A Gamble for All Time

In 2008, the central bankers of the world revealed the true danger of Keynesian economic theory by staging the biggest bailout to date. There was a short flurry of complaints about the banking system being able to leverage the economy instead of just themselves and their filth-ridden balance sheets.

Fast forward 12 years. You guessed it – another massive bailout. The warnings issued after the crisis of 2008 went unheeded, banks leveraged to even greater levels than 2008 and brought the rest of the world with them. Now, not only has runaway Keynesianism enabled the banks to leverage themselves and the financial economy, now they’ve been permitted to leverage the entire world’s economy as well.

Central banks are gambling the next hundred years of economic history that they can print their way out of this mess. Instead of unwinding their malfeasance, they’re doubling down.

Many of you read our piece on ‘modern monetary theory’ last summer. That is now in play as well. This summer we’ll analyze the next move in an epic economic game of chicken. And there isn’t a person on Earth who will be left unaffected. Coming Soon…

Sutton/Mehl

Risk Management – Default Risk

Investors don’t normally think of themselves as lenders – banks do the lending right? Not always. If you have any kind of bonds or mutual funds, closed-end funds or ETFs that own bonds, you are a lender. Not in the direct sense. You don’t have a contract with the borrower to be repaid, for example – unless you own a government or corporate bond directly.

During the 2008 financial crisis, the word default was a household term. People were defaulting on mortgages, companies were defaulting on their bonds, some companies, like Lehman Brothers, couldn’t get a loan because they were viewed as a high default risk.

There are a couple of points to remember. The first is that return needs to be commensurate with the risk involved. Oftentimes the market might indicate which instruments are perceived as more ‘risky’ – they’ll have higher yields than other comparably rated instruments. Debt is nearly always rated. There are various ratings agencies. Standard & Poors, Moody’s, and Fitch are three of the major agencies. They all have a different nomenclature for their grading, but it’s the same as your report card.

A is the best, B second-best, and so forth. You should see yields increase as you look at lower-rated bonds. There is a fairly significant misconception right now. People seem to think that because the government and/or fed are bailing everything out that there is no longer any default risk. Again, this is not simply an American circumstance, this is more global. So simply shifting bond purchases to overseas companies won’t necessarily help.

The big advantage of holding a bond over a stock is that 1) you’re going to get some type of interest even if it is small. Companies may or may not pay a dividend on their common stock. Generally the preferred shares, which are hybrids and have characteristics of both stocks and bonds also have interest. The second big advantage to owning debt is that you’re a creditor of the company. If there IS a bankruptcy, the bondholders and other creditors are first in line for any distribution of the company’s assets. Stocks are considered equity.

Keep in mind that a default and a bankruptcy are two different events. A default is when the borrow stops paying on a particular loan or multiple loans. While a default is an alarming development, it doesn’t necessarily equal a bankruptcy in which the company either is permitted to re-organize or goes out of business altogether. So if you own bonds from a particular company and that company goes bust, you might get some of your capital back, but almost certainly not all of it. If you’re a shareholder in a company and the company goes broke, it is extremely unlikely to have any return of capital.

When considering the risk of default it is always good to look at a company’s balance sheet and several years worth of income statements at a bare minimum. A SWOT analysis is also helpful. What sorts of events might result in your company not having money to make good on its debts? What is going on right now is certainly going to cause problems. What other types of events could hurt your company? We would encourage people to stay away from the assumption that industries and companies will always be bailed out by governments. After all, investors and creditors in Lehman Brothers, didn’t think the USGovt would leave the company twisting in the wind.

There are some very important lessons to be learned by studying economic and financial history with the goal being to learn from the mistakes of others rather than having to endure the pain of defaults in your own portfolio.

Sutton/Mehl

The US/EU on the Brink of Bankruptcy – von Greyerz

Note: This column, while deemed relevant was written by a third-party author. The views, opinions, and content are attributable to the author, not the Institute for Economic Awareness.

Most people don’t understand the cause of hyperinflation. Many argue that we can’t get hyperinflation since asset prices are now under pressure and there is no demand led inflation as most people currently have very little money. 

What few people understand is that hyperinflation is a currency driven event. It doesn’t arise as a result of prices going up. Instead hyperinflation comes from the value of the currency imploding. In every case of hyperinflation in history, it is the collapse of the currency that is the cause. So what leads to the currency collapsing. Well, exactly what is happening now around the world, namely unlimited money printing and credit creation. Led by the Fed and the ECB, the whole world is now extending trillions in loans, subsidies and guarantees to companies and individuals. Government deficits are now surging as tax revenues collapse and expenditures increase rapidly. So governments will also need to print money to finance their galloping deficits. The inevitable outcome will be bankruptcy although few nations will admit it. 

US DEBT DOUBLES EVERY 8 YEARS

I produced the debt chart below the first time at the end of 2017 when Trump was elected president. I forecast then that US debt would reach $28 trillion by the end of 2021 and double by 2028 to $40 trillion. These kind of debt increases seemed incredible at the time. But very few people study history and learn from the past. 

usa-debt

All we need to do is to go back to 1981 when Reagan became president. Since 1981 US Federal debt has on average doubled every 8 years, without fail. Obama doubled debt during his reign from $10 to $20 trillion. Thus, it was totally in line with history that the US debt would be $40 trillion 8 years later, in 2025. 

Until a couple of months ago, it seemed totally impossible to reach these high debt levels.  But today it looks like we could exceed those figures by a big margin, especially the 2025 one of $40T. I am not surprised. Because when you make these forecasts you know that there are always unforeseen events that will occur to fulfil them. And the end of the biggest asset and debt bubble in history had to end with an unexpected event.

The bottom part of the graph above shows US tax revenue. It was $0.6T in 1981. Currently it is $3.4T. With the present situation in the US, it is likely that tax revenue will collapse, thus increasing the deficit further. But even at the current level of $3.4T, tax revenue has gone up less than 6X since 1981 whilst debt has gone up 31X. 

As the banking system comes under pressure with debt defaults and imploding asset prices together with the $2Q derivatives going up in smoke, the US will be looking at an economic and social situation which is terrifying.

With falling tax revenues and galloping debt and deficit, the US is clearly on the way to default and bankruptcy.

SO WE ARE LOOKING AT THE FINANCES OF A BANKRUPT STATE. No additional printing of worthless dollars will remedy the situation. All it will lead to is a collapse of the dollar and an implosion of US debt. SO HYPERINFLATION HERE WE GO! 

But the US won’t be alone, since sadly the EU (ED-European Disunion) and many other nations will encounter a similar destiny. A bankrupt world is the inevitable result of the irresponsible actions of central banks and governments in the last 100 years. 

As Voltaire said already back in 1729:

PAPER MONEY EVENTUALLY REACHES ITS INTRINSIC VALUE – ZERO

The table below shows all the major currencies since the Fed was created in 1913. The straight line at 100 is Gold which represents stable purchasing power. In the last 100 years all major currencies have gone down 97-99% against gold. 

ALL MAJOR CURRENCIES HAVE LOST 82-87% THIS CENTURY

If we look at more recent periods, the table below shows the currencies’ decline since 1971 and 2000. Since 1971 they are all down 98-99%, except for the Swiss franc and Yen, thanks to Nixon closing the gold window. 

What few people realise is that since 2000 all the major currencies, except for the Swiss franc, are down 82-87%. This means that in real purchasing power, the currencies in industrialised countries have lost more than 4/5th of their value. So the final leg of the destruction of the current monetary system started 20 years ago. And from 2020 for the next 1-3 years, we will experience the final destruction down to Zero. 

MOST CURRENCIES WILL LOSE 100% IN THE NEXT FEW YEARS

But what we must remember is that final fall to the bottom involves a 100% fall from today in the value of the Dollar, Euro, Yen etc. It was always clear that the current monetary system would end like all the others in history since no currency has ever survived in tact with the exception of gold. And the world’s central banks have now started the process that will lead to the demise of paper money as we know it today. 

The facts and tables in this article are indisputable. The message couldn’t be clearer. 

Still, most people don’t get gold, since less than 0.5% of world financial assets are invested in physical gold.

As I have outlined in many articles, stocks, bonds and property will lose 90-99% in real terms, against gold, in the next few years. Many bonds will lose 100%. And paper money will lose 100%. 

LAST CHANCE TO SAVE YOUR WEALTH

Investors who don’t take immediate action are going to lose most of their investment assets. If you own property without debt, you can at least hold on to it but you will stop looking at it as an investment. But sadly most investors in conventional assets, like stocks and bonds, will be paralysed, hoping that Central Banks and Governments will save them yet one more time. But it won’t happen this time as more worthless debt cannot solve  a debt problem.  So I urge you to take action now. 

Stocks will very soon start the next downleg in the secular downturn that started a few weeks ago. So there is a last little window to get out at what will seem like fantastic prices just a few months from here. 

Gold has now started the acceleration phase and made new highs in most currencies except for in US dollars. The 2011 high of $1,920 will soon be reached on the way to much, much higher levels. 

The three biggest gold refiners in the world in the Swiss canton of Ticino are now operating again but only at 1/4 of normal capacity. So there will be very little physical gold available. Our company can still get hold of gold but the tight supply situation will lead to prices going up rapidly and spreads widening. 

Remember that you are not holding gold for illusory gains in worthless paper money. Instead, physical, and only physical, gold is life insurance against a collapsing world economy and monetary system. 

Egon von Greyerz
Founder and Managing Partner
Matterhorn Asset Management
Zurich, Switzerland
Phone: +41 44 213 62 45

A Brief Primer on Risk Management

We say ‘brief’ because first hurdle one has to clear when assessing any type of situation is whether or not there is risk involved. Risk can appear anywhere – even crossing the street. Such simple acts are rarely given much consideration, but our brains are constantly analyzing risk/reward quotients for various activities.

Often, when looking at investments, we give in to perceptions rather than realities. Most capital asset pricing models, for instance, rely on the use of ‘the riskless asset’ in their various formulae. Does such an asset exist or is it akin to the ‘Giffen good’ concept in mainstream economics texts?

If anything has become clear since the turn of the century, it is that there is no such thing as a ‘riskless asset’. US Government debt, the de facto ‘AAA’ rated standard bearer of zero risk has become fraught with uncertainty. Once we break the mental model that there are in fact safe havens, we can start to have a meaningful conversation about risk and reward. Before we launch into a series of short briefs outlining the various types of risk, we need to hit some assumptions. These assumptions are especially true for Americans and anyone who holds depreciated US Dollars in any real quantity.

The Dollar as the reserve currency of the world. At present time, this is an arrangement of convenience more than anything else. Why would anyone want a paper ticket (or mostly digital now) that has no intrinsic value, does not act as a store of wealth (Thanks Msrs. Powell, Bernanke, Greenspan, et al), and has developed such an animus about it?

Answer: Because that’s what we’ve always done. The population of the world, in vast majority, hasn’t lived through a time when the Dollar wasn’t the standard bearer. So it is human nature to assume this will continue – despite mounting evidence to the contrary. If we make the leap that the Dollar is vulnerable, then so does all the debt that bears its name. Goodbye says the ‘riskless asset’. What does that do to our models? We need new ones if we’re going to accurately assess risk either qualitatively or quantitatively.

So, with that rather unpleasant bit of business done and the idea of the riskless asset disposed of, we’ll embark on a rundown of the various types of risk for a typical investor in an environment that often looks more like a war zone than a place to nurture wealth.

We’ll try for one each day and, failing at that, to accomplish this task within the next few weeks. If you looked at the chart of the US National Debt that was posted yesterday, you can probably imagine there is an essay forthcoming. The media isn’t covering the out of control accumulation of debt – passed on to our children and grandchildren – so our rather small group of deficit hawks will do their job for them. Stay well.

Sutton/Mehl

The Legacy of Coronavirus – Wall Street Journal

Andy’s Notes: This is where the Keynesian leanings of policymakers and economists are going to finish off an already weakened currency and the economy that uses it. The question used to be ‘Should we borrow to stimulate?’ Now the question is ‘How much will be enough?’. This progression has occurred over the last dozen years and it’s a global one. Debt is the mighty elixir for all that ails. In a completely unironic twist, the lack of economic ‘wiggle room’ people, businesses, and governments have for dealing with a crisis has been largely caused by a reckless accumulation of debt. Now the solution being offered is even more debt. The world has, in fact, gone insane. Ladies and Gentlemen of the jury, I rest my case.

Sutton

The full impact of the coronavirus pandemic may take years to play out. But one outcome is already clear: Government, businesses and some households will be loaded with mountains of additional debt.

The federal government budget deficit is on track to reach a record $3.6 trillion in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, and $2.4 trillion the year after that, according to Goldman Sachs estimates. Businesses are drawing down bank credit lines and tapping bond markets. Preliminary signs are emerging that some households are turning to credit for funds, too.

The debt surge is set to shape how governments and the private sector function long after the virus is tamed. Among other things, it could be a weight on the expansion that follows.

Many economists believe low interest rates will help the nation manage the soaring debt load. At the same time, they say high levels of private sector debt could lead to a period of thrift, slowing the recovery if businesses and individuals try to rebuild their savings by holding back on investment and spending.

“People and firms and government are facing a negative shock, and the classic textbook prescription for a temporary shock is to do some borrowing to smooth that out,” says Alan Taylor, an economist and historian at the University of California Davis, who has studied the economic effects of pandemics going back to the Black Death of the 14th century.

Borrowing now amounts to a transfer of economic activity from the future to the present. The payback comes later. “You do have something to worry about in terms of the recovery path,” Mr. Taylor said. Overall U.S. debt as a share of GDP has been rising since the 1980s. Since the 2007-09 crisis, stimulus plans pushed federal debt to post-World War II levels, while household debt shrank as people paid off commitments.

US Debt as Percentage of GDP (2020)

Past crises and buildups in U.S. government debt led to changes in the tax code and sharp fluctuations in inflation. In the private sector, debt loads could become a dividing line between firms that fail and those that emerge more dominant in their industries.

Because states run balanced budgets to avoid large debt, they are likely to dip into rainy day funds in the weeks ahead and could turn quickly to cost cutting to keep their budgets in line in a downturn, squeezing the economy.

Moody’s Analytics sees $90 billion to $125 billion of such cuts or tax increases coming and says the hits will be unevenly spread around the country. New York, Michigan, West Virginia, Louisiana, Missouri, Wyoming and North Dakota are especially vulnerable, it said.

The Federal Reserve, the nation’s central bank, will play the critical role of navigating the nation through the rising tides of debt. It sways the cost of debt service, whether inflation emerges and whether banks and other financial institutions can bear the burden of lending that the nation demands.

So far the Fed is getting high marks from President Trump and many economists and investors for moving quickly to make credit widely available, though it faces challenges and uncertainties deciding how far to extend itself and when and how to pull back. On Thursday, it announced more programs to support $2.3 trillion in lending.

During and after the 2007-09 financial crisis, the Fed expanded its own portfolio of securities and other holdings from less than $800 billion to $4.5 trillion. The Fed unwound some of that as the expansion took hold. Now, in the initial stages of the coronavirus crisis, it has stretched its holdings from $3.8 trillion last September to $5.8 trillion as of April 1, and is on track to increase them by trillions more in the months ahead.

“Had the Fed not come in these past few weeks, we would have had a combination of the Great Depression and the 2008 financial crisis,” said Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic adviser at Allianz, the Munich-based financial firm.

The U.S. government currently has $17.9 trillion in debt held by private investors and other governments—the amount it has borrowed from others to fund its annual budget deficits. That works out to 89% of U.S. gross domestic product, the highest since 1947. Before the coronavirus crisis, debt and deficits were pushed higher by ramped up government spending on military and other programs and tax cuts enacted in 2017.

Government borrowing will soar in the months ahead due to the $2 trillion economic rescue program, higher spending on programs like unemployment insurance and an expected fall in tax revenues amid lower incomes and corporate profits.

Mr. Trump is pushing for an additional Washington stimulus program focused on infrastructure spending. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said another round of stimulus could exceed $1 trillion. That could include an expansion of small business loans and grants by another $250 billion.

‘Modern’ Monetary Theory Paper – Please Read and Distribute

This paper is attached to an older blog entry, but given the fact that the world’s central banks are busy enacting the 5 planks of MMT as we write this, we thought it pertinent to refresh that post. Please feel free to distribute this paper to anyone you know who might be interested in finances or is confused about what is going on financially/economically. If you re-post, we just ask for a simple citation. The timeliness of the material far surpasses the need for any ‘credit’. There is a lot of misinformation going on right now. We have some of the best thinkers out there as readers. Keep thinking! Fear disables critical thinking. We have not been given a spirit of fear, but that of a sound mind. Don’t forget that.

Sutton/Mehl

Liberty Talk Radio – Bailout 2020 Edition

Dear Readers, Andy was on Liberty Talk Radio again with Joe Cristiano to discuss the 2020 economic stimulus package recently passed by Congress. We’ve reached a critical inflection point as a country – we now ‘need’ these stimulus programs / bailouts to continue to function in our current monetary and economic system. During the crisis of 2008, there was a chance to change course. With the passing of 12 subsequent years, so has the chance to sufficiently alter course. We’re locked into the petrodollar system until the next currency model emerges.

For convenience and at the request of several readers, we’re adding the audio from the discussion in mp3 format. You may listen below or download it by right-clicking the link. More updates to follow.

Sutton/Mehl

https://www.andysutton.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/ltr_03282020.mp3

Retirement Accounts Part of Next Bailout? (We’ve Already Addressed This)

Today, for the first time, a prominent national politician mentioned on television news that portions or potentially all of the pension systems in the United States might have to be ‘nationalized’ to fund additional bailout measures.

It is already abundantly clear that the $2+ Trillion measure that just passed the Senate won’t be nearly enough. We have lived by debt for many years with seemingly few – if any – observable consequences. The old saying says ‘live by the sword, die by the sword’. Perhaps we’re about to find out.

In 2013 there was a bank raid on the tiny Mediterranean island of Cyprus. Panic ensued with depositors losing the ability to withdraw funds, a bank holiday followed and a bail-in resulted. A bail-in? Yes, that’s not a typo. We penned a volley of articles dealing with what transpired in Cyprus and closed out with some possible mechanisms by which US retirement assets would be seized to protect national security interests.

Rather than re-write all of that content we’re going to just re-post what we penned at that time. Tomorrow (hopefully) we’ll be able to take a short guided tour through those articles and apply some of what is going on now and how this whole thing might come together. A friendly reminder. We are not asking for any money. We don’t want any. We are not giving advice. We are providing information and analysis based on almost 50 combined years of studying economics, financial markets, and geopolitics. The link to the compilation – in PDF format – is below. Until next time,

Sutton/Mehl

Q&A Answers – 3/21/2020

Since we were unable to do Liberty Talk Radio again, I’m going to address the questions we received here. The chart below will be a point of reference for most of them.

The chart above shows the Dow Jones Industrial Average from approximately 1905. You’ll have to click to see the chart in detail and I apologize for that – it is hard to get a decent chart with that kind of timeline.

The first ‘peak’ if you can even call it that was the roaring 20s and the bursting of the speculative bubble in late 1929. The Dow would lose more than 75% of its value before the move ended.

The next events are pointed to as well. The main question people have is ‘How was the DJIA near 30,000 to begin with?’ It’s a good question. There are a couple of reasons. First is inflation (growth of the money supply). More money chasing after a relatively fixed set of goods produces higher prices, all else being equal. Let’s proceed through the timeline to get to an answer about Dow 30,000.

Inflation and the revocation of the Glass-Steagall Act allowed for the run-up and eventual blowup of the dot-com bubble. The fact that many of the dot -com firms never made a single penny in profits yet sold for hundreds of dollars a share contributed as well. We’d call this part a speculative bubble. Inflation put the money in the system to allow the bubble to reach the level it did.

After the 2002-03 recovery, the central banks (globally) began serious interference in markets, causing distortions and artificially low interest rates (aka cost of capital) that allowed the next bubble – the housing bubble to inflate. Again, more money in the system due to inflation and a lower cost to that money thanks to the central banks and voila! Boom.

If you thought that was dramatic, the federal reserve in the US and other central banks began something known as ‘quantitative easing’ or QE. This is a fancy term for printing money from thin air and injecting it into the financial system and economy. In the business we call it ‘hot money’ because it’s like a hot potato. It moves around very quickly. From 2009-2019, we had multiple opportunities for what is happening right now and each time, the central banks intervened with more hot money and you can see by the shape of the curve after 2009 how the slope increases dramatically.

This general shape of curve is consistent with monetary systems that are built on fractional reserve banking and that feature a unit of currency that isn’t backed by anything tangible. Until 1971, the USDollar was at least partially backed by gold. I didn’t mark the area, but if you look on the chart at where the curve really starts to accelerate upwards, that was right in the 1971 time frame.

There has been some speculation about fractional reserve monetary systems of late. The important thing to note is that this particular type of system allows for inflation (the creation of new money) when debt is incurred. A quick example is in order. I take 100 depreciated American dollars to the bank and deposit it. Joe Cristiano comes along and asks my bank for a loan, they will lend him up to around $90 of my deposit. However, the bank still owes me my $100 initial deposit. At this point, the money supply went from $100 to $190.

One of the often used misconceptions is that, therefore, when loans are repaid, that equals deflation (the destruction of money). It does not. Let’s use our above example. Joe repays his loan to the bank after 30 days. Let’s say they were very charitable and say they charged him 1% total interest for the 30-day loan. So, he would repay $90.90. Now, my initial $100 is still in there so the total is now $190.90. No deflation.

However, when people pay down loans instead of taking out more debt it does dramatically slow the rate of bank-created inflation. This happened during 2010. Governments don’t like this because they’ve invested a great deal of time convincing people that inflation is necessary for growth to occur. If the people won’t borrow, you can sure bet the governments will do it for them and that is exactly what took place in 2010.

A final thought. A few asked if what is going on would have happened if we didn’t have a global biologic event. As you can see by the chart above, we’ve been long overdue. The QE done by the federal reserve is unhealthy for the economy and if our economy was truly healthy, it wouldn’t need constant stimulus or massive federal, state, local, and personal deficits to function. The ‘solution’ for nearly 2 decades has been to print money and blow up bubbles. Put simply, at some point bubbles always burst and this most recent one was looking for its pin.

Sutton, Mehl – 3/21/2020

Q&A Session on Liberty Talk Radio 3/19/20 @ 24:00 UTC

Hello Readers,

I will be on either a brief Q&A segment with Joe Cristiano’s Liberty Talk Radio or I’ll be releasing a short podcast this evening. I know many of you are not in the US so my apologies for the short notice. Please email your questions when you can and we’ll go from there.

Topics? While I have medical training, I am not qualified to speak on the issue of COVID-19 beyond the most general of terms. I would like to focus on the global financial markets and the very strong likelihood that another 2008-style event was imminent as early as last summer.

Now, with global markets shredded, economies left in doubt, and the population of a growing number of countries behind closed doors, what needs to happen next? We’ve heard some solutions. Are they the right ones?

We’ll be addressing these issues – and your questions – tonight. Don’t miss it!

Best,

Andy Sutton