Tag: "currency crisis"
Europe is bailed out. Who is next?
The markets have gone mad. I can’t for the life of me understand what there was to celebrate in today’s announcement that the world would print whatever money is necessary to bail out an entire continent. What in that announcement said anything but “we are all in deep trouble here.” What in that announcement said anything but “the bailout of the banksters is now the world’s problem.” And in the United States, what in that announcement said anything but “the U.S. taxpayer is now the guarantor of the world’s sovereign debt.”
Through taxes or inflation, the U.S. government or the Federal Reserve will put the cost of the bailout of the world’s nations onto the backs of the American taxpayer. Oh yes, each nation will certainly share in the pain of their respective country’s bailout as “austerity’ measures are put in place. But the U.S. will be asked to shoulder some of the burden “for the greater good” just as all of Europe has had to share in the reckless policies of Greece, Portugal, Italy and Spain.
And in the end, it will not work.
What we witnessed over the weekend was the assured destruction of our current financial system. Jim Sinclair in this case hit it dead on. If Greece’s problems spawned a $1 trillion bailout response, what will happen when California’s debt meets the same fate? “QE to infinity” as sovereign debt explodes into trillions of dollars of losses – all monetized until the major fiat currencies of the world explode in hyperinflation as people lose confidence.
Contrary to popular opinion, hyperinflation is NOT strictly a monetary event. It is a loss of confidence event. And the “confidence” shown by the knee jerk reaction of the world’s markets to more and larger bailouts will soon fade. When it does, look for the next big nasty down leg in the markets to return with a vengeance – that is except in precious metals and a few (very few) other sectors.
I have written in the past that if anything near a worst case scenario begins to play out in the debt markets, there would come a day when one will want all of their assets in tangible goods of one form or another. That includes gold, silver, oil, grains, farmland, etc – and NOT their paper representatives such as ETF’s or possibly even equities of companies who own them. You may need the real thing. That day may not be far off, and the likelihood of it actually coming is growing by the week.
Stay tuned and buckle up. What we saw over the weekend is one of the primary reasons you are saving in silver. Stay the course.
View PostWhy the crash? Good answer here.
The reality of the “shadow banking system” that would have gotten people labeled as conspiracy nut a couple of years ago is now making its way into the main stream. Watch this and learn. It is as close to the truth as you will see on the MSM.
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
View PostThe “C” word is back – contagion
Not since the early days of the sub-prime mortgage crisis have we heard the word “contagion” bantered about so much. We were assured then that it would be “contained.” It wasn’t This won’t be either.
ECB May Have to Turn To Nuclear Option
Last time it was 18 months between the initiation of the sub-prime and the financial crisis. I don’t think we’ll have that long this time.


Agenda – Grinding America Down (5 star!)


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