Showing posts with label US dollar crash. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US dollar crash. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2013

Video: Ron Paul on the Fed's Untaper: Prepare for the destruction of the US dollar and crash of the bond markets

The great Ron Paul interviewed by Fox Business (hat tip Lew Rockwell Blog)

The untaper says Dr. Paul is a "bad sign" and that the "Fed is really worried about the economy", despite the "deception out there that everything is doing good". But "markets like it". 

In view of rising markets, Dr. Paul further asks why does the Fed have "to punish the elderly who save money?"

Asked about what to expect from Bernanke's replacement Janet Yellen, Dr Paul's response "Just prepare for the destruction of the US dollar and crash of the bond market one day" (1:48) 

He says that the "bond bubble is already weakening" and that interest rates will go up, the dollar is going to weaken, prices are going up and standard of living is going down. 

Dr. Paul also says that the "worse political problem" is the growing "discrepancy between the poor and the middle class"

Asked about housing as beneficiary of Fed Policies, Dr. Paul responds, "as long as the interest rates are artificial I think you are going to get malinvestments misdirected investments and people are going to make mistakes and you don’t when they are until the correction has to come"

It's not all bad news though, Dr. Paul is optimistic over the long term: "I think there is a lot to be optimistic about on the long run, but on the short run I think we are gonna have to go through some tough times"

Saturday, October 03, 2009

Jim Rickards: Federal Reserve needs to cut US Dollar in half over next 14 years

Jim Rickards managing director of market intelligence for scientific consulting firm Omnis, sees the US dollar cut in half over the next decade or so, in a CNBC Interview. [Hat Tip: TruthFN]

Some notes and excerpts:

Expect: 4% inflation in 14 years that will cut the US Dollar in half
Explains SDRs as solution to the Triffin Dilemma
recommends 10% gold 90% cash
SDRs-printing money but still nothing behind it
No solution for national security implications
Central banks are hoping for a "stable steady" decline of the US dollar and not a collapse


“Unannounced product of G20, the IMF anointed as global Central bank...
"IMF is issuing Debt for the first time in history"
“Displace the dollar with SDRs
“If you own Gold you are fighting central banks in the world. Central banks hate gold because it limits their ability to print money. But the market is the market, the market will do what it wants even the central banks are not bigger than the market.”



My comment:

It seems odd for an expert to prescribe a portfolio of 90% cash and 10% gold when the risk of a dollar collapse is construed as significant.

A dollar collapse means the loss of the basic function of the currency as medium of exchange, store of value and the unit of account on an international scale.

That would only mean inflation going berserk. Who would want to hold cash (US dollar) in an environment where money is rapidly losing purchasing power?

This would seem self contradictory.

Sunday, April 05, 2009

G20: Fueling The Inflation Drama, Reprise Why A Different Inflationary Setting

`Despite the pleas from bankers and politicians, mortgages are not plagued by a lack of liquidity but a lack of value. If sellers would be more negotiable, there would be plenty of liquidity. Who knows, at the right price I might even buy a few. The problem is that putting a market price on these assets would render most financial institutions insolvent, which is precisely why they do not want to let that happen. Simply pretending that all these mortgages will be repaid does not solve the underlying problems. It may keep some banks alive longer, but when they ultimately do fail, the losses will be that much greater. In the meantime, solvent institutions are deprived of capital as more funds are funneled into insolvent "too big to fail" institutions - hiding their toxic assets behind rosy assumptions and phony marks.” Peter Schiff, Let's Play Pretend!

As we have discussed last week in Expect A Different Inflationary Environment, we don’t believe that the US financial markets will see a renaissance during this inflationary episode nor do we believe it will lead the market out of the present bear market rut.

The stiff regulations to be imposed on the industry will be one major factor why. In addition, the G20 summit has equally accentuated the political demand to do so. Mass leverage from the system of 30 or 40 or 50 to 1 won’t be seeing the light.

Today’s leverage will mainly come from the global governments or if fortunate enough Emerging Markets or Asia whose credit system has been unimpaired from the recent crisis.

Moreover, as we discussed in Why Geither's Toxic Asset Program Won't Float spreading recessionary strains will further vitiate on the financial positions of banks, this percolating from the largest concentrated banks to regional banks.

While the recent changes in the FASB accounting standards may temporarily help alleviate the pressures to redress the balance sheets, it is unlikely for US banks to normalize the lending process in the possible understanding that gains from the overleveraged households and the financial sector may not be large enough to offset the risks of potential losses.

Next, there are regulatory concerns. The fact that the rules of the game are being changed daily and where a political backlash by the public on Wall Street has combined to turn off potential investors interests into participating in government sponsored programs.

Moreover there are major concerns like asset quality and the price discovery from the toxic assets which includes the gigantic credit default swap market and other forms of derivatives as the interest rate swap.

The issue of price discovery isn’t a figment of anyone’s imagination. The fact that bid and ask can’t meet into a voluntary exchange means that this isn’t a liquidity problem but a valuations problem. Why? To be sure, this isn’t a market failure for the simple fact that incentives driving the financial sector have been totally severely distorted by excessive government intervention, moral hazard issues, and or the bailout mentality.

Simon Nixon of Wall Street Journal hit the nail in the head with this poignant commentary (all bold highlights mine), ``In a capitalist system, prices are set in the free market and providers of capital bear responsibility for their losses. Neither of these characteristics hold true of the banking system. The price of credit, the basic commodity of the financial system, was distorted first by implicit government guarantees to depositors and other providers of capital, and second by the tendency of governments to cut interest rates at the first sign of financial trouble.

``Financial theory says the cost of capital to an enterprise should rise in line with risk. But banks during the boom were able to leverage themselves more than 50 times yet see their cost of funding fall.

``That is hardly the sign of a well-functioning free market. Those who provided funding to banks correctly gambled that governments would ride to their rescue…

``Indeed, it has been axiomatic of the policy-maker response that bondholders should be kept whole to avoid the threat that the banking system would seize up completely or that the insurance industry, with large bond portfolios, would become the next domino to fall. Most Western bank bonds are now issued with an explicit government guarantee. The result is a distorted global financial system in which the true cost of capital is obscured.

``In a fully capitalist system, there would be no guarantees. The market would ensure banks didn't become too big or too leveraged.

``At least the current crisis is sure to lead to higher common-equity buffers for all. But since removing the guarantees and breaking up the banks is outside the realm of political reality, an alternative solution is to charge banks explicitly and upfront for all guarantees. The charges would rise in line with leverage. That at least would raise the cost of funding, helping to generate a price signal to the market.

``Instead, global governments are taking the opposite tack. Unable to remove the guarantees and unwilling to properly charge for them because the banks remain too weak, they will try to limit the risks through more intrusive regulation.

``The results, if that goes too far, should be clear enough: lower bank profits, less capital generated, less credit created, lower economic growth and more bureaucratic control over the banks and the wider economy.”

In short the market cleansing process has been skewed by government’s intense efforts to camouflage real price values, which has led to lack of trust and confidence among the financial institutions. Without government lifeline all these structures are most likely to collapse.

The deflationary pressures will ensure that the US government will continue to inflate the system. And inflating the system means that it would need to accelerate the rate of inflation.

The likely scenario will be a tug-of-war between inflation and deflation. Although, inflationary pressures outside the ongoing debt deflation zone will probably take a firmer root or become more entrenched.

As we stated last week, inflation appears in stages and with the OECD real estate sector and the securitization backed structured finance out of play, the inflation process will be short circuited and likely be in rotation or in a feeback loop within the commodity sector and the world stock markets particularly in Asia and Emerging Markets.

The tug of war of inflation and deflation will ensure that debt deflation affected markets will underperform relative to those whom are least affected. Although the sheer magnitude from collaborative effort to stoke inflation may put a floor to these markets at the expense of the currency values.

While the G 20 summit declares that they “will put in place credible exit strategies from the measures”, it doesn’t say how they would do it. The tug of war between deflationary pressures and inflation suggest that they will lean towards more inflation than risks towards deflation. This would account for as the mainstream economic ideology in practice, whose results will likely mirror that of the 70s but at a far wider damage.

Moreover another dubious assertion is that they “will refrain from competitive devaluation of our currencies”. The fact that the degree of fiscal stimulus or monetary inflation will be applied differently means that the currencies involved in huge programs will obviously be ventilated through prices. Hence, refraining from competitive devaluation is an example of a fashionable political statement than to be seen in actual practice.

Finally as we appear to be seeing today, initially “boom conditions” will prevail. The next phase of will likely see a spillover of high commodity prices into consumer prices. And some central banks may apply brakes which may cause increased volatility, although such volatility may again prompt central bankers to lean towards inflation. Then we should see an acceleration of inflation.

If Emerging Markets and Asia succeeds to soak up the inflation to generate a boom in their national markets and economies then a future bust with these regions as the epicenter of the next crisis.

Otherwise, the other possible risk is one of hyperinflation where the aftermath would result to the end of the reign of the US dollar as the world’s de facto currency reserve.


Wednesday, March 11, 2009

US Federal Reserve Study: Currency Crashes Can Be Good!

The Federal Reserve recently came out with an interesting discussion paper which attempts to discredit the commonly held view that Currency Crashes are economically devastating.

In Currency Crashes in Industrial Countries: Much Ado About Nothing? Fed economist Joseph E. Gagnon concludes that crashes can be occasionally good ...

``Currency crashes in industrial countries have always been associated with at least one of the following causal factors:

-Inflationary macroeconomic policies that put upward pressure on all prices, including the price of foreign currency. (my comment-printing money)

-Weak aggregate demand and rising unemployment that encourage policymakers to stimulate growth through expansionary monetary policy, including devaluation in the case of a fixed exchange rate. (my comment printing money again)

-Large capital outflows or current account deficits that run into financing difficulties. In some cases, these deficits may reflect either of the above forces (my comment printing money again), but they may also reflect exogenous shifts in the terms of trade or in financial market sentiment (my comment-currency run due to previous money printing or too much debt absorption held in foreign currency-currency mismatch).

``The consequences of currency crashes depend critically on the causes. Poor outcomes have occurred only after inflationary currency crashes. The responses of macroeconomic policymakers after inflationary currency crashes had important implications for GDP growth. Tighter policies to fight inflation generally reduced GDP in the short run. (my comment-recession)

``When authorities did not fight inflation, GDP growth generally held up in the near term." (my comment-let inflation rip...).

``Bond yields usually rose and real equity prices usually fell during and immediately after inflationary currency crashes."

``Non-inflationary currency crashes uniformly had good outcomes: GDP growth was average to above average, bond yields fell, and real equity prices rose."(my comment-yehey printing money solves the society's ills).

Could this study serve as a fundamental justification or a trial balloon of the US Federal Reserve's possible policy direction-which is to go for a massive US dollar devaluation (crash)?

As Axel Merk of Merk Funds recently wrote, ``There is one area we are in agreement with Fed Chairman Bernanke: those countries that devalue their currency may recover more quickly from a depression. Rather naturally so: if the purchasing power of your savings is slashed, you have a great incentive to work again."

In short if your currency is worth less than what was, one will be forced to double work efforts.

But with too much debt in the system, devaluation seems to be Ben Bernanke's nuclear option. Could he be telegraphing his moves?