The End Game Has Begun
For six years, the world
has operated based on faith and hope that Central Banks somehow fixed the
issues that caused the 2008 Crisis.
All of the arguments
supporting this defied common sense. A 5th grader knows that you cannot solve a
debt problem by issuing more debt. If the below chart was a problem BEFORE
2008… there is no way that things are better now. After all, we’ve just added
another $10 trillion in debt to the US system.
Similarly, anyone with a
functioning brain could tell you that a bunch of academics with no real-world
experience, none of whom have ever started a business or created a single job
can’t “save” the economy. Indeed, few if any of the Fed Presidents have even
run a bank before. And yet they’re in charge of the banking system.
However, there is an AWFUL
lot of money at stake in maintaining the illusion of Central Banking
omniscience. So the media and the banks and the politicians were happy to
promote them. Indeed, one could very easily argue that nearly all of the wealth
and power held by those at the top of the economy stem from this fiction.
So it’s little surprise
that no one would admit the facts: that the Fed and other Central Banks not
only don’t have a clue how to fix the problem, but that they
actually have almost no incentive to do so.
So here are the facts:
1) The REAL
problem for the financial system is the bond bubble. In 2008 when the crisis
hit it was $80 trillion. It has since grown to over $100 trillion.
2)The derivatives market that uses
this bond bubble as collateral is over $555 trillion in size.
3)Many of the large
multinational corporations, sovereign governments, and even municipalities have
used derivatives to fake earnings and hide debt. NO
ONE knows to what degree this has been the case, but given that 20% of
corporate CFOs have admitted to faking earnings in the past, it’s likely a
significant amount.
4)
Corporations today are more leveraged than they were in 2007. As Stanley
Druckenmiller noted recently, in 2007 corporate bonds were $3.5 trillion… today
they are $7 trillion: an amount equal to nearly 50% of US GDP.
5) The
Central Banks are now all leveraged at levels greater than or equal to where
Lehman Brothers was when it imploded. The Fed is leveraged at 78 to 1. The ECB
is leveraged at over 26 to 1. Lehman Brothers was leveraged at 30 to 1.
6) The
Central Banks have no idea how to exit their strategies. Fed minutes released
from 2009 show Janet Yellen was worried about
how to exit when the Fed’s balance sheet was $1.3 trillion (back in 2009).
Today it’s over $4.5 trillion.
We are heading for a
crisis that will be exponentially worse than 2008. The global Central Banks
have literally bet the financial system that their theories will work.
They haven’t. All they’ve done is set the stage for an even worse crisis in
which entire countries will go bankrupt.
This process has
already begun abroad.
In January 2015, the
Swiss National Bank (SNB), backed into a corner by the ECB’s QE program, had a
choice: print an obscene amount of money to defend the Franc’s peg or break the
peg.
The SNB chose to
break the peg. In a single day, the bank lost an amount of money equal to
somewhere between 10% and 15% of Swiss GDP. More than that, it let the Franc
appreciate… in a country in which 54% of the GDP is based on exports.
The next bank to lose
its grip is the Central Bank of China.
With an economy in
free-fall (GDP is growing by 3% at best), a dual
house and stock bubbles bursting simultaneously, China’s regulators went on the
offensive: freezing the markets, banning short-selling, arresting
short-sellers, and pumping tens of billions of Dollars into the market per day.
Despite this, Chinese
stocks continue to crater. And the economy hasn’t budged.
The fact of the
matter is that despite public opinion, there are problems that are so big that the
Central Banks cannot fix them. We’ve seen this in Switzerland and China. It
will be spreading to other countries in the near future.
Indeed, by the look
of things, the Fed began to lose control of the market last week when it failed
to raise interst rates. Despite doing this, stocks have begun to plunge and are
rapidly losing value.
In short, the next
round of the great crisis is beginning. It will take time to unfold, but
we have reached Peak Central Bank Intervention. When Central Banks loosen
policy and the markets fail to respond, you're in the End Game.
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