In the same way, developed countries have borrowed tomorrow’s riches to finance today’s consumption. According to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the total debt of governments, households and companies in the OCDE countries has grown from 160% of GDP in 1980 to 321% in 2010. And most of this debt has been used for financing consumption (bureaucrats’ salaries, household spending) rather than for infrastructure or investment. Most countries being in deficit, a part of their debt goes to... servicing older debt, which is the definition of a Ponzi scheme. On top of that, those countries are guaranteeing « entitlements » (retirement, health care) that are far from being funded.
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Friday, January 11, 2013
Our Whole Economy Is a Ponzi Scheme !
In the same way, developed countries have borrowed tomorrow’s riches to finance today’s consumption. According to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the total debt of governments, households and companies in the OCDE countries has grown from 160% of GDP in 1980 to 321% in 2010. And most of this debt has been used for financing consumption (bureaucrats’ salaries, household spending) rather than for infrastructure or investment. Most countries being in deficit, a part of their debt goes to... servicing older debt, which is the definition of a Ponzi scheme. On top of that, those countries are guaranteeing « entitlements » (retirement, health care) that are far from being funded.
Etichette:
Ben Bernanke,
Central Bank Policy,
Central Planning,
GDP
Thursday, January 10, 2013
It’s a mad mad mad mad world
By Detlev Schlichter
Shinzo Abe, Japan’s new prime minister,
has some exciting new ideas about how to make Japan’s economy grow. How
about the government borrows a lot of money and spends it on building
bridges and roads all over the country?
If
that doesn’t sound so new, it is because it isn’t. It is what Japan has
been doing for 20 years, and it is the main reason why Japan is now the
most heavily indebted nation on the planet – and still not growing a
lot. Its debt-to-GDP ratio stands at an eye-watering, world-record 230
percent, which already guarantees that the country’s pensioners-to-be
(and Japan has a lot of those) will never be repaid with anything of
true value for the government bonds they kept patiently accumulating in
their pension funds, and that they optimistically keep calling ‘assets’.
But
never mind. The Keynesians agree that this policy was a roaring
success, and that this is why the country needs more of it, as,
strangely, Japan has still not regained self-sufficient growth after 2
decades of such a policy. Hmmm. Well, in any case, surely the next set
of roads and bridges are going to make all the difference. I suggest
that this should be called the ‘Krugman-doctrine’, after the outstanding
Keynesian thinker, Paul Krugman:
even if a few trillion of new government debt and a few trillion of
newly-printed paper-money have not revitalized your economy, the next
trillion in government deficit-spending and the next trillion in new
central-bank money will finally get the economy going. “Just keep the
foot on the gas pedal until the economy grows, damn it!”
Etichette:
Ben Bernanke,
Central Bank Policy,
central banks,
Central Planning,
Debt,
Detlev Schlichter,
FED,
GDP,
hyperinflations,
Inflation,
Japan,
Keynesian Economics,
Keynesianism,
Quantitative Easing
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
The Trends to Watch in 2013
Rather than attempt to predict the unpredictable – that is, specific events and price levels – let’s look instead for key dynamics that will play out over the next two to three years. Though the specific timelines of crises are inherently unpredictable, it is still useful to understand the eventual consequences of influential trends.
In other words: policies that appear to have been successful for the past four years may continue to appear successful for a year or two longer. But that very success comes at a steep, and as yet unpaid, price in suppressed systemic risk, cost, and consequence.
Trend #1: Central Planning intervention in stock and bond markets will continue, despite diminishing returns on Central State/Bank intervention
Etichette:
banking,
banks,
central banks,
Central Planning,
Charles Hugh Smith,
Debt,
FED,
Federal Reserve,
GDP,
growth,
income,
Japan,
Keynesianism,
Manipulation,
Markets,
QE4,
Quantitative Easing,
recovery
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Japan in 2013
The Japanese government for the last twenty three years has employed the Keynesian tools of deficit spending and more recently the monetarist policies of expanding money supply in an attempt to stop the economy from sliding into recession and to develop some growth. On paper, it has only achieved the former objective; in reality it has emasculated the productive capability of her domestic economy.
Before the speculative bubble of the late-1980s the Japanese economy was driven by savings. Her strong savings flow gave Japanese industry access to a stable low-cost source of real capital with which it was able to produce high-quality goods for export at competitive prices. While there was, in the free market sense, much wrong with Japan this characteristic more than compensated for her economic sins. However, the bubble came along, fuelled by the institutional greed of the Zaibatsu which through their banks sanctioned a spectacular expansion of credit, and as bubbles go this one went pop spectacularly. Since then the government has done everything it can to stop banks folding and industrial malinvestments from being liquidated.
Etichette:
Ben Bernanke,
deflation,
ECB,
FED,
GDP,
Japan,
Keynesian Economics
Keynesian Economics vs. Austrian Economics
Keynesian Economics & Monetary Economics vs. Austrian Economics
Featuring Ben Bernanke, Paul Krugman, Peter Schiff, and Ron Paul
Etichette:
Austrian School,
Ben Bernanke,
Dollar Bubble,
ECB,
FED,
hyperinflations,
Inflation,
Keynesian Economics,
Paul Krugman,
Peter Schiff,
Ron Paul
Sunday, January 6, 2013
The Myth of the Failure of Capitalism
[This essay was originally published as "Die Legende von Versagen des Kapitalismus" in Der Internationale Kapitalismus und die Krise, Festschrift für Julius Wolf (1932)]
The nearly universal opinion expressed these days is that the economic crisis of recent years marks the end of capitalism. Capitalism allegedly has failed, has proven itself incapable of solving economic problems, and so mankind has no alternative, if it is to survive, then to make the transition to a planned economy, to socialism.
This is hardly a new idea. The socialists have always maintained that economic crises are the inevitable result of the capitalistic method of production and that there is no other means of eliminating economic crises than the transition to socialism. If these assertions are expressed more forcefully these days and evoke greater public response, it is not because the present crisis is greater or longer than its predecessors, but rather primarily because today public opinion is much more strongly influenced by socialist views than it was in previous decades.
Etichette:
Austrian School,
Capitalism,
crisis,
debt us,
deflation,
ECB,
FED,
GDP,
Inflation,
Ludwig von Mises,
Quantitative Easing,
Socialism
Friday, January 4, 2013
Promises Will be Broken
By Bill Bonner
When wealth was easy to identify and easy to control — that is, when it was mostly land — a few insiders could do a fairly good job of keeping it for themselves. The feudal hierarchy gave everybody a place in the system, with the insiders at the top of the heap.
But come the industrial revolution and suddenly wealth was accumulating outside the feudal structure. Populations were growing too…and growing restless. The old regime tried to tax this new money, but the new ‘bourgeoisie’ resisted.
“No taxation without representation,” was a popular slogan of the time. The outsiders wanted in. And there were advantages to opening the doors.
Rather than a small clique of insiders, the governments of the modern world count on the energy of the entire population. This was the real breakthrough of the French Revolution and its successors. They harnessed the energy of millions of citizens, who were ready to be taxed and to die, if necessary, for the mother country. This was Napoleon’s secret weapon — big battalions, formed of citizen soldiers. These enthusiastic warriors gave him an edge in battle. But they also ushered him to his very own Waterloo.
Napoleon Bonaparte himself was an outsider. He was not French, but Corsican. He didn’t even speak French when he arrived in Toulon as a boy.
When wealth was easy to identify and easy to control — that is, when it was mostly land — a few insiders could do a fairly good job of keeping it for themselves. The feudal hierarchy gave everybody a place in the system, with the insiders at the top of the heap.
But come the industrial revolution and suddenly wealth was accumulating outside the feudal structure. Populations were growing too…and growing restless. The old regime tried to tax this new money, but the new ‘bourgeoisie’ resisted.
“No taxation without representation,” was a popular slogan of the time. The outsiders wanted in. And there were advantages to opening the doors.
Rather than a small clique of insiders, the governments of the modern world count on the energy of the entire population. This was the real breakthrough of the French Revolution and its successors. They harnessed the energy of millions of citizens, who were ready to be taxed and to die, if necessary, for the mother country. This was Napoleon’s secret weapon — big battalions, formed of citizen soldiers. These enthusiastic warriors gave him an edge in battle. But they also ushered him to his very own Waterloo.
Napoleon Bonaparte himself was an outsider. He was not French, but Corsican. He didn’t even speak French when he arrived in Toulon as a boy.
Etichette:
Austrian School,
Bill Bonner,
Central Bank Policy,
deflation,
ECB,
FED,
Fiscal Cliff,
GDP,
Ponzi scheme
Thursday, January 3, 2013
The Entitlement Cliff
The Welfare States of the Developed World are “long growth.” Without it, their finances are doomed.
First, a little background…
Generally, investors will pay more for a dollar’s worth of earnings from a stock than from a bond. Stocks are riskier than bonds, in the sense that share prices tend to go up and down more, depending on company results. But investors believe this ‘risk premium’ is worth it, because there is more ‘upside’ in stocks; they will grow with the economy. Over the long run, therefore, the rate of return on stock market investing should more or less reflect the stream of dividends received, plus the rate of growth in the economy. If the economy doesn’t grow, however, the risk premium becomes a costly artifact of an earlier age.
Pension and insurance funds, too, count on growth. They collect money. They invest it and make projections based on what they consider a likely rate of return. The difference between what they collect in premiums…and what they need to invest to cover their costs and payouts…is profit. As of 2012, the typical pension fund — such as those operated by state and local governments — was banking on a rate of investment return as much as four times higher than the GDP growth rate. If growth does not pick up, these funds will go broke.
Etichette:
Central Bank Policy,
collapse,
Fiscal Cliff,
Inflation
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Fiscal Cliff Explained - How Do We Land?
Etichette:
Central Bank Policy,
collapse,
Debt,
debt us,
deflation,
FED,
Fiscal Cliff,
Gold and Silver,
gold market,
Inflation,
Investment,
Mike Maloney,
Quantitative Easing,
Social Security
Tuesday, January 1, 2013
The year 2012 in perspective
by sibileau.com
“…If you tax a nation to death, destroy its capital markets, nourish its unemployment, condemn it to an expensive currency and give its corporations liquidity at stupidly low costs you can only expect one outcome: Defaults….”
Click here to read this article in pdf format: December 9 2012
Today, I want to summarize what we
covered over the year. During 2012, I sought to address both theory and
market developments. Under an Austrian approach, I discussed many
macroeconomic topics: the effect of zero interest rates, the myth of decoupling (between the US and the Euro zone), collateralized monetary systems (as imposed by the European Central Bank), the technical (but not realistic) possibility of a smooth exit from the Euro zone, the destruction of the capital markets by financial repression, the link between the futures, repo and gold markets and consumer prices (I don’t like the word “consumer prices”, but it is better than speaking of a “price level”), insider trading, circular reasoning in mainstream economics, high-frequency trading, what can precipitate the end game to this crisis, the technicalities of a transition to a gold standard, the conditions for a successful implementation of the gold standard, and the flawed logic behind the Chicago plan, as proposed by Benes & Kumhof.
Let’s now briefly follow up on each of the market themes I covered in 2012:
1.-There has been no decoupling: The Euro zone is coupled to the US dollar zone
At the end of 2011, when the collapse of
the banking system in the Euro zone (courtesy of M. Trichet) was
dragging the rest of the world, the Swiss National Bank established a
peg on the Franc to the Euro and the Federal Reserve extended and
cheapened its currency swaps with the European Central Bank. These two
measures –indirectly- coupled the fate of the assets in the balance
sheets of the Euro zone banks to the balance sheets of the central banks
of Switzerland and the US.
Etichette:
Austrian School,
Central Bank Policy,
European Union,
FED,
Gold and Silver,
gold market,
Gold Standard
What causes hyperinflations and why we have not seen one yet: A forensic examination of dead currencies
by mises.ca
As anticipated in my previous letter, today I want to discuss the topic of high or hyperinflation: What triggers it? Is there a common feature in hyperinflations that would allow us to see one when it’s coming? If so, can we make an educated guess as to when to expect it? The analysis will be inductive (breaking with the Austrian method) and in the process, I will seek to help Peter Schiff find an easy answer to give the media whenever he’s questioned about hyperinflation. If my thesis is correct, three additional conclusions should hold: a) High inflation and high nominal interest rates are not incompatible but go together: There cannot be hyperinflation without high nominal interest rates, b) The folks at the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee will eventually be out of a job, and c) Jim Rogers will have been proved wrong on his recommendation to buy farmland.
(Before we deal with these questions, a quick note related to my last letter: A friend pointed me to this article in Zerohedge.com, where the problem on liquidity being diverted back to shareholders in the form of share buybacks and dividends was exposed, before I would bring it up, on my letter of March 4th. )
A forensic analysis on dead currencies
When I think of hyperinflation, I think of dead currencies. They are the best evidence. There is a common pattern to be found in every one of them and no, I am not talking of six-to-eight-figure denomination bills or shortages of goods. These are just symptoms. Behind the death of every currency in modern times, there has been a quasi-fiscal deficit causing it. Thus, briefly, when someone asks: What causes hyperinflations? The answer is: Quasi-fiscal deficits! Why have we not seen hyperinflation yet? Because we have not had quasi-fiscal deficits!What is a quasi-fiscal deficit?
A quasi-fiscal deficit is the deficit of a central bank. From Germany to Argentina to Zimbabwe, the hyper or high inflationary processes have always been fueled by such deficits. Monetized fiscal deficits produce inflation. Quasi-fiscal deficits (by definition, they are monetized) produce hyperinflation. Remember that capital losses due to the mark down of assets do not affect central banks: They simply don’t need to mark to market. They mark to model.
Etichette:
Austrian School,
Central Bank Policy,
ECB,
Euro,
FED,
Gold and Silver,
hyperinflations,
Inflation,
Jim Rogers
Our Collapsing Economy and Currency
by paulcraigroberts.org
Is the “fiscal cliff” real or just another hoax? The answer is that the fiscal cliff is real, but it is a result, not a cause. The hoax is the way the fiscal cliff is being used.
The fiscal cliff is the result of the inability to close the federal budget deficit. The budget deficit cannot be closed because large numbers of US middle class jobs and the GDP and tax base associated with them have been moved offshore, thus reducing federal revenues. The fiscal cliff cannot be closed because of the unfunded liabilities of eleven years of US-initiated wars against a half dozen Muslim countries–wars that have benefitted only the profits of the military/security complex and the territorial ambitions of Israel. The budget deficit cannot be closed, because economic policy is focused only on saving banks that wrongful financial deregulation allowed to speculate, to merge, and to become too big to fail, thus requiring public subsidies that vastly dwarf the totality of US welfare spending.
Is the “fiscal cliff” real or just another hoax? The answer is that the fiscal cliff is real, but it is a result, not a cause. The hoax is the way the fiscal cliff is being used.
The fiscal cliff is the result of the inability to close the federal budget deficit. The budget deficit cannot be closed because large numbers of US middle class jobs and the GDP and tax base associated with them have been moved offshore, thus reducing federal revenues. The fiscal cliff cannot be closed because of the unfunded liabilities of eleven years of US-initiated wars against a half dozen Muslim countries–wars that have benefitted only the profits of the military/security complex and the territorial ambitions of Israel. The budget deficit cannot be closed, because economic policy is focused only on saving banks that wrongful financial deregulation allowed to speculate, to merge, and to become too big to fail, thus requiring public subsidies that vastly dwarf the totality of US welfare spending.
Etichette:
Bernanke,
collapse,
debt us,
ECB,
FED,
Fiscal Cliff,
Inflation,
Paul Craig Roberts
Friday, December 28, 2012
"fraud. why the great recession" (official documentary)
Free markets are not to be blamed for the Great Recession. On the contrary, its origins rest upon the deep government and central bank intervention in the economy. Through fraudulent mechanisms, this causes recurrent boom and bust cycles: bad policies create phases of irrational exuberance, which are then followed by economic recessions, a result that every citizen ends up suffering from.
Etichette:
Austrian School,
Central Bank Policy,
collapse,
Commodities,
crisis,
debt us,
deflation,
Documentaries,
FED,
Gold and Silver,
Jesús Huerta de Soto,
Ludwig von Mises
The Fiscal Cliff Is a Diversion: The Derivatives Tsunami and the Dollar Bubble
The “fiscal cliff” is another hoax designed to shift the attention of policymakers, the media, and the attentive public, if any, from huge problems to small ones.
The fiscal cliff is automatic spending cuts and tax increases in order to reduce the deficit by an insignificant amount over ten years if Congress takes no action itself to cut spending and to raise taxes. In other words, the “fiscal cliff” is going to happen either way.
The problem from the standpoint of conventional economics with the fiscal cliff is that it amounts to a double-barrel dose of austerity delivered to a faltering and recessionary economy. Ever since John Maynard Keynes, most economists have understood that austerity is not the answer to recession or depression.
Regardless, the fiscal cliff is about small numbers compared to the Derivatives Tsunami or to bond market and dollar market bubbles.
The fiscal cliff requires that the federal government cut spending by $1.3 trillion over ten years. The Guardian reports that means the federal deficit has to be reduced about $109 billion per year or 3 percent of the current budget.
Etichette:
Central Bank Policy,
collapse,
crisis,
debt us,
deflation,
derivate,
Dollar Bubble,
Fiscal Cliff,
Inflation,
Paul Craig Roberts
Why are (Smart) Investors Buying 50 Times More Physical Silver than Gold?
By: Eric Sprott
As long-time students of precious metals investing, there are certain things we understand. One is that, historically, the availability ratio of silver to gold has had a direct influence on the price of the metals. The current availability ratio of physical silver to gold for investment purposes is approximately 3:1. So, why is it that investors are allocating their dollars to silver at a much higher ratio? What is it that these “smart” investors understand? Let’s have a look at the numbers and see if it’s time for investors to do as a wise man once said and “follow the money.”
Average annual gold mine production is approximately 80 million ounces, which together with an estimated average 50 million ounces of annual recycled gold, totals around 130 million ounces available per year. In comparison, annual mined silver production has averaged around 750 million ounces, while recycled silver is estimated at 250 million ounces per year, which adds up to approximately 1 billion ounces. Using this data, there is roughly 8 times more silver available to buy than there is gold. However, not all gold and silver is available for investment purposes, due to their use in industrial applications. It is estimated that for investment purposes (jewelry, bars and coins), the annual availability of gold is roughly 120 million ounces, and of silver it is 350 million ounces. Therefore, the ratio of physical silver availability to gold availability is 350/120, or ~3:1.1
As long-time students of precious metals investing, there are certain things we understand. One is that, historically, the availability ratio of silver to gold has had a direct influence on the price of the metals. The current availability ratio of physical silver to gold for investment purposes is approximately 3:1. So, why is it that investors are allocating their dollars to silver at a much higher ratio? What is it that these “smart” investors understand? Let’s have a look at the numbers and see if it’s time for investors to do as a wise man once said and “follow the money.”
Average annual gold mine production is approximately 80 million ounces, which together with an estimated average 50 million ounces of annual recycled gold, totals around 130 million ounces available per year. In comparison, annual mined silver production has averaged around 750 million ounces, while recycled silver is estimated at 250 million ounces per year, which adds up to approximately 1 billion ounces. Using this data, there is roughly 8 times more silver available to buy than there is gold. However, not all gold and silver is available for investment purposes, due to their use in industrial applications. It is estimated that for investment purposes (jewelry, bars and coins), the annual availability of gold is roughly 120 million ounces, and of silver it is 350 million ounces. Therefore, the ratio of physical silver availability to gold availability is 350/120, or ~3:1.1
Etichette:
Austrian School,
Debt,
debt us,
Eric Sprott,
FED,
Gold and Silver,
Inflation,
Quantitative Easing
The Fed Doubles The Dosage
On December 12th, the Federal Reserve announced the most aggressive program of monetary stimulus ever undertaken in peacetime. Beginning in January, the Fed will more than double the amount of fiat money it creates each month from $40 billion to $85 billion. On an annualized basis that amounts to more than $1 trillion a year. This week we will consider 1) What they did; 2) Why they did it; and, 3) What impact it will have on asset prices over the short-term.
What They Did:
In a nutshell, the Fed announced it will more than double the amount of fiat money it creates each month and that it will use that money to buy government bonds and mortgage-backed securities until the unemployment rate drops substantially or until the inflation rate accelerates. The press release stated:
“…the Committee will continue purchasing additional agency mortgage-backed securities at a pace of $40 billion per month. The Committee also will purchase longer-term Treasury securities … initially at a pace of $45 billion per month.”
Etichette:
Austrian School,
Central Bank Policy,
collapse,
Debt,
debt us,
deflation,
FED,
Inflation,
QE3,
QE4,
Quantitative Easing
The Historic Inversion In Shadow Banking Is Now Complete
Back in June, we wrote an article titled "On The Verge Of A Historic Inversion In Shadow Banking" in which we showed that for the first time since December 1995, the total "shadow liabilities" in the United States - the deposit-free funding instruments that serve as credit to those unregulated institutions that are financial banks in all but name (i.e., they perform maturity, credit and liquidity transformations) - were on the verge of being once more eclipsed by traditional bank funding liabilities. As of Thursday, this inversion is now a fact, with Shadow Bank liabilities representing less in notional than traditional liabilities.
In other words, in Q3 total shadow liabilities, using the Zoltan Poszar definition, and excluding hedge fund repo-funded, collateral-chain explicit leverage, declined to $14.8 trillion, a drop of $104 billion in the quarter. When one considers that this is a decline of $6.2 trillion since the all time peak of $21 trillion in Q1 2008, it becomes immediately obvious what the true source of deleveraging in the modern financial system is, and why the Fed continues to have no choice but to offset the shadow deleveraging by injecting new Flow via traditional pathways, i.e. engaging in virtually endless QE.
What is more important, the ongoing deleveraging in shadow banking, now in its 18th consecutive quarter, dwarfs any deleveraging that may have happened in the financial non-corporate sector, or even in the household sector (credit cards, net of the surge in student and car loans of course) and is the biggest flow drain in the fungible credit market system in which the only real source of new credit continues to be either the Fed (via QE following repo transformations courtesy of the custodial banks), or the Treasury of course,via direct government-guaranteed loans.
Etichette:
Central Bank Policy,
collapse,
deflation,
FED,
Fiscal Cliff,
Inflation,
M1,
M2,
QE3,
QE4,
Quantitative Easing
Saturday, December 22, 2012
What is wrong about the euro, and what is not
Every Monday morning the readers of the UK’s Daily Telegraph
are treated to a sermon on the benefits of Keynesian stimulus
economics, the dangers of belt-tightening and the unnecessary cruelty of
‘austerity’ imposed on Europe by the evil Hun. To this effect, the
newspaper gives a whole page in its ‘Business’ section to Roger Bootle and Ambrose Evans-Pritchard,
who explain that growth comes from government deficits and from the
central bank printing money, and why can’t those stupid Europeans get
it? The reader is left with the impression that, if only the European
states could each have their little currencies back and merrily devalue
and run some proper deficits again, Greece could be the economic
powerhouse it was before the Germans took over.
Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard (AEP) increasingly faces the risk of running out of
hyperbolic war-analogies sooner than the euro collapses. For months he
has been numbing his readership with references to the Second World War
or the First World War, or to ‘1930s-style policies’ so that not even
the most casual reader on his way to the sports pages can be left in any
doubt as to how bad this whole thing in Europe is, and how bad it will
get, and importantly, who is responsible. From declining car sales in
France to high youth-unemployment in Spain, everything is, according to
AEP, the fault of Germany, a ‘foolish’ Germany. Apparently these nations
had previously well-managed and dynamic economies but have now sadly
fallen under the spell of Angela Merkel’s Thatcherite belief in
balancing the books and her particularly Teutonic brand of fiscal
sadism.
Etichette:
Central Bank Policy,
collapse,
Debt,
deflation,
Detlev Schlichter,
ECB,
Euro,
European Union,
FED,
Inflation
Thursday, December 20, 2012
No Way Out
By upping the ante once again in its
gamble to revive the lethargic economy through monetary action, the Federal
Reserve's Open Market Committee is now compelling the rest of us to buy into
a game that we may not be able to afford. At his press conference this week,
Fed Chairman Bernanke explained how the easiest policy stance in Fed history
has just gotten that much easier. First it gave us zero interest rates, then
QEs I and II, Operation Twist, and finally "unlimited" QE3.
Now that those moves have failed to
deliver economic health, the Fed has doubled the size of its open-ended money
printing and has announced a program of data flexibility that virtually
insures that they will never bump into limitations, until it's too late.
Although their new policies will create numerous long-term challenges for the
economy, the biggest near-term challenge for the Fed will be how to keep the
momentum going by upping the ante even higher their next meeting.
|
Etichette:
Central Bank Policy,
collapse,
Commodities,
FED,
Gold and Silver,
Peter Schiff,
QE3,
QE4,
Quantitative Easing
QE 4: Folks, This Ain't Normal
by Chris Martenson
Okay, the Fed's recent decision to boost its monetary stimulus (a.k.a. "money printing," "quantitative easing," or simply "QE") by another $45 billion a month to a combined $85 billion per month demonstrates an almost complete departure from what a normal person might consider sensible.
To borrow a phrase from Joel Salatin: Folks, this ain't normal. To this I will add ...and it will end badly.
If you had stopped me on the street a few years ago and asked me what I thought would have happened in the stock, bond, foreign currency, and commodity markets on the day the Fed announced an $85 billion per month thin-air money printing program directed at government bonds, I never would have predicted what has actually come to pass.
I would have predicted soaring stock prices on the expectation that all this money would have to end up in the stock market eventually. I would have predicted the dollar to fall because who in their right mind would want to hold the currency of a country that is borrowing 46 cents (!) out of every dollar that it is spending while its central bank monetizes 100% of that craziness?
Further, I would have expected additional strength in the government bond market, because $85 billion pretty much covers all of the expected new issuance going forward, plus many entities still need to buy U.S. bonds for a variety of fiduciary reasons. With little product for sale and lots of bids by various players, one of which – the Fed – has a magic printing press and is not just price insensitive but actually seeking to drive prices higher (and yields lower), that's a recipe for rising prices.
Okay, the Fed's recent decision to boost its monetary stimulus (a.k.a. "money printing," "quantitative easing," or simply "QE") by another $45 billion a month to a combined $85 billion per month demonstrates an almost complete departure from what a normal person might consider sensible.
To borrow a phrase from Joel Salatin: Folks, this ain't normal. To this I will add ...and it will end badly.
If you had stopped me on the street a few years ago and asked me what I thought would have happened in the stock, bond, foreign currency, and commodity markets on the day the Fed announced an $85 billion per month thin-air money printing program directed at government bonds, I never would have predicted what has actually come to pass.
I would have predicted soaring stock prices on the expectation that all this money would have to end up in the stock market eventually. I would have predicted the dollar to fall because who in their right mind would want to hold the currency of a country that is borrowing 46 cents (!) out of every dollar that it is spending while its central bank monetizes 100% of that craziness?
Further, I would have expected additional strength in the government bond market, because $85 billion pretty much covers all of the expected new issuance going forward, plus many entities still need to buy U.S. bonds for a variety of fiduciary reasons. With little product for sale and lots of bids by various players, one of which – the Fed – has a magic printing press and is not just price insensitive but actually seeking to drive prices higher (and yields lower), that's a recipe for rising prices.
Etichette:
Bernanke,
Central Bank Policy,
Debt,
debt us,
FED,
financial education,
Gold and Silver,
Inflation,
QE4,
Quantitative Easing
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