Tag: "Hyperinflation"

The smoking gun that may take down the system

Here it is people.  Jim Sinclair said in late 2008 (rightly so in my opinion) that what the markets didn’t destroy of the financial system, litigation would.  Here it is. (click on the article title to view)

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Off the Grid News

I’ve discovered a new web site, run by a group of Christian men who are dedicated to keeping you up to date on what is happening around the world and in our nation.  Off the Grid News gives practical advice on how to prepare for life post economic crash.  Please visit them today.

I will be posting less frequently for a period as my daughter and I finish our book “A Line In The Sand.”  As we begin writing, I am very excited about what God is doing through this work.   I believe God is revealing a very important story, while at the same time drawing my daughter and me closer together in a way that blesses me beyond what I can describe.  Please pray for this effort.  Right now, we anticipate the book’s completion to be by the end of the year at the latest.  By God’s grace, it may be as early as late fall.

God bless you all.  I will check in from time to time, particularly on issues related to getting Christians involved in taking this nation back.

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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.

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What (nearly) killed the markets today?

A nearly 1000 point drop in the DOW.  Gold up nearly $30.  What does is all mean? Well, that depends on who you ask at this hour.  MSM news outlets are claiming a computer glitch or a mistake made when entering a trade.  Others claim the markets are simply catching wind of just how serious of a problem exists in the currency markets with the sovereign debt problems in Greece and the Euro zone.  Still others blame HFT - High Frequency Trading – that simply got caught without a negative feedback loop, ala the 1987 crash.

Whatever the reason, one thing is certain.  Market sentiment is sure to have changed.  All the spin that has been engineered by the MSM and PTB over the last year was undone in one, 60 minute roller coaster ride on Wall St. If nothing else was evident today, it is clear that someone – be it millions of individual someones – or a few computer programmers in the glass houses of the big investment banks – has a hair trigger when it comes to exiting the markets.  That was on display for all investors to see today, and now people know that they can lose thousands of dollars in the blink of an eye.  Investors now will have their finger hovering over the mouse clicker or on the speed dial number of their broker.  “Sell NOW!” is on their minds.

18 months is not long enough for investors to have forgotten the pain that the market dive in late 08 and early 09 brought them.  They saw their financial life pass before their eyes.  Many were late to “get back in” and have recovered only a fraction of their losses.  They will not stand by this time and watch the rest of it slip away.  The question is, where will they go? If today’s market action did nothing else, it served to reveal in a 3 hour period where money will flow when the next down leg gains momentum (tomorrow and Monday will tell us if that is now).  Places to be:  US Treasuries, the US dollar, gold and silver and their equities.  Nearly everything else got thrashed today.

Let’s look at these one by one. US Treasuries will be a safe haven only for a short period of time.  That period could be days or months, depending on how quickly things unravel.  Eventually, they too will join the list of asset classes doomed to fall.  Ditto for the US dollar.  In the game of cascading currency defaults, even the last man standing (which will NOT be the US dollar) will fall.

Now to gold and silver.  Today they showed their metal (no pun intended).  Gold was firm all day long, steadily catching a bid in the face of major market turmoil.  Silver was noteworthy due to its lack of volatility.  This is the opposite of what happened in late 08/09′ when they both got crushed with the markets.  Why?  I have given this some thought, and in 08/09, the markets were under pressure because the financial system was failing.  Now, however the actual “money” itself is failing.  Big, big, big (did I say big?) difference.  This is a trend that will continue throughout the remainder of this crisis, until our current fiat empire is replaced by something else.

And what about energy and other “hard” assets?  Well, you saw that they will likely receive the same treatment – at least in the short term – as most other asset classes.  The fear of “demand destruction” will outweigh the flight to tangible assets in the early stages.  That simply means that energy and other hard assets will be great investment opportunities after the first wave of selling subsides.  It will take some wisdom to know when to enter those markets.

If the markets somehow gather themselves tomorrow and are able to put this horror show behind them.  It will only be temporary.  Gold may pull back slightly, however people now know what to expect.  More and more people will begin to accumulate precious metals and their shares.  Even Larry Kudlow remarked today “Gold is now the world’s reserve currency. Amazing.”  Not for those who have been watching this unfold for the past 3 to 5 years.  Not for the Austrian economists.  Not for those who read and study history.  And last but not least, not for those who read and study their Bible.

Buckle up everyone.  The next few days will be very telling.  Let’s see how the overseas markets view today’s action.

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The “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.

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Fear not Obamacare explained…

A reader asked me to explain my post “Fear not Obamacare” because they couldn’t listen to the BTR show.  Here is the short answer:

Before it is fully implemented (slated for 2014) this legislation has huge obstacles to overcome.  Some are beyond the control of the legislators…

1) It is being challenged in the courts on Constitutional grounds.  Ultimately this will make it to the SCOTUS.  In my opinion, the SCOTUS will side with the Federal Government because it is a branch of the Federal government and if they open the door to limits on Fed power, especially by the states, they know the states will end up limiting their power (SCOTUS) eventually, and they don’t want that.

2) Attempts at nullification by the states will be undertaken.  Again, see #1 above for a possible similar process.

3) Absent relief from the courts, some states (at a minimum their citizens) will practice civil disobedience, ignoring the Fed’s demands on Obamacare.  The masses will be very vocal in their demands for relief. 912 was just the beginning.  This is when things get – shall we say – interesting.

Then there are those things that are beyond the control of the courts and legislators.

4) By 2014, several states will have gone bankrupt, likely taking the Fed government and the US dollar down with them.  There will be NO MONEY to pay for Obamacare, let alone Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.   The US economy will very likely be starting over.  Massive Federal government defaults (probably by hyperinflation) will either have had happened or be in the process of happening.  This is in my opinion what is most likely to stop Obamacare.

5) There is a possibility of massive social unrest before 2014.  It could be in the wake of a collapse of the US dollar or because of backlash to ever increasing Federal tyranny.  What this ends up looking like is difficult to say at this point.  However, if it turns really sour, then the Federal government will likely be in a major overhaul.  This ties to #3 above.

So there you have it.  What I believe is the unfortunate probable outcome.  No Obamacare, but possibly for reasons that are not pleasant.

Freedom comes at a price. If we are to continue to be free in this country, we must once again step up and pay.

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Update on the most important chart…

Here is an update on “the most important chart in 100 years.”  The dollar broke out to the upside, but did so in a manner that suggests a short squeeze more than a major turn.  If it can consolidate here without turning down sharply, it should set up a sideways trading range. It may even make 80 for a final test of the major multi-decade breakdown level.  However it could just be a bull trap where it turns back down violently.  It will bear watching closely.  74 has now become a very important technical level.  When it is broken to the downside it will bring on accelerated selling similar to the buying we have seen on the upside breakout.

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The coming second wave…

For those who believe the economic crisis is over, I have a reality check here.

  • Unemployment is above 17% according to government figures (see U6, not the touted U3 number) and nearly 22% if it were calculated using methodology used before 1994. Source Shadow Stats. Yes unemployment is generally a lagging indicator, however we are not in a normal business cycle here.  This is a deleveraging cycle, and the two are very different.
  • Social Security is due to go into the red in 2010 (meaning it will contribute to budget deficits, not lower them).  Source “Gary North/Lew Rockwell.
  • Commercial loan losses are just beginning to be felt in the financial sector. Source:  Seeking AlphaWall St. Journal.
  • Christmas sales are running under last year’s dismal numbers.  The consumer (70% of GDP) is tapped out and pulling in the horns as they stave off personal bankruptcy and credit card default.  Source:  Gallup.
  • Dubai’s debt default (technically anyhow it was a default) shows continued stress in the system.
  • Then, there is this chart.

Mortgage Resets 12_09

We are moving headlong into the next wave of mortgage resets.  It took a full year into the first wave before the crisis hit the banks.  So far, interest rates are low and the resets  are hurting but not devastating.  This chart is a major reason that the Fed will keep rates low for at least another year.  At least they will try.  Contrary to popular opinion, the bond market controls mortgage rates, not the Fed.  What happens if the dollar continues to slide (it will) and the bond market demands higher rates for holding US treasuries (they will)?  You’ve got it.  Mortgage crisis II, only this time from an economic baseline much lower and more fragile than it was during the first wave.

If the economy were truly on the mend, the Fed would be talking about raising rates and a real exit strategy for all the liquidity they have pumped into the system.  Remember when we were told by the Fed that the taxpayer would make a profit on the Fed buying these assets and selling them back to the banks at a profit? Their exit strategy should be to sell those assets back to the banks and get them off the Fed’s books, in turn receiving back the cash they lent out. That is how money is drained from the system.

However, recently they announced their “exit strategy” is to perform a reverse repo.  What this means is that they will sell their toxic assets for cash, thus “draining” that cash from the banking system.  But wait.  That’s not all.  The reverse repo means they also agree to buy that asset back at a future date for more than they paid for it.  Say again?  Source:  Financial Times

Yep.  That’s right.  This is a shell game combined with a game of hot potato.  Follow the ‘taters.

1) Toxic assets (the ‘taters) are bought by the Fed for cash in late 2008 to stave off a banking system collapse.

2) Those assets are held on Fed’s books while banks supposedly repair their balance sheets.

3) Rather than the banks buying the ‘taters back at par or greater, making a profit for the taxpayer (who believed that?), they are being re-sold by the Fed back to the banks with an agreement for the Fed to buy them back later at a higher price, thus making a profit for the banks, and sticking the taxpayer with the ‘tatters once again.

Sick isn’t it.  If anyone thinks this financial crisis is over, they are not watching what the Fed is doing.  The toxic assets they bought are more toxic now than they were a year ago.  They will never return to a state of health and at some point the ‘taters will have to be dealt with.  IF this game can buy the Fed more time, then that is all it will buy them.  There is no way out of this bankrupt mess.  But the time bought will allow them to concoct a plan to further enrich the banking system while putting into place the follow up for whatever is left of our national currency.

Obama declared a few weeks ago that there is risk of a double dip recession.  Also, the Federal Reserve has recently began to increase the Fed’s monetary base  further, (despite their jawboning about an “exit strategy” – see above) following a pause following last fall and winter’s unprecedented doubling of the monetary base.  At the same time, they are saying that substantial downside risks remain and interest rates are going to be held low for a considerable period.  Why?  The answers are above.  We are moving headlong into the next financial crisis and this time it will include not just the financial markets, but the bond and currency markets as well.  Gold’s rise to well over $1,000/oz  is telling us the transition from a credit crisis to a currency crisis is well under way.

Do not be fooled.  Be prepared.  God, gold, grub and guns.  I never thought I’d post that, but that’s what I see.

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