The U.S. Mint made an unusual request last week. In a press release dated July 23, the bureau begged Americans to start putting coins back into circulation by spending or depositing them.
As you may have noticed, people just aren’t making transactions with coinage like they used to. That’s especially the case now in the age of the coronavirus. With many people sheltering in place, billions of dollars in everyday purchases are being made online that would have happened at the cash register at regular times.
This is creating a national coin shortage.
“Until coin circulation patterns return to normal, it may be more difficult for retailers and small businesses to accept cash payments,” the Mint writes, adding that cash is the only form of payment for millions of Americans. Without coins, retailers can’t break bills.
This crisis, if it can be called that, got me thinking about the velocity of money. In simple terms, money velocity measures the number of times a unit of currency changes hands in a given period of time. As an illustration, imagine you spend $10 on lunch at a restaurant in a strip mall. That same $10 is then used by the restaurant owner to pay the lease; the landlord then uses it to pay its own creditors, and so on.
When the velocity of money increases, it suggests more excellent economic activity. Money is being spent more freely and rapidly. And when it decreases, it suggests that the economy is stagnating or deteriorating. People aren’t spending.
Below is the velocity of the M2 money supply, which includes not just cash but also so-called “near money”: savings deposits, money market securities, and the like. As you can see, it’s at its lowest level ever, using 60 years’ worth of data.
So what does this mean, and can we blame coin hoarders for this decline? Hardly. Instead, we should be directing the blame at the Federal Reserve, which has flooded the economy with easy money.
Record Money-Printing Has Been Rocket Fuel for the Price of Gold
Never before in its 244-year history has the U.S. economy been so saturated with money. There’s too much of it. M2 money supply growth is at 24 percent year-over-year, the fastest rate ever.
The economy isn’t growing that quickly. It’s simply impossible for much of this newly-issued money to be lent out to consumers, and with low rates, there’s little financial incentive to do so. So it’s just sitting in banks’ excess reserves.
Kind of like how coins are just sitting in people’s couch cushions and mason jars right now instead of being put into circulation.
For many people, this underlines the belief that fiat currency is intrinsically worthless. Because cash is not linked to a hard asset—or, for that matter, anything of value—the central bank is free to print as much of it as it pleases, right out of thin air, regardless of there being a demand for it or not.
And as anyone who’s taken high school economics knows, when supply outpaces demand, the value of any asset plummets.
Dalio and Mobius Urge Investment in Gold
“Cash is trash,” Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, the world’s largest hedge fund firm, said back in January. “There’s still a lot of money in cash.”
Instead, Dalio advocates for a highly-diversified portfolio, one that includes gold and other hard assets that we can’t just print more of.
“I believe that it would be both risk-reducing and return-enhancing to consider adding gold to one’s portfolio,” Dalio wrote last July in an article posted on LinkedIn. That same month, he revealed that gold would be among his top investments at Bridgewater.
It was a masterful call. Since he wrote the article, spot gold has climbed 35 percent. On Friday, for the first time since 2011, the precious metal crossed above $1,900 an ounce. And today, it hit a new all-time record high, trading above $1,940 for the first time.
It is pleasing to see the ratio between gold and silver prices fall further off its recent all-time high. This shows that the white metal competes against its more expensive cousin.