It's been a long time since the yen slid so steeply against the US dollar. So long, in fact, that people are beginning to wonder how much further it has to go, and Toby Connor of GoldScents thinks there might be an even bigger problem.

As many of you who have read my work in the past know, I expect the eventual endgame to this whole Keynesian monetary experiment that has been going on ever since World War II to finally terminate in a global currency crisis. I’m starting to wonder if we aren’t seeing the first domino start to topple.

I’m talking about the Japanese yen, of course.

I think everyone just naturally assumes that the yen is dropping in response to Prime Minister Abe’s intent to imitate US policy and print its way out of its troubles. The problem with this strategy is, of course, eventually Japan will break its currency. Japan is in a particularly tenuous situation in that their debt to GDP dwarfs most of the rest of the world. The only hope they have of servicing this debt is for interest rates to stay basically at zero.

Any move by interest rates above this artificially low level and Japan’s debt becomes unserviceable, without resorting to a greater and greater debasement of the currency. Unfortunately that will also result in an acceleration of the collapse of the currency, which would just cause Japanese bonds to be sold even more aggressively—a nasty catch-22 situation.

At this point there is no way out for Japan. The only question is when the endgame will arrive? Japanese bond bears have been asking themselves this question for almost two decades.

The recent move in the yen has started me wondering if that end game hasn’t now begun.

In the chart below I have marked the successive yearly cycle lows with blue arrows. As you can see this major cycle bottom tends to arrive between March and May most years. If the 2013 yearly cycle low arrives in the normal timing band, then there may be a big problem developing with the Japanese currency. The reason I say that is because the Japanese yen is basically already in free fall and we may still have another one-three months to go before a final bottom.

Yen Long Term

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Another warning sign is the fact that this decline cut through not only the 2012 yearly cycle low, but also the 2011 yearly cycle low and never even blinked. In an orderly decline both of these levels should have generated at least a decent bear market rally. In my opinion, it’s very worrisome that the yen didn’t even slow down as it moved through these major support levels.

Yen Daily

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The next major support level is at the 2010 yearly cycle pivot. If the yen slices through this support level also, then I think we have a major currency crisis on our hands.

Yen Weekly

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Needless to say, if the world sees a major currency collapse, which up to this point, I think, most people would consider an absurd idea, it’s going to spark a panic for protection. Despite stocks entering the euphoria stage of this bull market, stocks are not going to protect one from a currency crisis. Only hard assets will do that, and the two hard assets that are best at protecting one’s wealth are gold and silver.

Wouldn’t it be fitting that at a time when gold and silver are about to be most cherished, they are now completely loathed by the market?

By Toby Connor of GoldScents