Here’s something unexpected. According to IMF data, the central bank of Kazakhstan recently purchased 3.1 metric tons of gold, increasing its reserves by 4.2%. In an even more stunning development, Mongolia’s central bank purchased 1.2 metric tons, increasing its reserves by a whopping 52%.

borat.png

To be fair, 4.3 metric tons of gold is not much. At current market value, it’s around a quarter of a billion dollars, just a small fraction of last year’s worldwide gold production. It is an interesting, trend, though.

Years ago, most radidly developing countries enjoying their first taste of wealth would have been more than happy holding dollars. Today, it’s becoming obvious to everyone that sitting on a bunch of worthless fiat paper does not make a sound balance sheet.

Over the years, central banks have managed to accumulate trillions of dollars worth of foreign reserves, the vast majority of which is in dollars, euros, and yen.  This is a big problem. Asset managers (including central banks) need a reasonable store of value to hold their cash and reserve funds, and none of those three is a good option.

What’s more, as the euro drama continues to unfold, central bankers will be increasingly forced to choose between the fundamentally flawed US dollar, and the fundamentally flawed yen. No other currency can absorb hundreds of billions of dollars worth of capital flows.

One suggestion being discussed openly by many central bankers is to hold foreign reserves in a new, specially created reserve currency similar to the IMF’s SDR– essentially a global currency that’s only accessible as a medium of exchange for central banks.

Now, this may be the dumbest idea in the history of modern finance– solving the problem of too much structurally unsound fiat currency by creating a new fiat currency backed by other fiat currencies? It’s unimaginably stupid.

For now, though, there is no solution… which means that big economies weilding hundreds of billions, even trillions of dollars, have very few options. And it’s a tough problem to manage.

For example, a friend of mine who works at one of China’s sovereign wealth funds once told me that they don’t look at any deal where they can’t deploy at least one billion dollars.

As any successful investor knows, finding a great deal is not easy. Finding one that’s worth at least a billion dollars is seriously difficult. Finding thousands of them across which you can invest trillions of dollars is an impossibility.

This is why sovereign fund managers, just like pension funds and bank asset managers, keep falling back on the same old, tired investments that don’t make any sense– US Treasuries, Japanese government bonds, etc. It’s the only asset class on the planet where you can park a billion dollars with relative ease.

Little guys like Kazakhstan and Mongolia don’t have that problem; they can fly under the radar, build reserves, and continue accumulating precious metals in meaningful quantities (as a proportion of their holdings) without moving the needle too much. China and Saudi Arabia can’t.

It’s a good model for the rest of us to follow– stay liquid, steadily acquire precious metals, and fly under the radar.

Until tomorrow,
sig.jpg

Simon Black
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com

This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
Field
, a free newsletter dedicated to individual freedom,
internationalization, asset protection and global finance. For a
complimentary subscription, visit http://www.SovereignMan.com

Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 27, 2012 Reporting From: Manila, Philippines

In Business/Political Trends Worldwide, Chile, China, Constitution of The United States, Continental Travel, currency, International Diversification, Jobs, John Cobin, Social Security, Sovereign Man, Taxes, Travel, United States Debt on January 28, 2012 at 10:37 am

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 27, 2012
Reporting From: Manila, Philippines[Editor's note: Tim Staermose is filling in today while Simon is at the farm in Chile.]There is a delicious irony in the world of economic policy at the moment.
Back in 1997 and 1998 I had a ringside seat to the Asian financial crisis from my trading desk in Seoul. When everything collapsed, the policy prescriptions from the World Bank and IMF for Asia’s sick economies was to:

1. HIKE interest rates,
2. CUT government spending,
3. Further deregulate, liberalize, and open their economies to foreign investment to attract capital;
4.  And let their zombie banks FAIL.

Though, they experienced brutal recessions after swallowing this tough medicine, the two countries which carried out these policies to the fullest extent:  South Korea, and Indonesia, are today among the most successful and dynamic economies in Asia, and the WORLD.
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Since emerging from recession in 2000, Indonesia has enjoyed more than a decade of fast, uninterrupted economic growth. In fact, one emerging markets funds manager told me this week that Jakarta today is “far too modern” to interest him now.  It has already “emerged.”

South Korea also emerged bigger, better, and stronger from the crisis 14 years ago.  On my last trip there in late 2010 ahead of the G20 meeting in Seoul, I was astounded how far it had come since I’d last been there in 2003.

I remember having a chat with my cab driver and telling him it really looked to me as though Korea had  reached “developed country status.”  Becoming a “seon-jin-guk” as they call it in Korean was always one of the burning desires of Korean politicians, bureaucrats, business people, and ordinary citizens alike.

My cabbie was far too modest and said, “No. We still have a long way to go,” as he waved my visa card in front of a payment gadget mounted on his dashboard that instantly deducted the fare and had me on my way in about 5 seconds flat, without having to fumble around for change or sign anything.

South Korea today is the most wired country on the planet.  So good are their technology companies, spearheaded by Samsung Electronics, they even have Apple running scared.

I recently retired my Blackberry.  The replacement won’t be an iPhone.  It’ll be Samsung’s Galaxy S2.  All my friends who have them say they’re, “Way better.”
Bottom line — Indonesia and South Korea “reset” their systems back in the late 1990s and have emerged stronger and more dynamic than ever.

The Asian crisis back then was brought on by the same things that led to the current crisis in Europe and the US (and the one I believe is coming to China):  Too much cheap money.  Too much borrowing by people who couldn’t afford it, to buy non-productive assets.  And an insanely leveraged banking system run amuck.

Today, the same Western policymakers whose advice got Indonesia and South Korea quickly back on the rails are giving the EXACT OPPOSITE prescriptions for their own economies.

They’ve CUT interest rates to near ZERO.  Governments have SPENT trillions of borrowed money that they have no hope of ever repaying on ill-advised “stimulus.”

They’ve BAILED OUT nearly all the brain-dead banks, keeping them on life support in a coma.  Protectionist rhetoric is building up, and more onerous regulations are being ushered in.

This is what Japan did after its 1980s bubble.  And look at them now.  They’re stuck in a time warp, and the Japanese economy remains in a funk.

It doesn’t take a genius to see that if they persist with their current approach, Europe and America are going to end up exactly like Japan. And places such as South Korea, and even Indonesia, are eventually going to leave them in the dust.

Until next time,

Tim Staermose,
Chief Investment Strategist
Sovereign Man

This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
Field
, a free newsletter dedicated to individual freedom,
internationalization, asset protection and global finance. For a
complimentary subscription, visit http://www.SovereignMan.com

Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 25, 2012 Reporting From: Santiago, Chile

In Business, Business/Political Trends Worldwide, Continental Travel, currency, Expatriation, Gold, Government, History, International Diversification, John Cobin, personal and business, Political parties, Social Security, Sovereign Man, Taxes, Travel, United States Debt on January 26, 2012 at 10:39 am

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 25, 2012
Reporting From: Santiago, Chile

I woke up this morning to a flurry of emails– “Did you watch the State of the Union address last night?” I did not. Rather, I was busy sharing a delightful meal at one of my favorite restaurants with some close friends; I didn’t even know that the speech was going on yesterday.When you break away from the confines of a single geography, the political theater becomes completely irrelevant. And State of the Union addresses represent the absolute worst of this absurdity.  All the applause, the silly introduction traditions, and of course, the Newspeak. A quick glance at the transcript from last night shows plenty of gems, such as:1) US military involvement in Iraq “has made America safer and more respected.” No comment.

2) “In the last 22-months, businesses have created more than 3 million jobs.” Nevermind that the BLS’s own statistics show that the employment to population ratio has been steadily dropping since 2006.

3) “Take the money we’re no longer spending at war, use half of it to pay down our debt, and use the rest to do some nation-building right here at home.” Regrettably, the government was borrowing all of that money to begin with… so in essence the President is asking to take half of borrowed money to pay back borrowed money.

4) “Your country will do everything it can to help you succeed.”

5) “But challenges remain. And we know how to solve them.”
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Those last two are among the best, particularly when viewed in light of recent legislation that has been introduced, such as:

HR 3798, which requires a uniform national standard for the housing and treatment of egg-laying hens;

HR 3791, which would require certain American companies to undergo an additional level of reporting bureaucracy in how much they pay women and minorities;

HR 3784, which would impose a windfall profits tax on oil, natural gas, and related products production;

… and my favorite …

HR 3806, a bill submitted for ending “the practice of including more than one subject in a single bill… AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES.”

It would be funny if it weren’t all true.

Just as elections do every four-years, State of the Union addresses give people an annual dose of hope… that whoever is in office has a credible plan to fix all the problems. To improve education, to take care of seniors, to win the peace, to bolster the economy, to create jobs.

Sure, it may be inspiring. But ultimately, like campaign promises and electoral rhetoric, it’s just hot air. Real hope and inspiration comes from within… from embracing self-reliance and taking charge of your own destiny.

A lot of people are waiting for their politicians to serve up opportunity and job skills on a silver platter. This is simply not going to happen. Politicians don’t create jobs (unless they’re unproductive government jobs). The market creates jobs. And those jobs are based on products, skills, and services that are in demand.

The opportunities are out there, no doubt. Down here in Chile, droves of new software and biotech companies are flourishing. My friends in Singapore tell me that they can’t find enough workers to hire in finance, real estate, and personal services. Unemployment in Hong Kong is just 3.3%.

Our partner Tim Staermose recently wrote about several business opportunities in the Philippines that he is personally financing. And this Friday, our monthly SMC teleconference is dedicated to unique opportunities in Mongolia.

Things might seem a bit slow where you live, but the world is a big place full of possibilities. And action trumps hope any day.

Until tomorrow,
sig.jpg

Simon Black
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com 

This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
Field
, a free newsletter dedicated to individual freedom,
internationalization, asset protection and global finance. For a
complimentary subscription, visit http://www.SovereignMan.com

Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 24, 2012 Reporting From: Santiago, Chile

In Business, Business/Political Trends Worldwide, Chile, Continental Travel, currency, Expatriation, Government on January 24, 2012 at 3:06 pm

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 24, 2012
Reporting From: Santiago, ChileYesterday, Kentucky senator Rand Paul was detained by the TSA in Nashville after refusing to be fondled by the airport agents.Paul has been a vocal enemy of the TSA, blasting the agency last year after agents conducted an invasive search of a 6-year old girl despite her parents’ objections. TSA Director John Pistole suggested that, because a young child in Afghanistan is capable of detonating a roadside bomb, all children should be considered potential threats.

Paul raised the issue again yesterday in an opinion piece. As usual, the Obama administration closed ranks around the TSA yesterday, defending the agency and insisting that “we take necessary actions to ensure that air travel is safe.” Such as treating 6-year old girls like criminal terrorists.

Air travel is never going to be safe. We’re talking about a 500,000 pound flying building crammed with hundreds of strangers criss-crossing the skies nearly 100,000 times in a single day. There’s a lot of room for things to go wrong.

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Criminalizing travel, which is the effective net result of the current passenger screening process, has minimal impact on weeding out the boogeyman. There are so many holes in the TSA procedures– medication, baby formula, pilot exceptions. Not to mention a whole world of softer targets. Who needs airplanes when you have shopping malls?

One of the first things I learned in the intelligence business years ago is that smart enemies will always adapt their tactics. It’s not rocket science; Sun-Tzu wrote the same 2,500 years ago– focusing on a single approach (like airport security) is useless.

Thing is, TSA airport security has nothing to do with security, and everything to do with making sure that every human being who transits within or through a US commercial airport knows exactly who is in charge. We call it the Tip of the Spear.

The idea is to desensitize people to government intrusion, generally with something shocking (like treating a 6-year old girl as a criminal terrorist). That’s the tip of the spear. As the spear drives further and further into its target, subsequent intrusions seem less and less acute.

Psychologist Robert Cialdini, whose writings on influence and persuasion have been read by millions across the world in dozens of languages, discusses three key principles which apply to this ‘Tip of the Spear’ approach.

The first is called social proof. It’s easy to understand– like lemmings, sheep, or milk cows, people standing in the security line watching everyone else get patted down and go through body scanners, will most likely comply with the social norm. Monkey see, monkey do.

The second is the principle of authority. Also easy to understand– people will obey authority figures even if it requires taking objectionable action. Uniforms establish an authority image, as do the training programs that teach intimidation tactics to government agents– voice projection, direct eye contact, use of professional vocabulary, etc.

The third is a bit more complex; Cialdini calls it the principle of commitment and consistency. Simply put, if people commit to an idea in word or deed, their future actions will be consistent with this idea because it becomes part of their own self-image.

In this context, people who submit to government intrusion the first time (e.g. watch their children receive pat-downs at TSA checkpoints) are more likely to continue acceding to further government intrusions down the road. It’s a bit of a boiling frog approach.

When you step back and look at the big picture, ‘security’ is an utter farce. The moral argument for such measures is rooted in a silly myth that men in caves wish to do us harm. The legal argument is questionable at best. Many folks forget that the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution states:

“The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated…”

Does anyone truly consider it reasonable to subject passengers to demeaning, invasive searches? Or to douse travelers in radiation from machines that cost over $100,000? Or to waste billions of dollars and man-hours each year on security procedures that are routinely proven to be ineffective?

If the answer is yes, then you obviously don’t see eye-to-eye with your neighbors, hence you’re probably living in the wrong country.

If the answer is no, then it should be obvious that your government has hijacked liberty… in which case you’re probably living in the wrong country.

Until tomorrow,
sig.jpg

Simon Black
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com

This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
Field
, a free newsletter dedicated to individual freedom,
internationalization, asset protection and global finance. For a
complimentary subscription, visit http://www.SovereignMan.com

Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 23, 2012 Reporting From: Santiago, Chile

In Banking, Business/Political Trends Worldwide, Chile, Constitution of The United States, Continental Travel, currency, Entrepreneurship, EPA, Expatriation, Gold, Gold coins, History, Money and Finances, Political, Santiago, Social Security, Travel, United States Debt on January 23, 2012 at 5:22 pm

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 23, 2012
Reporting From: Santiago, Chile

With over 150 million registered users, the file sharing site MegaUpload.com is one of the most popular on the Internet. At least, it was.

screen-capture.jpg

The site has now been seized by the US government and its homepage converted to an FBI anti-piracy warning. Its founder, a high tech entrepreneur named Kim Dotcom (yes, he had it legally changed), was arrested in New Zealand after his homes were raided and assets seized.

These actions were all at the behest of the US government. And it’s just the latest example of Big Brother overextending its authority across the entire world.

Last week, we discussed the grassroots efforts to stop passage of the SOPA/PIPA legislation that would give the US government jurisdiction over the Internet. Wikipedia blacked out its English language pages to raise awareness of the issue, and people went completely nuts.

Congress subsequently withdrew the bills amid popular outcry, and the public rejoiced that their efforts successfully thwarted further encroachment on their liberty. Or so they thought.

On the exact same day that everyone was celebrating victory over SOPA/PIPA, the US government simply used another set of regulations to nab Dotcom and seize his assets. The fact that SOPA was scrapped turned out to be completely irrelevant, they just found other rules to apply (or break).

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A GOLD MINE FOR YOUR SAVINGS
Simon’s most recent find outperformed gold by 37% last year.
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to a bank in one of the fastest growing economies that pays 14% on savings.
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As usual, it’s probably not legal. But such technicalities don’t matter in the ‘guilty until proven innocent’ system in which we live. Executive agencies exercise extreme latitude when confiscating assets, and victims often don’t have the opportunity to address the matter in front of a judge for years, if ever.

In Dotcom’s case, the man probably won’t even successfully make it past the extradition process for at least a year… let alone bring the issue to trial. The government is using its bureaucracy to completely circumvent due process and make an example of somebody that they consider a nuisance.

So why should they care? What interest could the US government possibly have in a silly file sharing site? None. But the entertainment industry does.

You see, we don’t live in a representative democracy. Democracy is an illusion to make people believe that they’re free. Instead, it’s blocs of large corporations who are really in control. If the entertainment business wants Kim Dotcom to go away, the government will invent or break any law necessary to make it happen. They’re all in bed together.

What’s more, it doesn’t matter which group or party is in power. Democrat or Republican, Labour or Conservative, Liberal or New Democratic… they’re all for sale. Citizens concern themselves with the outcome of elections, investing heavy emotional and financial support for ‘their guy’. Companies just wait it out and buy off whichever candidates win.

Kim Dotcom, though a wealthy and successful entrepreneur, was essentially a lone wolf standing against the entire industry. Rather than find ways to work with him in what is clearly emerging as a dominant media platform, they chose to eliminate him… by having the US government send the New Zealand government to arrest him and seize his assets.

It’s mind numbing when you really think about it.

Ultimately, Dotcom may successfully find his way back to a normal life after years in court and perhaps some time in jail. In the meantime, though, his case certainly makes a strong argument for flying under the radar. It’s a stark reminder that, if they really want to get you, they’ll apply, invent, or break whatever laws are necessary to do so.

Until tomorrow,
sig.jpg

Simon Black
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com 


This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
Field
, a free newsletter dedicated to individual freedom,
internationalization, asset protection and global finance. For a
complimentary subscription, visit http://www.SovereignMan.com

Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 20, 2012 Reporting From: Santiago, Chile

In Business, Business/Political Trends Worldwide, Chile, Continental Travel, currency, Entrepreneurship, Expatriation, Gold, Gold bulion, Gold coins, Government, International Diversification on January 20, 2012 at 7:36 pm

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 20, 2012
Reporting From: Santiago, ChileGreetings once again. It’s another beautiful, sunny day in Chile today, and I’m about off to our farm south of town to spend a wonderful weekend with good food and great friends. Before I sign off for the week, though, there are a few questions I wanted to address:


First, Louise asks, “Simon, that last edition of SMC really blew me away, I appreciate you serving up such great boots on the ground intelligence for me so conveniently. Tell me, though– you talked a lot about offshore banking. What’s the best way to check out these banks and brokerages to see if they’re safe?”

Great question, and thanks for the kind words.

We live in a time when you can no longer assume away counterparty risk simply because banks and brokerages are regulated by a government. If you’re depositing money with someone, you should look at them like a financial partner. And, as with any partner, it’s imperative to get to know who you’re dealing with.

Unfortunately, there is no easy way to do this. You can’t just Google “Is XYZ Bank safe?” It takes a bit of homework.

With banks and brokerages, the first place to start is by talking to key people within the organization. Ask to see the financial statements. Talk to them about the company’s operations. Ask about their audit history.

At a high level, this is mostly a test. Anyone in the business of being a financial steward of other people’s money should be completely transparent. If you get the sense that they’re uncomfortable discussing these issues, or that they don’t really know, it’s a major red flag.

I also dive into the books and look for positive cash flows, strong liquidity, and adequate capitalization. Banks can book phony profits out of thin air using clever accounting tricks, but cash positions are much more tangible.

I’m also deeply concerned about liquidity. I want to see very high levels of liquidity that can withstand bank runs in case of market panic. If a bank has $123 billion on deposit and only $4.6 billion in cash (a ratio of just 3.25%), I’m not interested.  [Editor's note: those are Suntrust Bank's actual Q3 numbers.]

Islamic banking centers tend to have higher liquidity ratios; Abu Dhabi and Lebanon are great examples, and both accept most non-resident nationalities (except Israelis) as customers who show up in person with passport in hand.

Capitalization is also important; you obviously want to pass if a bank is teetering on insolvency, or if the slightest market route would wipe out all the equity.

Unfortunately this is much more difficult to ascertain. Bank loan portfolios are notoriously a black box of assets– does anyone really know what’s on Bank of America or Deutsche Bank’s books? Nope. And neither do they.

Conduct your own research. I often drive around town to get a sense of what the bank is investing in. Banks often proudly display signs at construction sites and the like, showing off to the world that they loaned $XYZ to the project.

When you see enough of these, you get a strong sense that the bank is incredibly exposed to the real estate market. At that point it’s a judgment call.

Even better, though, I’ll often try to go through a borrowing process myself. If a loan officer is just begging throw money at me with some ridiculously low interest rate, minimal down payment, and no credit check, I run away like a scalded dog because I know they’re not doing their homework on anyone else either.

Ideally, you want to see very strict, conservative lending practices and formal due diligence.

I could go on about this for pages and pages, but I hope this gives you a good start.
Next, Dave writes, “Simon, I’m on a two-year assignment in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. I have a bank account here and am considering moving more into it. What are your thoughts on Malaysian banks?”

If you’re living overseas, it always makes sense to have a local account for small purchases. After all, you’ve got to pay the cable bill somehow. But for real savings, pick the place that’s best for your money.

Kuala Lumpur is right next door to Singapore, which is one of the best places in the world to bank. Singapore has never had a bank failure, and the banks there are extremely well capitalized. It would be well worth the short trip down to Singapore to give your savings a good home.

Last, Kristen asks, “Simon, I heard you were giving the keynote speech at a conference in the Bahamas this month. Are you finally surfacing!??! Any truth to that rumor?”

Ha. Yes, it’s true. I detest the speaking circuit and routinely turn down requests to appear at conferences or do interviews, but this is a rare exception.

I’ll be delivering the keynote at BFI Capital Group’s private Inner Circle Briefing on Paradise Island, January 31st. The event dovetails into the Bahamas Freedomfest, though I’ll probably skip that to make room for short trips to Haiti and Turks & Caicos. Drop by and say hello if you’re in the area.

Until tomorrow,
sig.jpg

Simon Black
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com 

This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
Field
, a free newsletter dedicated to individual freedom,
internationalization, asset protection and global finance. For a
complimentary subscription, visit http://www.SovereignMan.com

Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 19, 2012 Reporting From: Santiago, Chile

In China, Constitution of The United States, Continental Travel, currency, Expatriation, Gold, Offshore accounts, Opportunity, Personal, Sovereign Man, United States Debt on January 20, 2012 at 9:45 am

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 19, 2012
Reporting From: Santiago, ChileAs you’re probably aware, yesterday was the much ballyhooed blackout of several popular web sites in protest of new legislation that threatens the Internet as we know it.The United States Congress has teed up two separate bills which give government agencies sweeping new powers to punish millions of innocent users, criminalize harmless activities, and effectively make entire web sites disappear at their sole discretion without any judicial oversight.

In a nutshell, these bills would create the online equivalent of Nazi Germany.
But what can we really expect from these people? It’s not the first time that Congress has gone out of its way to destroy freedom and prosperity, and it certainly won’t be the last. Just look at the last decade for a plethora of examples:

USA PATRIOT Act, 2001. The US Constitution officially became toilet paper when this bill of over 60,000 words just happened to be introduced only a few weeks after 9/11. Roving wiretaps, suspension of due process, and a complete loss of privacy became the norm.

Sarbanes-Oxley Act, 2002. In the wake of the Enron scandal, Congress did the only thing it knows how to do– pass stupid laws with no thought of long-term consequences. SOX, as it became known, was one of the most burdensome pieces of legislation to American business in history.

The disclosure requirements alone added millions of dollars of unnecessary expenses to US businesses and sent foreign companies who were thinking about listing on the formerly prestigious NYSE running for the hills. Places like Hong Kong and Singapore benefitted from such short-sighted regulation, and the US became less competitive. Again.

Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act, 2010. The inappropriately named HIRE Act essentially puts a gun to foreign banks’ heads and forces them to make a decision: any bank with US clients must either enter into a costly information sharing agreement with the IRS, or be subject to a 30% withholding tax on US-sourced capital flows.

Consequently, a number of foreign banks have begun dropping their US clients. Taken in conjunction with various US Securities rules, many foreign businesses have also begun dropping US citizens as partners, shareholders, and directors. It’s simply too onerous to have to deal with all the disclosure filings and risk action by the SEC or IRS.

Net result? US citizens are less capable of competing internationally in a world where the economic power is shifting overseas.

National Defense Authorization Act, 2011. Signed by President Obama on Saturday, December 31st with little fanfare when hardly anyone was looking, NDAA is the latest gem in a long line of liberty-destroying legislation that authorizes indefinite military detention (without trial) of suspected terrorists.

Thing is, NDAA provides a ridiculously broad definition of ‘suspected terrorist’, essentially giving carte blanche to local, state, and federal police agencies who no longer need to worry about justifying their decisions in front of a judge.

Don’t worry, though. President Obama issued a statement acknowledging the controversy of the bill, but clarified that his administration “will not authorize the indefinite military detention without trial of American citizens.”

Heartwarming. But hardly a secure guarantee. President Obama isn’t exactly batting 1,000 on his promises to the American public, and future presidents certainly won’t be obliged by the same pledge.

There are, of course, dozens of other examples. Obamacare. Dodd-Frank ‘financial reform’. And now the Stop Online Piracy Act / Personal Information Protection Act.

Hey, these laws like SOPA and PIPA always have great names. Just like wars. Operation ‘Enduring Freedom’ was the moniker given to the early days of the US War of Terror. It all sounds very noble. The reality is always different.

Throughout history, governments on the brink of insolvency have routinely enacted similar policies. Sliding into economic obscurity, they’ll engage in reckless, cannibalistic initiatives– higher taxes, burdensome regulation, war, destruction of the productive class, etc. It only hastens the end game.

This time is not different. And we can expect more and more of the same. Up next will be new laws that:

- restrict cash transactions over a certain amount (Italy has already passed such measures for amounts exceeding 1,000 euros)

- nationalize pension funds and private retirement accounts (again, has already happened around the world from Ireland to Argentina)

- impose a national sales tax and reduce death tax exemptions (already at the forefront of the ongoing tax debate in the US)

- ban gold and silver personal holdings (if you think this can’t happen, ask any of the 250,000 people who used to own Liberty Dollar coins before they were seized by the FBI in 2007…)

And more.

The thing is, every time one of these new bills crops up, there always seems to be a small resistance movement fighting it tooth and nail on the ground. Hence yesterday’s SOPA/PIPA blackout.  But ultimately, the political establishment wins.

It’s impossible to shake the public from its apathy… to steer people from the mind-numbing drivel of prime time airwaves… to rescue them from the PSYOPS campaigns of the 24/7 news channels.

We can only take care of ourselves. Any money or energy spent fighting the government or rousing grassroots support is inherently better spent looking after your own interests and making sure that you and your family aren’t victims of historical certainty.

And make no mistake, collapse of empire is a historical certainty. From the Babylonians to the Persians to the Romans to the Mayans to the Mongolians to the Ottomans, no empire is built to last. And the final years are anything but smooth-sailing.

Until tomorrow,
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Simon Black
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com 

This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
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Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 18, 2012 Reporting From: London, England

In Business, Business/Political Trends Worldwide, Chile, Constitution of The United States, Continental Travel, currency, Expatriation, Interesting places, International Diversification, President Obama, Sovereign Man, Taxes, Travel, United States Debt on January 18, 2012 at 8:01 pm

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 18, 2012
Reporting From: London, England

[Editor's note: Simon's friend Tim Price is a delightfully witty fund manager in the UK, one of the few free-thinking individuals in all of institutional finance. His recent thoughts below on the euro debacle, gold, and hyperinflation are some of the best ever written on the topics.]

“Under the circumstances, discussions with Greece and the official sector are paused for reflection on the benefits of a voluntary approach.” Debt talks “have not produced a constructive response.”
- The Institute of International Finance, January 13, 2012

“The war situation has developed not necessarily to Japan’s advantage..”
- Japanese Emperor Hirohito after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, announcing Japan’s surrender to the Allies.

There is a terrible hubris at the heart of mankind. Like every other living thing on the planet we are products of nature, but we consider ourselves to be well above it. We are beset by regular reminders of our vulnerability, but quickly dismiss them off-handedly to a spiritual plane, calling them “acts of God” as if to show that we could never have prevented them.

In a significant essay for Foreign Affairs, “The Black Swan of Cairo,” Nassim Taleb shows how the efforts of our authorities to suppress volatility actually end up making the world less predictable and more dangerous.

“Although the stated intention of political leaders and economic policy makers is to stabilize the system by inhibiting fluctuations, the result tends to be the opposite. These artificially constrained systems become prone to “Black Swans” – that is, they become extremely vulnerable to large-scale events that lie far from the statistical norm and were largely unpredictable to a given set of observers.”

There is an analogy from the natural world. In the 1960s and 1970s, mid-western American states fell victim to scores of wildfires. Constant interventions by the US Forest Service appeared to have little positive impact – if anything, the problems seemed to worsen. Over time, foresters came to appreciate that fires were a normal and healthy element of the forest ecosystem.

By continually suppressing small fires, they were unwittingly creating the conditions for larger and less containable wildfires in the future. Naturally occurring fires are necessary to remove old forest cover, underbrush and debris. If they are suppressed, the inevitable fire to come has a far greater store of latent fuel at its disposal.

Economist Murray Rothbard jangled the sensibilities of the Keynesians when he wrote his classic study, “America’s Great Depression”:

“If government wishes to see a depression ended as quickly as possible, and the economy returned to normal prosperity, what course should it adopt? The first and clearest injunction is: don’t interfere with the market’s adjustment process. The more the government intervenes to delay the market’s adjustment, the longer and more gruelling the depression will be, and the more difficult will be the road to complete recovery.”

But politicians must be seen to be doing something – like encouraging the construction of a £33 billion white elephant rail link in the middle of an austerity recession.

Not interfering with the market’s adjustment process is simply allowing Schumpeterian “creative destruction” to operate, and cleanse the forest. But that process is anathema to well-compensated entrenched interests that suckle from the teat of the State. Banks, for example.

So while “laissez faire” would accelerate any banking crisis and shorten the resultant economic contraction, it would reveal the identity of too many naked swimmers when the tide retreats. Instead, courtesy of highly paid lobbyists, we get a long drawn out depression. The example of Japan’s zombie banks from the 1990s is still fresh, but ignored in the west.

Rothbard identified the ways in which government can hobble the adjustment process:

1. Prevent or delay liquidation. Lend money to shaky businesses, call on banks to lend further.

2. Inflate further. Further inflation blocks the necessary fall in prices, thus delaying adjustment and prolonging depression. Further credit expansion creates more malinvestments which, in their turn, will have to be liquidated in some later depression. A government’s “easy money” policy prevents the market’s return to the necessary high interest rates.

3. Keep wage rates up.

4. Keep prices up.

5. Stimulate consumption and discourage saving. More saving and less consumption would speed recovery; more consumption and less saving aggravate the shortage of saved capital even further.

6. Subsidize unemployment. Any subsidization of unemployment (via unemployment “insurance”, relief, etc.) will prolong unemployment indefinitely, and delay the shift of workers to the fields where jobs are available.

An iatrogenic illness is one caused by the doctor himself. The economies of the west now face policy measures of the sort highlighted by Rothbard that are stated to be in our interests, but which are more likely to do harm to the patient and prolong the recession.

Taleb uses the example of the turkey before Thanksgiving. The turkey is fed for 1,000 days and every day seems to reaffirm the farmer’s generosity of spirit. Until the last day, when the turkey’s confidence and contentment is at its maximum. The “turkey problem” occurs when “a naïve analysis of stability is derived from the absence of past variations”.

To put it another way, the US property market cannot decline because it hasn?t declined in living memory. As Taleb puts it, as humans we inhabit two systems simultaneously: the linear and the complex.

The linear is predictable and permits the use of mathematical tools of high predictive value.

Complex systems,on the other hand, are marked by an absence of visible causal links between their elements, “masking a high degree of interdependence and extremely low predictability.” They also incorporate non-linear elements often called “tipping points.”

One reason for the severity of the financial crisis, and the losses incurred by banks, is that bankers and financial analysts were using linear tools in a non-linear, highly complex environment otherwise known as the financial markets.The models didn’t work.

The problem we face now as investors will end up being existential for some banking institutions and sovereigns. Our (uncontentious) core thesis is that throughout the west, more debt has been accumulated over the past four decades than can ever be paid back.

The question, effectively to be determined on a case-by-case basis, is whether bondholders are handed outright default (which looks increasingly like the case to come in Greece) or whether the authorities, in their understandable but misguided attempts to keep the show on the road, resort to a policy of inflation that could at some point easily spiral out of control.

As Rothbard wrote, “The longer the inflationary boom continues, the more painful and severe will be the necessary adjustment process… the boom cannot continue indefinitely, because eventually the public awakens to the governmental policy of permanent inflation, and flees from money into goods, making its purchases while [the currency] is worth more than it will be in future.”

“The result will be a ‘runaway’ or hyperinflation, so familiar to history, and particularly to the modern world. Hyperinflation, on any count, is far worse than any depression: it destroys the currency – the lifeblood of the economy; it ruins and shatters the middle class and all ‘fixed income groups;’ it wreaks havoc unbounded… To avoid such a calamity, then, credit expansion must stop sometime, and this will bring a depression into being.”

It may be a new year, but we are beset by the same problems that have been recurring since the crisis began. In most cases, those problems have worsened. One of the few improvements has been in the recapitalisation of Anglo-Saxon banks, but continental European banks seem acutely vulnerable to the potential outcome of a disorderly sovereign default.

Since the problems are the same, so are our preferred solutions: a specific focus on only the most creditworthy sovereign and quasi-sovereign debt (where it offers a positive real return); a specific focus on only the most defensive and internationally diversified equities; genuinely uncorrelated investments; and exposure to objectively the highest quality currencies, namely precious metals.

Euro zone politicians and policy makers have had plenty of time to come to terms with the continent’s problems, and continue to show no willingness to grasp admittedly difficult nettles.

It is symptomatic of the balkanised and adversarial nature of politics in the euro zone (a unified body that exists in theory but barely in fact) that Christian Noyer, chairman of the French central bank, anticipated France’s credit downgrade by suggesting that Britain should be downgraded first.

As the Hildebrand scandal also revealed, most of Europe’s central bankers are not fit to sweep the streets. And still time is running out. Readers of a certain age will recall a late 1980s “big hair” rock anthem called “The Final Countdown.” It was released by essentially a one-hit wonder band.

Its name was Europe.

europe.png

Tim Price

Director of Investment
PFP Wealth Management


This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
Field
, a free newsletter dedicated to individual freedom,
internationalization, asset protection and global finance. For a
complimentary subscription, visit http://www.SovereignMan.com

Sovereign Man Notes from the Field Date: January 16, 2012 Reporting From: Manila, Philippine

In Business/Political Trends Worldwide, Continental Travel, Fuels, Gold, History, Offshore accounts, Real Estate, Sovereign Man, Taxes, Travel on January 17, 2012 at 11:11 am

Sovereign Man

Notes from the Field

Date: January 16, 2012
Reporting From: Manila, Philippines[Editor's note: Tim Staermose is filling in for Simon today.]

Reaction to my article last week about the strong economic picture, and business opportunities I see all around me here on the ground in The Philippines was overwhelming.

Evidently there are some go-getters out there in this community who want to take action. Andthat’s great to know.

So, today I thought I’d share more specifics about a few of the ideas so that you can make a better judgment about whether there may be some opportunities for you, personally.

Simon and I talk a lot about “adding value.” And really, that’s what it’s all about. Whether in business, adding value for your customers, or as an employee, adding value for your employer, if you think in terms of how you can add value, you will be amply rewarded for taking action.

I’ve written before that there is a massive real estate boom under way here in Manila. New condominium projects are being sold off-plan to investors, both foreign and local (foreigners can own apartments so long as less than 40% of the units are in foreign hands).

This has bubble written all over it. Here’s what happens in a bubble–it bursts. Then the guys who are left without a chair when the music stops delude themselves into thinking they can just ‘wait it out.’ Which means they’ll turn to the local rental market and try to achieve a yield to offset carrying costs.

Consequently, there is going to be huge demand for property management services–finding a tenant, collecting rent, maintaining the property, ensuring that taxes and dues are paid, and even hiring out to short-term tourists.

I know of a few companies springing up in this niche, but they’re in the embryonic stage. A professionally organized outfit that can achieve scale and a strong online presence could quickly dominate the market. Simon has mentioned before that a great model to copy already exists in Panama. Check it out and you’ll see.

For hungry real estate professionals, there is also ample room here in Manila for competent and knowledgeable buyers’ agents. The way the real estate business works here is that, in the new construction market, all of the brokers work for the developer. In the existing homes market, they work for the sellers. Buyers usually fend for themselves.

Setting up a small consulting firm that provides high quality, unbiased advice for buyers would be another excellent opportunity that is under represented at the moment.

Another idea I have is for a web-based service business in the Philippines. I can’t be too specific in this forum as I’m actually planning to get this one up and running. However I am looking for an IT professional who can design and build a custom, rigidly secure data warehousing platform.

If you have this kind of experience and are interested in hearing more, please fill out this form to let me know.

Until next time,

Tim Staermose,
Chief Investment Strategist, Sovereign Man


This article appears courtesy of SovereignMan.com: Notes From The
Field
, a free newsletter dedicated to individual freedom,
internationalization, asset protection and global finance. For a
complimentary subscription, visit http://www.SovereignMan.com

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