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Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

Below, we look at simple facts in the context of complex markets to underscore the dangerous direction of Fed-Speak and Fed policy.

Keep It Simple, Stupid

It’s true that, “the Devil is in the details.”

Anyone familiar with Wall Street in general, or market math in particular, for example, can wax poetic on acronym jargon, Greek math symbols, sigma moves in bond yields, chart contango or derivative market lingo.

Notwithstanding all those “details,” however, is a more fitting phrase for our times, namely: “Keep it simple, stupid.”

The Simple and the Stupid

The simple facts are clear to almost anyone who wishes to see them.

With US debt, for example, at greater than 120% of its GDP, Uncle Sam has a problem.

That is, he’s broke, and not just debt-ceiling broke, but I mean broke, broke.

It’s just THAT simple.

Consequently, no one wants his IOUs, confirmed by the simple/stupid fact that in 2014, foreign Central Banks stopped buying US Treasuries on net, something not seen in five decades.

In short, the US, and its sacred bonds, just aren’t what they used to be.

To fill this gap, that creature from Jekyll Island otherwise known as the Federal Reserve, which is neither Federal nor a reserve, has to mouse-click money to pay the deficit spending of short-sighted and opportunistic administrations (left and right) year after year after year.

Uncle Fed, along with its TBTF nephews, have thus become the largest marginal financiers of US deficits for the last 8 years.

In short, the Fed and big banks are literally drinking Uncle Sam’s debt-laced Kool aide.

The Fed’s money printer has thus become central to keeping credit markets alive despite the equal fact (paradox) that its rate hikes are simultaneously gutting bonds, banks and small businesses to fight inflation despite the stubborn fact that such inflation is still here.

The Inflation Narrative: Form Over Substance

My view, of course, is that the Fed’s war on inflation is a headline optic rather than policy fact.

Like all debt-soaked and failing regimes, the Fed secretly wants inflation to outpace rates (i.e., it wants “negative real rates”) in order to inflate away some of that aforementioned and embarrassing debt.

But admitting that is akin to political suicide, and the Fed is political, not “independent.”

Thus, the Fed will seek inflation while simultaneously mis/under-reporting CPI inflation by at least 50%. I’ve described this as “having your cake and eating it too.”

All that said, inflation, which was supposed to be transitory, is clearly sticky (as we warned from the beginning), and even its under-reported 6% range has the experts in a tizzy of comical proportions.

Neel Kashkari, for example, is thinking the US may need to get rates to at least 6% to “beat” inflation. James Bullard is asking for more rate hikes too.

But what these “go higher, longer” folks are failing to mention is that rate hikes make Uncle Sam’s bar tab (i.e., debt) even more expensive, a fact which deepens rather than alleviates the US deficit nightmare.

The War on Inflation is a Policy that Actually Adds to Inflation

Ironically, however, few (including Kashkari, Bullard, Powell or just about any economic midget in the House of Representatives) are recognizing the additional paradox that greater deficits only add to (rather than “combat”) the inflation problem, as deficit spending (an economy on debt respirator) keeps artificial demand (and hence) prices rising rather than falling.

Furthermore, these deficits will ultimately be paid for with more fiat fake money created out of thin air at the Eccles building, a policy which is inherently (and by definition): INFLATIONARY.

In short, and as even Warren B. Mosler recently tweeted, “the Fed is chasing its own tail.”

Inflation, in other words, is not only here to stay, the Fed’s “anti-inflationary” rate hike policies are actually making it worse.

Even party-line economists are forecasting higher core inflation this year:

The Real Solution to Inflation? Scorched Earth.

In fact, the only way to truly dis-inflate the inflation problem is to raise rates high enough to destroy the bond market and the economy.

Afterall, major recessions/depressions do “beat” inflation—along with just about everything and everyone else.

The current Fed’s answer to combatting the inflation problem is in many ways the equivalent of combatting a kitchen rodent problem by placing dynamite in the sink.

Meanwhile, the Rate Hikes Keep Blowing Things Up

Buried beneath the headlines of one failing bank (and tax-payer-funded depositor bailout) after the next, is the equally dark picture of US small businesses, all of which rely on loans to stay afloat.

But according to the U.S. Small Business Association, loan rates for the “little guys” have reached double digit levels.

Needless to say, such debt costs don’t just hurt small enterprises, they destroy them.

This credit crunch is only just beginning, as small enterprises borrow less in the face of rising rates.

Real estate, of course, is just another sector for which the “war on inflation” rate hikes are creating collateral damage.

Homeowners enjoying the fixed low rates of days past are naturally remiss to sell current homes only to face the pain of buying a newer one at much higher mortgage rates.

This means the re-sale inventory for older homes is shrinking, which means the market (as well as price) for new construction homes is spiking—serving as yet another and ironic example of how the Fed’s alleged war on inflation is actually adding to price inflation…

In short, Fed rate hikes can make inflation rise, and equally tragic, is that Fed rate cuts can also make inflation rise, as cheaper money only means greater velocity of the same, which, alas, is inflationary…

See the Paradox?

And that, folks, is the paradox, conundrum, corner or trap in which our central planners have placed us and themselves.

As I’ve warned countless times, we must eventually pick our poison: It’s either a depression or an inflation crisis.

Ultimately, Powell’s rate hikes, having already murdered bonds, stocks and banks, will also murder the economy.

Save the System or the Currency?

At that inevitable moment when the financial and social rubble of a national and then global recession is too impossible to ignore, the central planners will have to take a long and hard look at the glowing red buttons on their money printers and decide which is worthing saving: The “system” or the currency?

The answer is simple. They’ll push the red button while swallowing the blue pill.

Ultimately, and not too far off in our horizon, the central planners will “save” the system (bonds and TBTF banks) by mouse-clicking trillions of more USDs.

This simply means that the deflationary recession ahead will be followed by a hyper-inflationary “solution.”

Again, and worth repeating, history confirms in debt crisis after debt crisis, and failed regime after failed regime, that the last bubble to “pop” is always the currency.

A Long History of Stupid

In my ever-growing data base of things Fed-Chairs have said that turned out to be completely and utterly, well…100% WRONG, one of my favorites was Ben Bernanke’s 2010 assertion that QE would be “temporary” and with “no consequence” to the USD.

According to this false idol, QE was safe because the Fed was merely paying out dollars to purchase Treasuries is an even swap of contractually even values.

What Bernanke failed to foresee or consider, however, is that such an elegant “swap” is anything but elegant when the Fed is marred by an operating loss in which its Treasuries are tanking in value.

That is, the “swap” is now a swindle.

As deficits rise, the TBTF banks will require more mouse-clicked (i.e., inflationary) dollars to meet Uncle Sam’s interest expense promise to the banks (“Interest on Excess Reserves”).

In the early days of standard QE operations, at least the Fed’s printed money was “balanced” by its purchased USTs which the TBTF banks then removed from the market and parked “safely” at the Fed.

But today, given the operating losses in play, the Fed’s raw money printing will be like like raw sewage with nowhere to go but straight into the economy with an inflationary odor.

Bad Options, Fluffy Words

Again, the cornered Fed’s options are simple/stupid: It can continue to hawkishly raise rates higher for longer and send the economy into a depression and the markets into a spiral while declaring victory over inflation, or it can print trillions more fiat dollars to prop the system and neuter/debase the dollar.

And for this wonderful set of options, Bernanke won a Nobel Prize?

The ironies do abound…

But as a famous French moralist once said, the highest offices are rarely, if ever, held by the highest minds.

Gold, of course, is not something the Fed (nor anyone else) can print or mouse-click, and gold’s ultimate role as a currency-insurer is not a matter of debate, but a matter of cycles, history and simple/stupid common sense. (See below).

Markets Are Prepping

In the interim, the markets are slowly catching on to the fact that protecting purchasing power is now more of a priority than looking for safety in grossly and un-naturally inflated “fixed income” or “risk-free-return” bonds.

Why?

Because those bonds are now (thanks to Uncle Fed) empirically and mathematically nothing more than “no-income” and “return-free-risk.”

Meanwhile, hedge funds are building their net short positions in S&P futures at levels not seen since 2007 for the simple reason that they foresee a Powell-induced market implosion off the American bow.

Once that foreseeable implosion occurs, get ready for the Fed’s only pathetic tools left: Lower rates and trillions of instant liquidity—the kind that kills a currency.

In Gold We Trust

The case for gold as insurance against such a backdrop of debt, financial fragility and openly dying currencies is, well: Simple stupid and plain to see.

Few on this round earth see the simple among the complex better than our advisor and friend, Ronni Stoeferle, whose most recent In Gold We Trust Report has just been released.

Co-produced with his Incrementum AG colleague, Mark Valek, this annual report has become the seminal report in the precious metal space.

The 2023 edition is replete with not only the most sobering and clear data points and contextual common sense, but also a litany of entertaining quotations from Churchill and the Austrian School to The Grateful Dead and Anchorman

Ronni and Mark unpack the consequences of a Fed that has raised rates too high, too fast and too late, which is, again a fact plain to see:

Needless to say, hiking rates into an economic setting already historically “debt fragile” tends to break things (from USTs to regional banks) and portends far more pain ahead, as both history and math also plainly confirm:

In a debt-soaked world fully addicted to years of instant liquidity from a central bank near you, Powell’s sudden (but again too late, too much) hiking policies will not “softly” restrain market exuberance nor contain inflation without unleashing the mother of all recessions.

Instead, the subsequent and sudden negative growth of money supply will only hasten a recession as opposed to a “softish” landing:

As the foregoing report warns, the looming approach of this recession is already (and further) confirmed by such basic indicators as the Conference Board of Leading Indicators, an inverted yield curve and the alarming spread between 10Y and 2Y yields. 

Self-Inflicted Geopolitical Risks

The report further examines the geopolitical shifts of which we have been warning(and writing) since March of 2022, when Western sanctions against Russia unleashed a watershed trend by the BRICS and other nations to seek settlement payments outside of the weaponized USD.

One would be unwise to ignore the significance of this shift or underestimate the growing power of these BRICS (and BRICS “plus”) alliances, as their combined share of global GDP is rising not falling…

As interest in (and trust for) the now weaponized USD as a payment system declines alongside a weakening faith in Uncle Sam’s IOUs, the world, and its central banks (especially out East) are turning away from USTs and turning toward physical gold.

Again, I give credit to the In Gold We Trust Report:

See a trend?

See why?

It’s fairly simple, and for this we can thank the fairly stupid policies of the Fed in particular and the declining faith in their prowess in general:

Myths Are Stubborn Things

Many, of course, find it hard to imagine that a Federal Reserve based in DC and within the land of the Great American dream (and world reserve currency) could be anything but wise, efficient and stabilizing, despite an embarrassing Fed track record that is empirically unwise, inefficient and consistently destabilizing…

Myths are hard to break, despite the fact the myth of MMT and QE on demand has been a failed experiment and is sending the US, as well as the global, economy toward a reckoning of historical proportions.

But the messaging of “Keep calm and carry on” from Powell is calming in spirit despite the fact that it hides terrifying math and historically confirmed consequences for the fiat money by which investors still wrongly measure their wealth.

But as Brian Fantana of Anchorman would tell us, trust the central planners.

“They’ve done studies, you know. 60% of the time it works every time.”

As for us, we trust the kind of data Ronni and Mark have gathered and that barbarous relic of gold far more than calming words and debased, fiat currencies.

As history reminds, when currencies die within a backdrop of unsustainable debt, gold in fact does work—and every time.

Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

Below, we see why the USA is screwed.

De-Dollarization: Downplaying the Obvious

De-Dollarization is a real, all too real trend, though it is both fascinating and disturbing to see what is otherwise so obvious being deliberately down-played, excused or ignored from the top down.

But then again, the laundry list of ignored facts and open lies from the top down to hide hard truths in everything from inflation data to recessionary debt traps is nothing new.

Instead, such propaganda replacing blunt transparency is the new normal (and classic trick) for all historical endings to debt-soaked (and failing) nations/systems and their fork-tongued (i.e., guilty) policy makers.

Slow & Steady

De-Dollarization, of course, is a gradual rather than over-night process.

Its origins stem from 1) years of exporting USD inflation overseas (to the painful detriment of friend and foe alike) and 2) the insanely stupid decision to weaponize the world reserve currency (i.e., USD) subsequent to a border war between two local tyrants in the Ukraine.

Whether or not you buy into the Western “media’s” narrative which categorizes Putin as Hitler 2.0 and Zelensky as a modern George Washington, the weaponization of the USD (and freezing of FX reserves) has made an already dollar-tired globe even more distrusting of Uncle Sam’s currency and IOUs.

This trend is confirmed by the profound dumping of USTs throughout 2022 and the undeniable trend among the BRICS (and the 36 other nations) to deliberately seek bilateral trade agreements and settlements outside of the USD.

Furthermore, with Saudi talking to China and Iran, and with China talking to Mexico, Russia and just about everyone else, it’s fairly clear that a move away from the once sacred petrodollar (Pakistan now seeking Russian oil in Yuan) is no longer just the fantasy of conveniently eliminated folks like Saddam Hussein or Muammar Gaddafi…

As I discussed here and here, the petrodollar is under threat, which means longer-term demand for the USD is equally so.

But the USD Still Has Legs—For Now…

That said, there’s also no denying that the USD is still very strong, very important and very much in demand.

After all, and despite welching in 1971 on its 1944 promise to be gold-backed, the USD is still the world reserve currency.

With over 40% of global debt instruments denominated in Greenbacks and over 60% of the reservoir of global currencies composed of USDs, this reserve status (and hence forced demand) aint going anywhere too soon.

Furthermore, and as I have written and agreed, the so-called “milk-shake theory” is not altogether wrong.

That is, demand for USDs (and USTs) within the tangled and levered web of US derivative and Euro Dollar markets is baked into a system which will take years (not days) to unravel, monetize or replace, and this sure as heck won’t be orderly, global nor overnight.

Then Comes Change, Pain and Open Denial

But let’s get real: The days of the USD as a trusted payment system or hegemonic power broker are unwinding right before our very eyes.

And the best way to see the truth of this reality is to catalogue the ever-expanding list of lies from the big boys and their complicit, media ja-sagenders (“yes-sayers”) desperately trying to deny the same.

At first, for example, the centralized economists were blaming de-dollarization and CNY energy transactions on the Russian sanctions.

Gee. Go figure?

Thereafter, the economists said de-dollarization is just the result of Emerging Market (EM) countries momentarily running out of (in fact they’re intentionally dumping) USD reserves.

Western “experts” are trying to convince themselves and the rest of the world that EM nations will implode unless they eventually acquire more USTs and USDs to buy energy.

What these experts are failing to see (or say), however, is that many of those countries are already beginning to buy that energy outside of the USD…

Folks, de-dollarization in global commodity markets is happening already, and will accelerate rather than fade away into some fantasy image of how the “West was Won,” for as argued elsewhere, the West is already losing.

Facts Are Stubborn Things

As for the list of nations, both big and small, de-dollarizing right before our watering eyes, just consider, well…China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Ghana, Bolivia…

Even the world’s largest hardwood pulp producer, Suzano SA, is in talks with China to trade its commodity in CNY.

This transition from a weaponized USD to an expanding CNY is not just the sensationalism of fiat-haters but the hard math of real events and data, which the following chart of the Renminbi Globalization Index (up 26% in 2022) makes all too clear…

Graph showing fiver years of RGI Increases

The undeniable trend and rise (which is not the same as “hegemony”) of the CNY is certainly not good news for the fiat-all-too-fiat USD, who is less and less the prettiest girl at the dance.

As trust/demand in the USD falls, so too does its purchasing power, which may explain why China, at the very same time its trade power increases, is simultaneously growing its gold reserves in anticipation for what it knows is coming but what the West still refuses to see, namely: The slow-drip neutering of Uncle Sam’s fiat currency.

See the trend folks?

We Told You So

See why picking a currency-for-energy war against Russia (the world’s biggest commodity exporter and a nuclear power in bed with China, the world’s biggest factory owner and a nuclear power) may have been a bad idea?

As we warned literally from day-1 of the sanctions, this was obviously not the same as picking a sanction fight with say, Iran or Venezuela…

Nope. This scale of this was far more dangerous, and the avoidable casualties still piling up in the West’s proxy war (on Ukrainian soil/rubble) are not just soldiers and civilians, but Greenbacks too.

This was foreseeable.

Even Obama foresaw it in 2015:

President Obama 2015 speech quote - Finance

Clearly, Biden’s handlers, however, didn’t see it in 2022.

Image of Biden - Finance

They wanted to play war rather than sound economics, and the end result will be a loss of both.

As for the USD: Volatility Before Debasement

As for the fate and price of the USD near-term and long-term, the move will be volatile rather than in a straight line north or south.

The USD can still go higher, much higher, as fewer Greenbacks overseas still face large debt payments.

Ultimately, however, Uncle Sam’s own twin deficits and schoolyard of children masquerading as House Members/”leaders” will deficit spend the USA into a debt spiral whose only “cure” is more mouse-clicked and debased dollars along side more unloved and over-issued USTs (IOUs).

Thereafter, the up and down moves of the USD will eventually just sink, Titanic-like, in one direction as ever-more USD’s collide with a growing debt iceberg.

As argued so many times, but worth repeating: The last bubble to die in a debt-soaked regime is always the currency. Even the increasingly unloved world reserve currency will be no exception to the laws of over-supply and decreasing demand.

Between now and then, all we can expect are more lies from on high and more centralized controls masquerading as efficient payment systems and national emergencies blamed on Eastern bad guys and bat-made (?) virusesrather than the bathroom mirrors of our central planners (happy idiots?).

All Good Until Things Break

We have always warned that Powell’s rate hikes (too much, too fast, too late) would be too expensive for Uncle Sam, and would thus break things here and abroad—from repo markets, gilt markets and Treasury markets to a US fiscal implosion and dying regional banks.

Next to implode are the labor markets.

Six decades of data confirm that rising rates always break things.

But when you place such rising rates into the context of the greatest debt crisis in US (as well as global) history, the “breaking” gets really ugly.

Until the Fed supplies more inflationary liquidity (fiat-fantasy money), the dual forces of a hawkish Powell and a de-dollarizing yet milk-shake world means the USD could rise and squeeze out the dollar short traders nearer term.

Anything but “Softish”

Ultimately, however, and after enough smaller banks have been murdered (more will die) and after the UST market has suffered all it can suffer, too much will break at once, and it won’t be soft, or even “softish.”

This is not fable but fact. The only “tool” the centralizers will have left is more synthetic, fiat (and inflationary) liquidity on demand.

This trend is simple: Uncle Sam is broke and his only solution is a money printer.

In short, a counterfeit answer to a real cancer.

Don’t believe me?

Just ask the US Treasury Dept.

More Ignored Math from DC

The latest TBAC (Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee) confirms the US has already deficit spent $2.060T in fiscal 1H23, the interest expense alone of which is 101% of tax receipts.

This effectively puts the USA into a red-zone of imbalance reminiscent of the COVID crisis, only this time they don’t have COVID to blame for a debt addiction that was in play long before Fauci stained our screens or Powell printed more money post-March-of-2020 than was produced in the entire compounded history of our nation.

The TBAC report further indicated that projected US Federal deficits for 2023 to 2025 have risen by 30-50% in just the last 90 days…

And folks, the only way to pay for this embarrassing bar tab in DC is either more open QE (mouse-clicked trillions) and/or a much, much, much weaker USD to inflate away this debt as we head simultaneously into the mother of all recessions.

Such a crisis, of course, could be preceded by temporary (relative, rather than inherent) spikes in the USD until more UST supply/liquidity weakens the Greenback and sends gold higher, regardless of the USD’s relative strength and then subsequent weakness.

Meanwhile the Propaganda from On-High Continues

As I’ve said in interview after interview, you know things are getting really bad when comforting words and de-contextualized data increasingly replace simple (but scary) math.

At $95+T in public, household and corporate debt, the US has irreversibly passed the Rubicon of any easy solutions.

As Egon von Greyerz makes abundantly clear week after week, the US in general and the Fed in particular have irrevocably cornered themselves.

Stated otherwise: The USA is screwed.

DC has to chose between saving its “system” (of insider/TBTF banks, self-interested politicos–from the Maoist “woke” to the neocon “dark” and Wall Street Socialism) or destroying its currency.

Needless to say, it’s ultimately the currency that will fall on the sword for this now openly corrupt and pathetic “system.”

But again, rather than confess their own sins, the message is always “be calm and carry on.”

The Latest Fantasy Chart

Take, for example, the latest puff-tweet regarding Bloomberg’s “US Economic Surprise Index” which paints an oh-so rosy picture of the US economy rising at the fastest pace in over a year.

Fantasy Chart - Bloombergs US Economic Surprise Index

But as far smarter folks than me (i.e., Luke Gromen) will remind, this so-called data is ignoring a few contextual elephants in the room…

Context Helps

First, the above “good news” ignores a US debt/GDP ratio of 125%, a deficits/GDP ratio of 8% and government spending at 25% of GDP.

Secondly, US Government Outlays (i.e., deficit spending) has been growing at 30% for five of the last seven months.

Spending rates like this have only occurred twice in the last four decades, namely: 1) during the height of the COVID hysteria and 2) during the height of the 2008 GFC.

So, despite the “good news” in puff-charts above, the pundits are ignoring the fact that Uncle Sam (and his mis-fit children in the House of [lobbied] “Representatives”) are spending as if the USA is already in the eye of a financial storm.

And yet we haven’t even seen the recession officially hit or labor and risk markets tank, YET.

Imagine the spending when things get officially far worse than today—and they will; it’s now mathematical.

Out of Sight, Out of (Our) Mind

Sadly, however, very few investors are seeing the bigger picture and the wandering elephants.

In the interim: 1) the military industrial complex will create more profits and jobs here and more casualties overseas; and 2) deficit spending will keep unemployment in check (for now) and GDP “stable” until 3) its deficits (and debts) cancerously metastasize within a nation frog-boiling in debt and fractured by manufactured identity politics over transgender beer ads and slavery reparations from the 1860’s.

Such “woke” trends are ironic, given the fact that middleclass Americans of all colors, sexualities, “privileges” or political bends are already unknowing slaves/serfs in a modern feudalism of fake capitalism fighting against the bogus (yet SJW) “equity” euphemism of a woke (but hidden) re-distribution of social “shares” smacking of modern yet genuine Marxism.

Slowly, Then All at Once

And amidst all this distraction, division and in-fighting, the reality of rising rates colliding into historically unprecedented debt levels will just crush all stripes of Americans in the same manner Hemingway described poverty: “Slowly, then all at once.”

As Egon has often told me: Be careful what you wish for or already know.

Gold will inevitably go higher as the rest of the nation/world slides into its foreseeable debt trap and fiat end-game.

This may be obviously good for gold; but it will be at the expense of so much else, as the disorder ahead is neither fun nor pretty.

 And it’s only just beginning…

Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

Tectonic shifts lie ahead. These will involve a US and European debt crisis ending in a debt collapse, a precipitous fall of the dollar and the Euro with Gold emerging as a reserve asset but at multiples of the current price.

The next phase of the fall of the West is here and will soon accelerate. It has been both precipitated and aggravated by the absurd sanctions of Russia. These sanctions are hurting Europe badly and affecting the US in a way that they didn’t expect, but was obvious to some of us. The Romans understood that free trade was essential between all the countries that they conquered. But the US administration blocks have both the money and the ability to trade of the countries they don’t like. 

But shooting yourself in the foot really hurts and the consequences are in front of our eyes. No foreign country will want to hold US debt or dollars. That is a catastrophic problem for the US as their deficits will grow exponentially in coming years. 

So a debt collapse is not just a looming disaster but a bomb hurling towards the US economy at supersonic speed. 

With the imminent death of the petrodollar and explosion of US debt, there is only one solution for the funding requirements of the US Governmentthe FED which will stand as the sole buyer of US Treasuries. 

A CATASTROPHIC DEATH SPIRAL 

So the DEBT spiral of higher debt, higher deficits, more Treasuries, higher rates and falling bond prices will soon turn into a DEATH spiral with a collapsing dollar, high inflation and most probably hyperinflation. Sounds like default to me but that word will probably never be used officially. It is hard to admit defeat even when it stares you in the face!

A FRED graph balance sheet and US deficits

Yes, the US will probably obfuscate the situation with CBDCs (Central Bank Digital Currencies) but since that is just another form of Fiat money, it will at best buy a little time but the end result will be the same.

 US Debt Ceiling Farce belongs to Broadway rather than Wall Street

The US Debt ceiling in a graph

The debt ceiling was created in 1917 as a means of restricting reckless spending by the US government. But this travesty has gone on for over 106 years. During that time there has been a total disdain for budget discipline by the ruling Administration and congress. 

The problem is not just the debt but the cost of financing it. 

The annualised cost of financing the Federal debt is currently $1.1 trillion. If we assume conservatively that the debt grows to $40 trillion within 2 years, the interest cost at 5% would be $2 trillion. That would be 43% of current tax revenue. But as the economy deteriorates, interest will easily exceed 50% of tax revenue. And that is at 5% which will probably be much too low as inflation rises and The Fed loses control of rates. 

Thus a very dire scenario lies ahead and that is certainly not a worst case scenario.  

US government interest payments annualized in a graph

THE FED IS BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE 

Scylla and Chardbdis - Rock and a Hard Place

The Fed and the thus US government are now between Scylla and Charybdis (Rock and a Hard Place). 

As it looks today, the US will bounce between Scylla and Charybdis in coming years until the US financial system and also the economy takes ever harder knocks and goes under just as every monetary system has in history. 

Obviously the rest of the West including an extremely weak Europe will follow the US down. 

BRICS AND SCO – RISING POWERS

The whole world will suffer but the commodity rich nations as well as the less indebted ones will ride the coming storm far better. 

This includes much of South America, Middle East, Russia and Asia. The expanding power blocks of BRICS and SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organisation) will be the strong powers where a much increasing part of global trade will take place. 

Barring major political and geopolitical upheavals, China will be the dominant nation and the main factory of the world. Russia is also likely to be a major economic power. With $85 trillion of natural resource reserves, the potential is clearly there for this to happen. But first the political system of Russia needs to be “modernised” or restructured. 

What I outline above is of course structural shifts that will take time, probably decades. But whether we like it or not, the first phase, which is the fall of the West, could happen faster than we like. 

A MONETARY SYSTEM ALWAYS ENDS IN A DEBT EXPLOSION 

In 1913, total US debt was negligible, and in 1950, it had grown to $406 billion. By the time Nixon closed the gold window in 1971, debt was $1.7 trillion. Thereafter the curve has become ever steeper as the graph below shows. From September 2019 when the US banking system started to crack, the Repo crisis told us that there were real problems although no one wanted to admit it. Conveniently for the US government, the Repo crisis became the Covid crisis which was a much better excuse for the Government to print unlimited amounts of money together with the banks.   

Thus, just in this century, total US debt has grown from $27 trillion to $94 trillion!

USA total debt 1950- 2023 graph

But that was history and we know we can’t do anything about the past. But now comes the fun. 

I have been warning about a coming debt explosion for some time. Well, I believe this is it. 

In a recent article about the price of gold I explained that the final stages of hyperinflation are exponential.  

Egon von Greyerz presentation

We will see a very similar exponential pattern with the coming debt explosion. If we assume that the final 5 minutes of the exponential phase started in September 2019, the stadium was then only 7% full and will in the next few years grow from 7% to 100% full or 14X from here. 

This is obviously just a demonstration and no exact science, but it shows that theoretically US debt could now explode. 

So let’s take a quick look at a few factors that will cause the debt explosion.

BANK FAILURES  

A Hoover Institute report calculates that more than 2,315 US banks currently have assets worth less than their liabilities. The market value of their loan portfolios are $2 trillion lower than the book value. And remember this is before the REAL fall of the asset values which is still to come. 

Graph showing US bank net losses from bonds and securities

Just take US property values which are greatly overvalued by the lenders: 

Graph showing Property price predictions - Egon von Greyerz May 2023

So the four US banks that have gone under recently are clearly just the beginning. And no one must believe that it is just small banks. Bigger banks will follow the same route. 

During the 2006-9 subprime crisis, bailouts were the norm. But at the time, it was said that the next crisis would involve bail-ins.

But as we have seen so far in the US, there were no bail-ins. Clearly the government and the Fed were concerned about a systemic crisis and did not have the guts to bail in the bank customers, not even above the FDIC limit. 

As the crisis spreads, I doubt that bank depositors will be treated so leniently. Neither the FDIC, nor the government can afford to rescue everyone. Instead depositors will be given an offer they can’t refuse which is compulsory purchase of US treasuries equal to their credit balance. 

The European banking sector is in an even worse state than the US one. European banks are sitting on large losses from bond portfolios acquired when interest rates were negative. No one knows at this stage the magnitude of the losses which are likely to be substantial. 

Both in commercial property and housing, the situation is worse in Europe than in the US since the European banks are funding most of these loans directly themselves, including € 4 trillion of home mortgages. 

The banks also have a mismatch between low rates received on mortgages against high rates paid to finance them. 

The ex-governor of the Bank of France and ex-head of the IMF, Jacques de Larosière accuses the authorities of subverting the private banking system with deranged volumes of QE after it had become toxic: 

“Central banks, far from promoting stability, have delivered a Masterclass in how to organise financial crisis”

$3 QUADRILLION OF GLOBAL DEBT & LIABILITIES  

Infographic on liabilities and gold - Central bank gold

If we add the unfunded liabilities and the total outstanding derivatives to the global debt, we arrive at around $3 quadrillion as I discussed in this article:

“This is it! The financial system is terminally broken”

Sadly, the Western financial system is now both too big to save and too big to fail. 

Still all the king’s horses and all the king’s men cannot save it. So even if the system is too big to fail, it will with very dire consequences. 

GOLD TO BE SUBSTANTIALLY REVALUED IN THE DISORDERLY RESET

Just over a century after the creation of the Fed and the beginning of the debt ceiling, the mighty dollar has lost 99% of its value in purchasing power terms. 

And measured against the only money which has survived in history – Gold – the dollar has also lost 99%. 

This is obviously not an accident. Not only is gold the only money which has survived but also the only money which has kept its purchasing power throughout the millennia. 

For example, a Roman Toga cost 1 ounce of gold 2000 years ago, which today is also the price for a high quality man’s suit. 

You would have thought that losing 99% of its value for the reserve currency of the world would be a disaster. Well it is of course, but the US, as well as most of the Western world, has adjusted by increasing debt exponentially to make up for the disastrous debasement of the currencies. 

What is even more interesting, gold is up 8-10X this century against most currencies.

That is a superior performance to virtually all major asset classes. 

And still nobody owns gold which is only 0.5% of global financial assets. 

More recently gold is at all-time-highs in all currencies including the dollar. 

But in spite of the extremely strong performance of gold or more correctly put, the continued debasement of all currencies, no one talks about gold.

Just looking at the number of articles covering gold in the press in the graph below (white bars), it confirms that the most recent price increase of gold (blue line) is met by a yawn. 

Graph showing number of press articles on gold 2013-2023

This is obviously very bullish. Imagine if all stock markets made new highs. It would be all over the media. 

So what this is telling us is that this gold bull market, or currency bear market, has a very long way to go. 

As I often point out, no fiat money but only gold has survived throughout history. 

Gold’s rise over time is always guaranteed as governments and central banks will without fail destroy their currency by creating virtually unlimited fake money.  

Since this has been going on for 1000s of years, history tells us that this trend of constantly debasing fiat money is unbreakable due to the greed and mismanagement of governments. 

And now with the debt crisis accelerating, so will the gold price. 

Luke Groman makes a very interesting point in his discussion with Grant Williams (grant-williams.com by subscription).  Luke suggests that although the dollar will not yet die as a transactional currency, that it is likely to be replaced by gold as the reserve asset currency.  

The combination of dedollarisation and liquidation of US treasuries by foreign holders will lead to this development. 

Commodity countries will sell for example oil to China, receive yuan and change the yuan to gold on the Shanghai gold Exchange. They will then hold gold instead of dollars. This will avoid the dollar as a trading currency when it comes to commodities. 

In order for gold to function as a reserve asset, it will need to be revalued with a zero at the end and a bigger figure at the beginning as Luke says. The whole idea would be that gold will become a neutral reserve asset which floats in all currencies. 

The inverse triangle of Global debt resting on only $2 trillion of Central Bank gold shown above makes the revaluation of gold obvious. 

A floating gold price as a reserve asset is of course much more sensible than a fixed gold price backing the currencies and would be the nearest to Free Gold

See my 2018 article, “Free Gold will kill the Paper Gold Casino”.

So the consequence of gold becoming a reserve asset could involve a rise of say 25X or 50X the current level.  Certainly not an improbable outcome in today’s money. The debasement of the dollar and other Western currencies is likely to have a similar effect but then we are not talking in today’s money. Time will tell. 

As gold is now in an acceleration phase, we are likely to see much higher levels however long it takes and whatever the reason is for the rise. 

The 1980 gold price of $850, adjusted for real inflation would today be $28,300 

Inflation and Gold graph 1720 - 2023

As gold is now in an acceleration phase, we are likely to see much higher levels however long it takes. 

What is clear is that fiat money, bonds, property and stocks will all decline precipitously against gold. 

What is important for investors is to take protection now against the most significant RESET in history which is a disorderly reset. 

So if you don’t hold gold yet, please, please protect your family, and your wealth by acquiring physical gold.  

Gold repositioning as a Global Reserve Asset could happen gradually or it could happen suddenly. But please be prepared because when it happens you don’t want to hold worthless paper money or assets. 

Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

Below we look at the math, history and current oil environment in the backdrop of a global debt crisis to better predict currency and gold market direction without the need of tarot cards.

Seeing the Future: Math vs. Crystal Balls

Those looking forward only need to look at current and backward math to make relatively clear forecasts without risking the mug’s game of deriving crystal ball predictions.

Not surprisingly, the theme and math of simple (as well as appalling) US debt levels makes such forward-thinking almost too simple.

The Oil Issue: Is Anti-Shale Anti-American?

Although not as fluent as others in the oil trade or the green politics of the extreme US left, I’ve argued in prior reports that the current administration’s anti-shale policies make for some good (debatable?) environmental chest-puffing while ignoring the math, history and science of sound national as well as well as global thinking.

(But then again, the entire woke fiasco of current US policy seems to be on a crusade to cancel such things as math, history and science; so, thinking contextually or globally is beyond their sound-bite-driven stump-speeches.)

Oil, however, still matters.

And when understood in the broader context of the macro-economic themes we’ve tracked for years–namely debt, currencies, inflation, gold, a cornered Fed and a weaponized USD–the current and future trends are already in motion.

And as for the endless debate as to global warming, butterfly-friendly energy policies and the simple reality of fossil fuels as a part of, rather than threat to, our planet, I’m certainly not here to answer or solve the same.

Certainly the Germans (and their solar powered ideas in a part of Europe with very little sun) are not getting it… In fact, they are getting much of their (nuclear) energy from France and are now forced to burn coal to get through the winter.

I am here, however, to lay down some objective facts and ask some blunt questions.

Oil Politics

Biden, it seems fairly clear to all, is not in charge of US policy.

That’s a scary fact. Even more scary, however, is determining who is in charge?

Again, not something I can answer.

But if he were in charge, we’d all be amused to ask how he expected Saudi Arabia to welcome him and his embarrassing pleas for Saudi production increases (to ostensibly ease inflated US fuel costs) after previously telling the world he considered Saudi Arabia a pariah state…

We all remember that embarrassing fist-pump with the Crown Prince.

How do oil prices effect gold prices

Meanwhile, Saudi is now spending far more time with the Chinese and Iran…

We’d also love to hear the White House explain how it expects increased US shale production to reduce energy inflation when it has been simultaneously seeking to legislate oil off the American page.

Furthermore, it would be worth reminding Americans and politicians tired of inflated fuel prices that the vast majority of those inflated pump costs are due to US taxes per gallon, not Saudi production cuts.

But I digress.

Oil Math

At the current levels of US oil production and exploration, the US (according to its own Dallas Fed) will have to engage in annual energy price inflation levels of 8-10% just to keep the oil industry’s lights on at a breakeven price level.

Such conservative inflation figures for oil/fuel pricing, when seen in the context of over $31T in US Federal debt, basically means that Uncle Sam’s ability to cover his ever-increasing public debt burden will weaken by at least 8-10% per year at a moment in US history where Uncle Sam needs all the help, rather than weakness, he can get.

Fighting Inflation with Inflation, and Debt with Debt?

Needless to say, the only “solution” to these inflated debt burdens will be the monetary mouse-clicker at the Eccles Building, whose doom-loop (yet now ossified) “solution” to addressing inflated oil prices is the even more inflationary policy of printing more fake money to “fakely” cure an inflation crisis.

You really can’t make this stuff up.

Fed monetary policy, ever since patient-zero Greenspan sold his soul (and sound-money, gold-backed academic thesis) to Wall Street and Washington, boils down to this: We can solve a debt crisis with more debt, and an inflation crisis with more, well…inflation.

Does this seem like “sound monetary policy” to you?

Or, Just Export Your Inflation to the Rest of the World?

But as I’ve warned for years, Uncle Sam’s first instinct (as holder of the world reserve currency) whenever handed a hot-potato of self-inflicted inflation, is to hand it off to the rest of the world—i.e., to export his inflation to friends and foes alike.

Global energy importers in Europe, emerging markets, India, China, and Japan, for example, are facing what accountants call a balance of payments crisis, but what I’ll bluntly call by its real name: A currency crisis.

That is, under the current, but potentially dying petrodollar system, these countries will need more USDs to buy oil.

But that’s where the problem lies.

Why?

Simple: Those USDs are drying up (unless more are printed).

How Long Will Global Currencies (& Leaders) Remain Prisoner to the USD?

Regardless of whether you believe in the perpetual hegemony of the USD as a payment system or not, we can all agree that USD liquidity is drying up (whether it be from the milk-shake theory absorption in euro-dollar and derivative markets or from post-sanction de-dollarization).

Nations facing the double whammy of needing more USDs to pay for inflated oil prices and inflated USD-denominated debts around the globe are going to being crying “uncle!” rather than just “Uncle Sam.”

What can these nations do in the face of that bullying hot potato known as the USD? How can they service these increased USD payment (oil and debt) burdens?

How the US Creates a Global Currency Crisis

Well, short of turning their backs on the USD (not yet), the only current option other nations have is to devalue (i.e., inflate and debase) their own currencies at home, which is how Uncle Sam makes his problem just about everybody else’s problem…

As I often say, with friends like the US, who needs enemies?

Something, however, has to give.

How Physical Gold Offers Better Pricing than Fiat Dollars

This clearly broken system of the US exporting its inflation upon a world forced since the 1970’s to import oil under a broken and inflationary Greenback has a genuine potential to implode.

Already, countries like Ghana have realized that it’s better to trade oil in real gold rather than fake fiat dollars.

Long before the petrodollar became the mad king, for example, history recognized that physical gold was a far better instrument of payment to settle stable oil pricing.

See for yourself.

Matthew Piepenburg article: Recent chart of oil prices against gold prices

As more and more of the world recognizes the currency crisis slowly in play now, and then steadily in greater pain tomorrow, this “Balance of Payments” (i.e., currency) crisis can easily evolve into a “change of payments” reality in which gold re-emerges as a superior payment system for oil.

Think about that.

More Tailwinds for Gold

As of this writing, the physical oil markets are greater than 15X the size of the physical gold markets on an annualized (USD) production basis.

If the world turns slowly (then all at once?) toward settling oil in gold (partially or fully) to avoid a global currency crisis, gold will have to be repriced at levels significantly higher than current pricing.

Hmmm.

Something worth tracking, no?

Well, the Zeitgeist suggests that we are not the only ones tracking these trends…

The Central Banks Are Catching On to (and Stacking) Gold

A recent pole of over 80 central banks holding greater than $7T in FX reserves indicated that 2 out of 3 polled strongly believe that central banks will be making more, not less, purchases of physical gold in 2023.

Again: Are you seeing a trend? Are you seeing the context? Are you seeing why?

As I’ve said countless times and will say countless times more: Debt matters.

Debt matters because debt, once it crosses the Rubicon of insanity and unsustainability, impacts everything we market jocks were supposed to have been taught in school and in the office—namely bonds, currencies, inflation and recessionary cycles follow debt cycles.

In short: It’s all tied together.

Once you understand debt, the policies, reactions, weaknesses, truths, lies, and cycles are far easier to see rather than just “predict.”

The increasing loss of faith in the world reserve currency and its embarrassing IOUs (i.e., USTs) is not merely the domain of “gold bugs” but the simple and historical consequence of the blunt math which always follows broken regimes, of which the US is and will be no exception.

The graph below, is thus worth repeating, as the world is clearly turning away from Uncle Sam’s drunken bar tabof debased dollars and IOUs toward something more finite in supply yet more infinite in duration.

Recent chart of Central bank purchases of Gold and foreign official purchases of USTs in billions

Again: See the trend?

Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

From oil markets to treasury stacking, backdoor QE, investor fantasy and hedge fund prepping, it’s becoming more and more clear that the big boys are bracing for disaster as gold stretches its legs for a rapid run north.

Recently, I dove into the cracks in the petrodollar as yet another symptom of a world turning its back on USTs and USDs.

Gold, of course, has a role in these headlines if one looks deep enough.

So, let’s look deeper.

Diving Deeper into the Oil Story

The headlines of late, for example, are all about “surprise” OPEC production cuts.

Why is this happening and what does it say about gold down the road?

First, let’s face the politics.

As noted many times, it seems US policy, on everything from short-sighted (suicidal?) sanctions to the “green initiative” makes just about zero sense in the real world, which is miles apart from the “keep-me-elected” fantasy-world of DC.

After all, energy, matters, which means oil matters.

But the current regime in DC has been losing friends in Saudi Arabia and cutting its prior and once admirable shale production outputs (think 2016-2020) in the US despite a world that still runs on black gold fighting against green politics.

The DC attack on shale may make the Greta Thunbergs happy, but let’s be blunt: It defies economic common sense.

Saudi, by cutting production, is now showing a still very much oil-dependent world it is not afraid of losing market share to the USA in the face of rising oil for the simple reason that the USA just aint got enough oil to fill the gap or flex its energy muscles.

In the meantime, Chinese demand for crude is peaking while Russian oil flows to the east (including to Japan) are hitting new highs at prices above the US-led price cap of $60/barrel.

If DC has any blunt realists (wrongly castigated as tree-killers) left, it will have to re-think its anti-oil policies and get back toward that recent era when US shale was responsible for 90% of total global oil supply growth.

If not, oil prices can and will spike, making Powell’s war on inflation even more of an open charade.

Speaking of inflation…

Ghana Oil-for-Gold Beats Inflation

When it comes to oil and the decades-long bully-effect of a usurious USD (See: Confessions of an Economic Hitman), we have argued countless times that a strong USD and an imposed petrodollar was gutting developing economies around the world.

We also warned that developing economies (spurned by global distrust of the Greenback in a post-Putin-sanction era of a weaponized reserve currency) would respond by turning their backs on US policies and its dollar.

In the old days, the US could export its inflation abroad. But those days, as we warned as early as March 2022, would be slowly but steadily coming to a hegemonic end.

Again, this does not mean (nod to the Brent Johnson) the end of the USD as a reserve currency, just the slow end of the USD as a trusted, used or effective currency.

Toward that slow but steady end, it’s perhaps worth noting that Ghana’s inflation rate has fallen from 156% to just over 60% since it began trading oil for gold rather than weaponized USDs.

Hmmm.

Gold Works Better than Inflated Greenbacks

The most obvious conclusion we can draw from such a predictable correlation is that gold seems to be working better than fiat dollars to fight/manage inflation, a fact we’ve been arguing for well…decades.

From India to China, Ghana, Malaysia, China and 37 other countries engaged in non-USD bilateral trade agreements, the inflation-infected USD is losing its place in more than just the critical oil trade.

Nations trapped in USD-denominated debt-traps (thanks to a rate-hiked and hence stronger and more expensive USD) are now finding ways to tie their exports (i.e., oil) to a more stable monetary asset (i.e., GOLD).

This, of course, makes me that much more confident that as the world moves closer to its global (and USD-driven) “Uh-Oh” moment, that the already-telegraphed Bretton Woods 2.0 will have to involve a new global order tied to something golden rather than just something fiat.

This, again, explains why so many of the world’s central banks are loading up on gold rather than Uncle Sam’s IOUs.

Gosh. Just see for yourself:

Ouch.

Uh-oh?

US Investors: Still High on Past Fantasy Rather than Current Reality

Sadly, however, the US in general, and US investors in particular, remain trapped in a spiral of cognitive dissonance and still believe today and tomorrow’s America is the America of magical leaders, deficits without tears and the balanced-budget honesty of the Eisenhower era.

That’s why the vast majority (and their consensus-think, safety-in-numbers advisors) are still huddling in correlated 60/40 stock bond allocations rather than physical gold according to a recent BofA survey of wealth “advisors.”

This always reminds me of a phrase circling around Tokyo just before the grotesquely inflated Nikkei bubble lost greater than 80% of its hot air in the crash of 1989, namely: “How can we get hurt if we’re all crossing the road at the same time?”

Well, a large swath of US investors (and their “advisors”) is about to find out how.

Doubling Down on Return Free Risk

This may explain why US households (a statistical term of art which includes hedge funds) have upped their allocations to USTs by 165% ($1.6T) since Q4 of 2022 at the same time that the rest of the world (see above) has been dumping them.

But in all fairness, this does make some sense, as higher rates in the US give investors in USTs (especially in short-duration/money market securities) a greater return than their checking or savings accounts.

Unfortunately, where the masses go is also where bubbles go; but as I like to remind: All bubbles pop.

Of course, when adjusted for inflation, these poor US investors are still getting a negative return on USTs.

Foreigners, of course, have stopped falling for this, but when Americans themselves get suckered en masse into this same bond-trap, they’re basically just paying an invisible tax while chipping away at GDP growth and unknowingly helping Uncle Sam finance his debt for free (namely: at a loss to themselves).

Crazy?

Yep.

Negative Returning IOUs—The Lesser of Evils

But why are hedge funds (i.e., the “smart money”) falling for this? Why are they loading up on USTs?

Because they see trouble ahead, and even a negative returning UST is safer (less evil) than a tanking S&P–and that’s exactly what the pros are bracing for/anticipating.

Waiting for a Market Bottom

In short: The big-boys are safe-havening today in negative-USTs so that they’ll have dry powder at hand to buy a pending and massive market bottom tomorrow.

Once they can buy a bottom, they too will dump Uncle Sam’s IOUs as the QE (along with inflation) kicks back to new highs thereafter.

And speaking of QE…

Backdoor QE: Coordinated and Synthetic Liquidity by Another Name

I have always endeavored to simplify the complex with big-picture common sense.

Toward this end, let’s keep it simple.

 And the simple truth is this: With US debt at unprecedented and unsustainable levels, it is a matter of national survival to prevent bond yields—and hence bond-driven rather than Fed- “set” interest rates–from spiking.

Such a natural, and bond-driven spike, after all, would make Uncle Sam’s embarrassing debt too expensive to function.

Survival vs. Debate

Thus, and to repeat: Keeping bond yields controlled is not a matter of pundit debate but national survival.

Since bond yields spike when bond prices fall, it is thus a matter of sovereign survival to keep national bond prices at reasonably high levels.

This, however, is naturally impossible when bond demand (and hence price) is naturally sinking.

This natural reality opens the door to the un-natural “solution” wherein central banks un-naturally print trillions (“synthetic demand”) to buy their own bonds/debt.

Of course, this game is otherwise known as QE, or “Quantitative Easing”–that ironic euphemism for un-natural, anti-capitalist, anti-free market and anti-free-price-discovery Wall Street socialism whose inflationary consequences cause Main Street feudalism.

In short: QE has backstopped a modern system of central-bank-created lords and serfs.

Which one are you?

See why Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson feared a Federal Reserve, which is neither “federal,” nor a solvent “reserve.”

The ironies, they do abound…

How Can there be QE if the Headlines Say QT?

But the official narrative and headlines are still telling us only stories of QT (Quantitative Tightening) rather than QE, so what’s the problem?

Well, as with just about everything from CPI data and transitory inflation memes to recession re-defining, the official narrative is not always the truthful narrative…

In fact, back-door or “hidden QE” is all around us, from the Fed bailing out/funding repo markets and dead regional banks to central banks making secret deals behind the scenes.

Although it’s not officially QE when the central bank of one country is buying the IOUs (bonds) of another country, it is more than likely that leading central banks are acting in a coordinated way to “QE each other’s debt,” a system which former Fed official, Kathleen Tyson, describes as a “Daisy Chain.”

And if we look at the IMF’s own data, we can connect the dots of this Daisy Chain with relative (rather than tin-foil-hatted) clarity.

Since Q4 of 2022, for example, overall FX reserves are now up by over $340B, the equivalent of over $100B per month of central bank QE by another name.

Toward that end, the math is simple, with: 1) GBP reserves up 10% (no surprise given the gilt implosion of Oct. 2022), JPY reserves up nearly 8%, EUR reserves up 7% and USD reserves only up only 0.5%.

Not only does this look like backdoor QE masquerading as “building excess reserves,” it looks to me, at least, like a coordinated attempt by DXY central banks to collectively weaken the 2022 USD which Powell’s rate hikes had made painfully too high for the rest of the world, a fact/pivot of which we warned throughout 2022.

Since the above G7 policies kicked in, the USD has fallen 11% into 2023 as the other DXY currencies (JPY, EUR and GBP) gave themselves a little backdoor/QE boost.

It seems, in short, that the need for artificial liquidity in a world thirsty for USDs found a clever way to weaken the relative strength (and cost) of that USD (and confront/tame skyrocketing volatility in USTs) without overtly requiring Powell to mouse-click dollars from his own laptop.

Why Markets Rise into a Recession

This unofficial but likely coordinated play to constructively weaken the USD among the big boys helps explain why the S&P has been rising into 2023 despite open indicators that the country is itself marching toward a recession.

US Manufacturing data (ISM) is now at levels consistent with a recession…

Again: The ironies (and un-natural manipulations) abound.

Meanwhile, the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow is down 1.5% from March’s 3.2% figure.

But hey, who needs growth, productivity, tax receipts or even a modicum of national economic health to keep a liquidity-supported stock market from defying reality—at least for now…

Waiting to Pay the Debt Piper…

Ultimately, of course, debt will get the last, cruel laugh, and with the US heading toward a deficit that is greater than 50% of GLOBAL GDP (!), I personally believe the Fed will need to return to its own money printer in a big way once this market charade ends in an historical “uh-oh” moment.

This seemingly inevitable return to mouse-click trillions (inflationary) will likely come after a deflationary implosion in equity assets currently supported by the foregoing tricks and fantasy rather than earnings and growth.

In the interim, and like those hedge fund jocks discussed above, we can only wait for things to get S&P ugly as gold, often sympathetic in the first hours of a market crash, rips toward all-time highs thereafter.

Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

The latest headlines, of course, are all pointing toward the ripple effect of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), and they should be.

This banking metaphor for the tech sector in particular and the previously described disaster in California as a whole or the matter of banking risk as a theme, require understanding and attention, provided below.

Once we get past a forensic look at the data and forces which explain SVB’s demise, we quickly discover that SVB is itself just a symbol of a much larger financial (and banking) crisis which ties together nearly all of the major macro forces we’ve been tracking since Powell began his QE to QT quest to be Volcker-reborn.

That is, we confirm that everything comes back to the Fed and bond market in general and the UST market in particular. But as I’ve argued for years, and will say again now: The bond market is the thing.

By the end of this brief report, we also discover that SVB is just the beginning; contagion inside and outside of the banking sector is about to get worse. Or stated more bluntly: “We aint seen nothing yet.”

But first, let’s look at the banks in Silicon Valley…

Two Failed Banks

The tech-friendly SVB story (i.e. FDIC shutdown) is actually preceded by another failed bank, namely the crypto-friendly Silvergate Capital. Corp, now heading into voluntary liquidation.

Because SVB was a much larger bank (>$170B in deposits) than Silvergate (>$6B in deposits), it got and deserved more headlines as the largest bank failure since well, the 2008 bank failures…

Unlike Lehman or Bear Stearns, the recent disasters at SVB and Silvergate were not the result of concentrated and levered bets/loans negligently packaged as investment-grade credits, but rather the result of a good ol’ fashioned bank run. Bank runs happen when depositors all want to get their money out of the banks at the same time—a scenario of which I’ve warned for years and compared to a burning theater with an exit door the size of a mouse-hole.

Banks, of course, use and lever depositor funds to lend and invest at risk (which is why Henry Ford warned of revolution if folks actually understood what banks actually do). Thus, if a mass of depositors suddenly wants their money at the same time, it’s just not gonna be there.

So, why were depositors in a panic to exit?

It boils down to crypto fears, tech stress and bad banking practices.

No Silver Lining at Silvergate

At Silvergate, they provided loans to crypto enterprises, which were the belle of the speculation ball until Sam Bankman-Fried’s FTX implosion made investors weary of crypto exchanges. Nervous depositors withdrew billions of their crypto-linked deposits at the same time.

Silvergate, of course, didn’t have the billions needed to meet depositor requests, because, well… banks by their operational (fractional reserve) nature never have the money when needed at the same time.

Thus, the bank had to quickly and desperately sell assets, which meant selling billions worth of non-mature Treasuries whose prices had tanked in the interim thanks to the Powell rate hikes.

(See how the Fed lurks, head down and silent, as the source behind nearly every crisis?)

This was selling bank assets at the worst time imaginable and immediately sent Silvergate into the red and toward the cold dark ocean floor.

Once DOJ investigations end and the FDIC insurance runs out, we’ll discover just how “whole” the bigger depositors at Silvergate will be—but this will take time and end in some degree of pain for many of them.

Death Valley for Silicon Valley Bank

As for the bigger disaster at SVB, they mostly serviced start-ups and technology firms with a major focus on life sciences start-ups—i.e., yesterday’s unicorns and tomorrow’s donkeys.

These unicorns, of course, were not only under the cloud of the FTX fears in particular and falling faith in tech miracles in general, but equally under the pressure of Powell’s rate hikes, which made funding (or debt-rollovers) harder and more expensive to obtain for tech names.

In short, the keg party of easy money for questionable tech enterprises was beginning to unwind.

SVB’s slow and then rapid demise came as depositors (at the advice of their VC advisors) withdrew billions at the same time, which SVB (like Silvergate) could not match after selling UST assets at a massive loss to save the first withdrawals while burning the later movers.

In short, and like all Ponzi schemes, banks suffering a bank run can’t and won’t make everyone whole—just the first money out—i.e., the fastest runners in the burning theater.

Burn Victims, Recovery?

Banks, ironically, can’t technically go bank-rupt. Silvergate plans to eventually make all depositors whole as they sift through their assets in liquidation. Hmmm. Good luck with that.

SVB, however, waited too long for voluntary liquidation procedures and was instead taken over by the FDIC as a receiver to manage the sale of assets to return investor deposits as a dividend over time.

Furthermore, the FDIC “insures” investor deposits up to $250K, but that won’t help the vast majority of SVB deposits (95.5%) not covered by this so-called insurance.

The Contagion Effect?

Notwithstanding the pain felt by depositors at Silvergate and SVB, the fear there has spread to the broader banking sector (big bank to regional), which saw expected sell-offs at the end of last week and has prompted the inevitable question, namely: Is this another Lehman moment?

For now, we are talking about bank runs rather than banks failing ala 2008 due to massive derivative exposures and bad loans. In short, this is not (yet at least) a 2008-like banking crisis.

That said, and as we’ve reported countless times, post-2008 banks are still massively over-levered and over-exposed to that toxic waste dump otherwise known as the COMEX and derivatives market.

Each day, the headlines change.

Signature Bank, this time in New York, was just shuttered by New York regulators.

The Fed then announced over the weekend that they will make depositors whole, which is tantamount to confessing yet another Fed bailout of bad banks under the new name of the $25B “Bank Term Funding Program”—or BTFP, an acronym which spurs reminders of the 2009 TARP days…

Such a bailout policy makes the odds of further Fed rate hikes in 2023 a bit less likely, and already the traders on Wall Street are renaming BTFP as “Buy The F***ing Pivot.”

As I’ve written for months (and show below), Powell’s QT plan would last until something inevitably broke, and it would seem that day has come, as expected.

Many are suggesting that the BTFB will need to be funded to at least $2T, not $25B, to backstop further banking risk.

Easy Prognosis

Based on context and current data, however, we can begin to make certain objective and early conclusions.

  1. Cash flow from VC into tech is about to get a lot tighter, as we’ve been warning for the last 2 years.
  2. SVB depositors may eventually get some or much of their money back over time once the bank’s assets (Treasuries, loans etc.) are sold off by the FDIC. Despite my very, very low opinion of bank regulators, at least SVB, unlike FTX, was regulated.
  3. As to a full-on crisis across all banks, it’s a bit early to say that the foregoing regional cancers will spread across all banks of all flavors, though our blunt reports on banking risk in the past suggest that banks as a whole are anything but safe.
  4. Cryptos, already under the cloud of FTX and now SVB, saw more pain, as the sell-offs in this space last week confirm. However, as banking fears prompt a more dovish Fed in Q2, many cryptos could rise.

The Bigger, Scarry Picture

In the still evolving nature of the current banking crisis, we see reasons to be concerned, very concerned, about systemic risk in the banking sector.

Banks, and banking practices, are complex little beasts. Just across town at that gasping entity known as Credit Suisse, for example, they have been too afraid to publicly report their cash-flow statements as the bank’s stock fell yet another 60%. So, yeah, things are complex…

But returning to the US in particular and banks in general, one can still derive the simple from the complex, which is simply scarry.

Keep It Simple

At the most basic level, banks fail when the cost of funding their operations rises dramatically above the returns or yields on their performing/earning assets.

It is our view that such a set-up for further pain across the banking sector is real, a set-up made all the worse by—you guessed it—that entirely un-natural destroyer of natural markets forces, free price-discovery and honest capitalism otherwise known as the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Central Bankers and Broken Bonds

As I’ve written and spoken, everything is connected, and everything eventually takes it signals from the bond market, which was long ago hijacked by the Fed.

Powell’s rate hikes, for example, don’t just occur in a vacuum to fight his bogus war on an inflation nightmare which he once promised was only “transitory.”

Fed QT and QE, for example, are more than just words, experiments or theories, they are un-natural, artificial and powerful toxins which can’t be contained to just making central bank balance sheets thinner or fatter and bogus CPI data higher or lower.

Instead, the Fed’s little tweaks, tricks and madness impact just about everything, and always end up screwing everything up.

Why? Because markets were designed to be managed by natural forces of supply and demand not artificial forces of fake money from central bankers.

By raising the Fed Funds Rates toward 5% and above at rapid pace, for example, Powell has done more than just make a tiny $300B dent in the Fed’s nearly $9T balance sheet. He has engineered a dis-inflationary recession and sent combined nominal returns in stocks AND bonds to levels not seen since 1871.

But when it comes to banking risk, Powell has also gut-punched that sector with criminal negligence.

How so?

Even the Banks Can’t Fight the Fed?

When the Fed began raising rates, it sent bonds to the floor and hence yields to the moon (yields and bond price are inversely related).

This impacts bank balance sheets because banks make a living by paying depositors at rate X while earning X+; but now those banks are in a deadly corner of the Fed’s own mis-design.

That is, the Fed has sent bond yields higher than the rates/yields which commercial banks offer depositors, which is why many depositors are questioning the advantage of being, well…depositors.

This mis-match, of course, will likely require banks to raise depositor rates to compete with rising UST yields, a costly tactic which cuts their profits and reddens their balance sheets.

Alternatively, banks could offer/issue more bank shares to increase their capital, but this dilutes existing share counts and value, which is how bankers are paid.

To add insult to injury, banks (and bankers) are also facing the real risk of rising or at least persistent inflation, which means that the real return on even “enhanced” depositor rates is ultimately a negative return when adjusted for the invisible tax of inflation.

All Conversations Return to Gold

So, no, we hardly think the commercial banking system, the massive and compounding risks of which we have reported for years, is anything remotely healthy, safe or credible.

All frowns and inevitable (yet increasingly empty) gold-bug critiques notwithstanding, we think holding a physical bar of segregated, allocated and non-levered gold in one’s own name in the world’s safest private vaults and jurisdictions makes a lot more sense than trusting your increasingly worthless paper or digital money to the world’s increasingly fractured banks, be they SVB, Credit Suisse or JP Morgan.

Just saying…

Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

Below we consider the State of California as the metaphor of a failed state as well as the failing state of the American Union, which is anything but a dream.

Metaphors

For those already familiar with my articles, interviews or even daily banter, I have an admitted affinity for metaphors and analogies, as they help draw the simple from the complex.

Toward that end, I’ve 1) compared policy makers to failed generals, 2) debt and currency bubbles to Titanics, 3) macro investing to polo matches, 4) monetary policy to drug addiction and 5) the love of bloated bond markets to toxic romances.

As for politicians and political issues, there is always the risk of partisan bias and offending those who cling to only one perspective.

Fortunately, my take on the left or the right of current politics is fairly agnostic, as I view nearly all politicos as crooked as a dog’s hind leg.

Thus, as I turn my lens toward the state of California and its failed governor, I hope readers of the left or right can dispense with politics and just stick to math so that we can all get past the swamp of red vs. blue opinions and respect the objective facts of red vs. black balance sheets.

And when it comes to the State of California, she’s deeply in the red, and serves, ironically, as yet another broader yet applicable metaphor of the world economy in general and the United States in particular.

So, let’s dig in.

California Dreaming?

Oh, how I have loved California. It is home to some wonderful personal memories as well as personal wipeouts—and not just the surfing kind.

Its sunny appeal, however, is universally seductive, and like that famous Eagles song, one indeed feels like you can check in any time you’d like, but you can never really leave California’s tempting horizons and mythical spell where dreams come true.

Nevertheless, folks are leaving California, and have been doing so to the tune of over 500,000 exits in the last 2 years alone.

Why?

For those on the political right, California’s big-headed Gavin Newsom is an easy target.

His over-the-top COVID hysteria (similar to other failed experiments in Seattle, Chicago or Portland…) and unsustainable tax policies coupled with San Francisco’s soft-on-crime nightmare (car-jacking capital) and L.A.’s recent fall from City of Dreams to Tent City are all classic symbols of a failed state.

I once lived on this beach…

But let’s leave that issue, debate and fall to the woke, the left, the right, the angry and the smug.

For me, the math of California (whose nominal GDP ranked as the 5th largest in the world) makes the discussion far easier to sift through.

The Hard Reality of Simple Math

Like nearly all cornered politicians, Newsom is driven by obfuscating the obvious and trivializing the momentous (Chicago’s recently failed mayor of the nation’s “murder capital” comes to mind…).

For example, his January projected budget deficit of $22.5B (an already embarrassing figure which he nevertheless tried to downplay) was in fact off.

Way off.

It turns out that even Newsom’s “sunny” forecast and optimistic math had overlooked a few pesky facts.

First, the state’s monthly tax revenue for January was almost $14B less than the revenue for the month prior.

Secondly, California’s fiscal year, which started last July, is moving at a pace of $23B in less income than the previous year.

In short: California’s income stream is running toward an emptiness equivalent to Newsom’s IQ, despite sunsets as consistent as his immaculate wardrobe and “Hollywood” smile (smear?).

But as many Californian’s know—it’s not how things feel, but how they look which counts.

For the top income bracket, however, California’s tax bills (and revenues) aren’t looking good.

Even those wealthy and beautiful (from Topanga to Belvedere Island) are starting to squirm under a state tax structure that feels and looks anything but “dreamy.”

State tax for Californians earning over $1M is 13.3%, and the top 0.5% of California’s tax payers are responsible for over 40% of the state’s total tax income.

Many, of course, are getting sick of paying taxes for increasingly expensive sunsets, even from Orange County’s row of waterfront mic-mansions.

Furthermore, for those wealthy left-coasters who’ve lost their jobs or capital gains at Google, Amazon, Facebook and countless other Silicon Valley enterprises of late, that tax income is openly drying up, which means so are the state’s revenues.

Fantasy Land

California, of course, is home to Hollywood and fantasy-like conversations of making dreams come true over cocktails at Shutters on the Beach or an overpriced vegetarian meal at The Ivy.

Fantasy, of course, is fun, and even necessary at times. (I always loved Shutters…)

It was fantasy, for example, that made an Austrian body-builder into a former Governor of California. How’s that for the American/Californian dream?

Unfortunately, that same Austrian never studied Austrian economics in between barbell sessions, and the last time I heard him speak, he was saying “screw your freedom,” suggesting that the unvaccinated were all anti-science “schmuks… “

What a guy. What a dream.

But had some of Cali’s former leaders indeed studied any form of economics, they’d likely understand that rising deficits and falling revenues is the opposite of a dream—it’s the historically-confirmed prelude to a nightmare.

Even the once-reliable WSJ has confessed that California’s budget has imploded and that January revenues are poised to be down by 40% y/y.

Uh-oh?

One wonders how long the top 0.5% of California will want (or be able) to pay that ever-increasing bill as profits in their tech-heavy portfolios creep ever closer toward a cliff steeper than Malibu’s Point Dume.

Fantasy Politics—Lipstick on a Pig

In the interim, Californian leadership sure knows how to put lipstick on a pig.

They’d tell us, for example, that despite revenues falling from prior peaks, that the state expects revenues for 2023-24 to “remain about 20% higher than before the pandemic.”

In other words, nothing to worry about.

Really?

First, those “projections” already have a ring of good ol’ Californian fantasy to them.

But even if we assume they are accurate and that California’s “revenue problems” are solved, those same budget wizards are ignoring the spending (i.e., the aforementioned budget deficit) problem which is mounting.

California as Metaphor

Unfortunately, California’s embarrassing combination of tanking revenues, increased spending and expanding deficits is not happening in a vacuum.

In fact, California serves as a mirror to a broader problem within the United States as whole (or debt hole) …

Like the failed state of California, the equally failed state of the US government has a problem with incoming tax revenues, an issue I’ve been tracing throughout 2022.

Like the Californian wealthy 0.5%, the wealthy 1% of the United States taken collectively are the ones paying 40% of the national taxes.

And like California’s wealthy in general, the nation’s wealthy in particular get a lot of that wealth from a bubbling risk asset market whose best days are largely behind us and whose worst days (and hence weaker capital gain receipts) are still ahead.

In short, and like California, the United States is facing less tax revenues combined with greater deficits and increased spending, making the Cali crisis a leading indicator of a national crisis.

The Math of Recessions

Recessions, even the kind the DC crowd seeks to redefine, deny, postpone or ignore, have patterns and facts which we can use to foresee coming trends, weaknesses and even opportunities.

For example, recessions mean less tax receipts and higher deficits.

If we assume even a 20% decline in tax receipts (conservative), tagged on to rising deficits estimated at a 12% increase in Entitlement Pay-Go’s (also conservative) in the backdrop Powell’s current rate hike policy, Uncle Sam’s bar tab (i.e., True Interest Expense) returns to Covid crisis/pain levels reminiscent of a seemingly forgotten yesterday:

In other words, the United States (along with California…) are mathematically heading toward a bar-tab (i.e., interest expense bill) as painful as the one we saw in March of 2020, when markets tanked and the Fed was required to print trillions in less than 8 months just to keep Uncle Sam’s nose (and Treasury market) above water.

For now, however, the Fed is not printing trillions via QE, but tightening ala QT.

Or stated more simply, US debt obligations are sailing toward yet another debt iceberg, only now the issue is not about too few lifeboats, but no life boats at all.

As I see it, and have said many times prior, the US is trapped with no easy solutions as debt levels are rising and revenues falling.

The end result is obvious, even if the precise timing of the iceberg is not.

Whether Powell’s Fed continues to tighten into a debt iceberg, or eventually seeks to temporary melt (monetize) that iceberg with more QE, the nation is doomed either way in a Hobbesian choice between tanking markets (QT-driven) or skyrocketing inflation (QE-driven).

No One Likes Bears, and Even Fewer Understand Gold

Unless you are a talented short-trader or volatility option jock, no one likes bears or bear markets, and hence very few like to hear data-driven bears (mathematical realists) like myself constantly reminding us of the debt elephant in the room–and all that this toxic debt inevitably implies.

Once debt levels become fatal, the direction of credit, stock, property and finally currency markets are easy to diagnosis, though the time of death is not.

Gold, of course, loves dying currencies.

The price of gold today, or the strength or weakness of the USD tomorrow, are frankly silly questions in the short term for any who understand the broader context of the long-term.

Currencies are always the last bubble to pop, and given that gold is a store of value rather than an instrument of speculation, gold investors (i.e., those whose aim is wealth preservation not asset speculation) recognize that gold never rises, currencies just fall.

Investors in physical gold therefore measure their wealth in ounces, grams and kilos, not highly toxic, increasing debased and (forever debated) fiat currencies whose race to the bottom is literally happening right before our eyes in real time.

To dismiss such simple deductions from admittedly complex market forces as just “gold bug” thinking ignores math, history and gold cycles.

But again, no one likes to see bears, even when they’re staring at them from the Californian state Capital.

Based on all the debt destruction (and coming consequences) I see in California, the United States and the world in general, I suppose I’ll still just be a “bear” and a “bug” to most.

But both are better than a sitting duck.

Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

Below we look at the interplay of embarrassing debt, dying currencies and failed monetary fantasies masquerading as policies to confirm that no matter how one turns or spins the inflation/deflation, QT/QE or recession/no-recession narratives, the global financial system is already doomed.

Recession: The Elephant in the Room

As I’ve been arguing in report after report, my view has been that the US, with its 125% debt-to-GDP and 7% deficit-to-GDP ratios, was, and already is, in a recession heading into 2023, despite official efforts in DC to re-define the very definition of a recession.

But a recession is still a recession, and an elephant is still an elephant, and both are fairly easy to see at a distance.

As of now, however, the recession has officially been avoided.

How comforting.

As with the inflation data, it’s nice when the folks in Washington can exercise their magical powers to move the goal-posts in mid-game whenever a little “cheating” helps their odds and fictional narrative.

For me, an elephantiac recession is now in the room.

The Empire Manufacturing data in my latest report, for example, supported this recessionary outlook.

In case, however, we still need more recessionary evidence, the dramatic 6 month decline in the Conference Board’s index of leading indicators serves as yet another neon-flashing warning that the recession—if not under our bow—is certainly right off our bow.

GOt gold

Still Hoping for a “Softish” Landing?

Furthermore, and despite Powell’s belief that his office can manage a recession with the precision of a home thermostat, his faith in what he lately described as a “softish landing” is almost as farcical as his prior attempt to describe inflation as “transitory.”

Without wishing to appear “sensational,” as many of us blunt and math-based observers (from Burry to Middelkoop) of late are described, I will stick my tin-foil-covered head out and say candidly that I see nothing “softish” ahead.

Instead, I see either: 1) a financial crisis which will dwarf 2008 and/or, 2) an absolute tanking of the USD, whose unsustainable strength throughout 2022 was indeed “transitory,” as I argued numerous times.

The Simple Math of Liquidity

The simple math and reality of even centralized and central-bank distorted markets is quite simple: These markets rise and fall on liquidity.

Once the monetary “grease” required to maintain the MMT fantasy of mouse-click money as a debt solution “tightens” too tight or runs too dry, the entire house of cards of the post-2008 fairytale comes to a hard rather than “softish” end.

Again, we saw the first signs of this collapse in the “tightening” backdrop of 2022.

Of course, this critical “liquidity” won’t be coming from economic growth, rising tax receipts, a robust Main Street or a fairly-priced market.

Instead, and as expected, it now comes from out of thin air…

Is It a Race to the Bottom for Risk Assets?

The honest but scary numbers rather than fluffy but fictional words of our financial central planners make it all too clear that unless Powell puts his finger on the Eccles-based mouse-clicker to create more fiat money (highly inflationary), US and global credit markets will simply continue their race to the ocean floor (highly deflationary or at least dis-inflationary).

As credit markets sink and bond yields and rates rise, this also means that equity markets, who have been sickly addicted to years of central-bank repressed low rates and cheap debt, will merely join those bonds on the bottom of the dark ocean floor.

In short, bonds (and hence risk parity portfolios) won’t save you. Rather than hedge stocks, they are now correlated to the same.

More Easing Won’t Bring “Ease”

Failing outright and open bond default, it thus seems that an eventual capitulation to more magical “liquidity” and renewed QE is nothing short of inevitable, which means the USD’s fall from its 2022 highs is equally the case, as shown below.

But such “easing,” if realized, will lead to more inflationary-debased Dollars and hence more inflation dis-ease for investors.

This is hard for investors to fully grasp when the Dollar seems “strong,” but even that was an illusion, and one which hardly did any asset class any good in 2022 but for the Dollar itself.

The Damage Already Wrought by the Strong USD

In the interim, the cancerous ripple-effects of the Fed’s strong USD policies, as warned throughout 2022, continue their waves of destruction, as openly evidenced by the earnings reports from our beleaguered S&P.

Already, the early data coming from its listed companies is anything but positive.

As in the July and October earnings seasons of 2022, corporate earnings for 2023 are still drowning under the weight of the USD.

But we must also keep in mind that the DXY (which measures the relative strength of the USD) has fallen 11% (from 113.9 to 101.8) over the last quarter.

If the S&P hit an October bottom during a DXY high, what can we deduce from a now falling DXY?

Will markets rise like Lazarus?

This will be something worth tracking.

But why?

Strong Dollar or Weak Dollar, No One Wins…

Should earnings and hence stocks continue to decline despite the DXY declines, this would suggest that not even a weakening USD can save these post-08, over-stretched, Fed-addicted and debt-soaked markets.

However, should stocks rise on a weaker Dollar, the percentage gains in price will only be eaten away by the invisible tax of inflation and the increasingly debased value of the very dollars used to measure those so-called “appreciating” stocks.

In short, a no-win scenario…

For now, it seems the stock market only cares about the Fed rather than the DXY, as the Fed is the market.

That is, when QE is the meme, zombie markets rise; when QT is the meme, they fall.

Again, see for yourself:

GOt gold

Yellen, Squawking for a Weaker Dollar?

In fact, it was during those October market lows that the queen of toxic liquidity, former Fed-Chair-turned-Treasury-Secretary (imagine that?) Janet Yellen, was suddenly ringing the bell for more magical money—i.e., “liquidity.”

Specifically, Yellen was wondering who would be buying Uncle Sam’s IOU’s without more mouse-click money from the Eccles Building?

As my latest reports on the UST markets confirmed, the answer was simple: No one.

Instead, foreign central banks were and are selling rather than buying America’s bonds. Just ask the Japanese…

Is Yellen, contrary to Powell, silently suggesting that QT has backfired? Is Yellen, unlike Powell, realizing that there are no buyers for our increasingly issued yet unloved USTs but the Fed itself?

Perhaps these tensions within the Treasury market provide the hidden clues as to why the USD has been sliding rather than rising from the DXY’s October highs?

After all, a weaker USD means less forced need for foreign nations to dump their UST reserves to come up with the money to buy their own dying bonds and strengthen their own dying currencies as a direct response to Powell’s (and originally, Yellen’s) strong USD policy.

In short, perhaps our Treasury Secretary now wants to stop the bleeding in her Treasury market…

Weaker Dollar Ahead?

My current view is therefore this: We are seeing the slow end of the strong USD policy.

Why?

Because as warned throughout 2022, such a strong USD was a massive gut-punch to foreign currencies and hence foreign holders of USD-denominated debt.

Indirectly then, the strong USD was also a gut-punch to the UST market, which saw more sellers than buyers around a crippled globe. Hence Yellen’s backfired and back-stepping fears above…

Furthermore, and returning to the aforementioned topic of recessions, I also argued throughout 2022 that no recession in history has ever been solved with a strong currency.

Given that such a recession is, again, either directly off our bow or already under it, it is likely no coincidence that the USD/DXY is now falling rather than rising.

In short has Uncle Sam’s strong Dollar finally cried, well… “Uncle”?

Or more simply stated, has Yellen realized, in private, what we’ve been arguing in public, namely: That we are already in a recession and thus need a weaker Dollar.

Powell: Ignoring Reality & Yellen?

Meanwhile, however, you have the math-challenged but psychologically tragic Jay Powell wanting to save his legacy as a Paul Volcker rather than as an Arthur Burns.

Like a child wanting to be John Wayne rather than Daffy Duck, Powell and his rate-hiked strong USD refuses to see the $31T debt pile in front of him which makes it impossible to be a reborn Volcker, who in 1980 faced a much smaller debt pile of $900B.

In short, Powell’s America of 2023, unlike Volcker’s America of 1980, can’t stomach rising rates or a strong USD.

Or stated even more simply: Powell can’t be Volcker.

Will someone at the Eccles Building please remind him of this?

Doomed Either Way

Yellen or Powell, QT or QE, strong Dollar or weak Dollar, the global financial system is nevertheless doomed.

We either tighten the bond and hence stock markets into a free fall and economic disaster, or we loosen and ease liquidity into an inflationary nightmare.

As I’ve said so many times: Pick your poison—depression or hyperinflation.

Or perhaps both…namely stagflation.

Either way, of course, Powell, and the American economy, is now doomed. And he has only Greenspan, Bernanke, Yellen, himself and years of mouse-click fantasy to blame.

Supercore (CPI) Lies from On High

Meanwhile, the lies, twisted math and Nobel-Prize level mis-information continues…

Last week, for example, I reminded readers of DC’s latest attempt to mis-report otherwise humanly-felt inflation by tweaking an already-tweaked (i.e., bogus) CPI inflation scale.

But if that comedy wasn’t already comical enough, now welcome none other than Paul Krugman to this stage of open theatrics masquerading as economic data.

According to one of Krugman’s latest neoliberal economist tweets, “3-month ‘supercore’ CPI is below Fed’s 2% inflation target,” which naturally had those equally raggish economic playwriters at the WSJ almost galvanic with theatrical “good news.”

Hmmm.

What neither Krugman nor the WSJ seemed to recognize is that “supercore” CPI excludes food, energy, shelter and the price of used cars, so yes, absolutely, if you take away all the things that actually cost lots of money, inflation is no problem at all… Bravo!

Such shameless misuse of data and headlines, of course, is almost as shameless as the misuse of monetary policy we’ve been enjoying since the Troubled Asset Relief Program…

But as stated last week, such desperate tricks from on high will continue to mount as global financial problems do the same.

An Historical Turning Point

The astounding lack of accountability from the foxes guarding our financial hen house will one day be the stuff of history books, assuming history itself is not cancelled, as it seems the study of economics has already left the room.

The best we can hope for from the very “experts” who have brought the global economy toward a mathematically unavoidable cliff are now empty words and twisted math, as per above.

Such disloyalty from our financial generals on the eve of an unprecedented strategic and tactical economic defeat of their own making reminds me of officers sitting miles from the trenches as investors go “over-the-top” toward a row of cannons pointed straight at their trusting chests.

In short: Sickening.

Gold: A Far More Loyal Lieutenant

Gold was a far more loyal asset than stocks and bonds in the turbulent times of 2022; and given that 2023 portends to be even worse, we can expect better loyalty from this so-called “barbarous relic” of the past.

With inflation ripping and war blazing, many still argue that gold did not do enough.

Hmmm…

But gold in every currency but the USD (see above) would beg to differ.

Furthermore, and as argued so many ways and times, that USD strength will not hold, as gold’s price moves this year have already tracked.

Gold’s future strength and rise is thus easy to foresee, as gold doesn’t rise, currencies just fall.

It’s really that simple.

Got gold?

Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

Below we track years of desperate yet deliberate central bank bubble creation (and can-kicking) to its ultimate end-game: titanic currency destruction.

The Bond Market is the Thing

When tracking markets and asset classes, one eventually accepts the Shakespearean reality that “the bond market is the thing.”

When a completely distorted global financial system is driven exclusively by the greatest credit bubble (and hence crisis) in history, the cost of that debt (i.e., the interest rate) becomes a primary protagonist.

When rates are low, for example, bubbles grow. When rates are high, they pop.

Of course, the bigger the bubble, the more fun the ride up; but conversely, the bigger the bubble, the more painful the pop.

And by the way: All bubbles (tech, property, credit and currency) pop.  

We are now entering that pop-moment, and the central bankers know it, because, well: They created it…

Once Upon a Time—Natural Forces

Once upon a time, there was a concept and even a dream of healthy capitalism and natural market forces in which bonds were fairly priced on the basis of a now extinct concept once known as natural supply and demand.

Nod to Adam Smith.

That is, when demand for a bond was naturally high, its price rose and its yield (and hence rate) was naturally low; conversely, when demand was low, its price fell and its yield (and hence rate) rose.

This natural ebb and flow of yields and hence interest rates kept credit markets honest.

As rates climbed and the cost of debt rose, debt liquidity naturally slowed down and the system prevented itself from over-heating.

In essence, the bond markets had a natural pressure gauge which triggered a natural release of the hot air within a bubble.

Then Came the Un-Natural and the Dishonest

Then came the un-natural central bankers against which our founding fathers and Constitution warned.

Like everything centralized and human, as opposed to natural, these short-sighted bankers ruined, well: everything.

Rather than allow bonds, yields and hence rates to be determined by natural price forces, these banks had the arrogant idea that they could control such forces, the hubris equivalent of a sailor attempting to control the powers of an ocean.

Nod to John Smith of the Titanic.

The Fun Part

For years, central bankers have artificially supported sovereign bond markets by purchasing otherwise unwanted bonds with money created out of thin air.

This absurd yet popular “solution” of repressed rates created bubble after bubble. That was the fun part.

It is also the part which breeds a school of academic apologists and theories (nod to MMT) who justify and defend the same as an unsinkable market.

Remember Janet Yellen’s claim that we may never see another recession? Or Bernanke’s Nobel-Prize winning observation that we could print trillions at “no cost” to the economy?

Meanwhile market participants, enjoying the tailwinds of low rates and easy/cheap access to debt, ignore the bubble dangers (i.e., icebergs) ahead as they enjoy the admittedly fun part of a rising bubble.

And oh, what fun a cheap-debt-driven and artificially controlled series of cheap-debt-induced bubbles can be…

Like the tuxedo-clad 1st class passengers on the Titanic’s A-Deck, investors (the top 10% who own 90% of stock market wealth) pass cigars and brandy among themselves and speculate like children comparing portfolios, all the while ignoring the rising iceberg off the bow.

How Icebergs Are Made

When it comes to making icebergs, our central banks have a perfect record, and the leader of this pack is the U.S. Federal Reserve, a private bank which is neither Federal nor a reserve.

Just saying…

For those paying attention rather than passing cigars on the A-Deck, you’ve already noticed this pattern of bubble-to-bubble and hence debt iceberg to debt iceberg creation before.

The Fed, with the complicit support of the commercial bankers and policymakers, for example, “solved” the tech bubble of the late 90’s (kudos to Greenspan) which popped in 2000 by creating a real estate bubble which popped in 2008.

Through the same playbook of artificial rate suppression, the Fed then “solved” that housing bubble (kudos to Bernanke) by creating a global sovereign debt bubble/iceberg (kudos to Yellen and Powell), the very A-Deck upon which we all stand today.

Today’s Iceberg: A Global Credit Crisis

Having bought time and bubbles, from tech to housing to sovereign bonds, the Fed is now running out of places to hide its latest iceberg. This kind of can-kicking is more like sin-hiding.

Having squeezed a tech bubble into a real estate bubble, and then a real estate bubble into a sovereign debt bubble, where can the central bankers now hide their latest Frankenstein, bubble and iceberg? (I love metaphors.)

The Currency Bubble

For me, at least, the answer is fairly clear.

The only way to hide and “solve” the greatest sovereign bond iceberg (crisis) in history is to bury it beneath wave after wave of mouse-clicked, debased and hence increasingly worthless fiat currencies.

In short, the Fed will hide its latest credit bubble behind the last and only bubble it has left in a history-confirmed pattern used by all failed financial regimes, namely: Creating a currency crisis (i.e., debased money) to solve a debt crisis.

Of course, if you read that last line (as well as centuries of economic history) correctly, this just means there are no solutions left, just a choice of crisis options: drowning bonds or drowning currencies.

Pick Your Poison: Credit Crisis or Currency Crisis

Just like the officers at the wheel of the Titanic were the first to realize their ship was sinking, the central bankers from DC to Tokyo are equally aware that they were driving too fast in a sea of icebergs.

Now, they are struggling to “be calm” in voice as their crew scurries to count unavailable lifeboats and keep the passengers from panicking too soon.

Among this crew of policy sailors on the financial Titanic, two camps are forming. After all, even when a ship is sinking, there is always different expressions of the human instinct to survive.

One camp is hawks. The other camp is doves. In truth, however, both camps are doomed.

Hawks Squawking

The hawks are telling the passengers (investors) to fear not.

Yes, they are raising rates to fight inflation, but this, they calmly say from the shivering A-Deck, will not cause the global credit and hence financial markets to sink into a contagious recession/depression.

This is the camp of Larry Summers, William Dudley, Jerome Powell and the likes of James Bullard at the St. Louis Fed.

Bullard, for example, thinks a Fed Funds Rate of anywhere from 5% to 7% may lead to a mere “slowdown in growth” but by no means a recession.

Well, that’s rich. This coming from the same office that said inflation was transitory and a recession is not a recession.

Based on prior GDP prints and the inverted 3m/10y yield curve inversion of late, I’d argue we are already in a recession, but then again, why let facts get in the way of a good lifeboat narrative.

As the Fed captains all know, when the truth hurts, just lie.

The hawks, it seems, somehow believe that they can raise rates (to as high as 7%) to kill mis-reported inflation (as high as 16%) [???] without killing the credit market.

Hmmm…

At the same time, however, Powell needs inflation to outpace interest rates to achieve a deep enough slope of negative real rates to inflate away the USA’s $31T public debt.

Like Captain Smith on the Titanic, Powell is trying hard to stay calm but knows the end game.

Dead Market or Dead Currency?

In short, Powell is in the mother of all conundrums, dilemmas and self-made corners. He literally has no good options left.

If he keeps raising rates to “fight inflation”—he risks sending the global credit markets below the cold-water line.

But if he pivots, eases or allows more liquidity (i.e., QE) back into the bond markets, he saves the bonds but kills/debases the currency and hence creates more rather than less inflation.

Again. Pick your poison: A dead bond market or a dead currency?

The Choice Has Been Made

But in case the suspense is killing you, I’d say the answer is already in front of us.

As hinted above (and shown below), the only and last option left for debt-soaked regimes is currency debasement.

History proves time after time after time that there are no exceptions to this sad rule.

Despite his words to the contrary, Powell will ultimately be forced to kill the currency to allegedly save the credit markets—thus once again squeezing one bubble (in credit) into another bubble (currency), which is what all the central bankers have been doing for years: Pushing one bubble into the next until the final one pops.

Stated otherwise: There just aren’t enough life boats for Captain Powell’s financial Titanic.

Facts Speak Louder Than Words

As I’ve argued all year, Powell may talk Volcker-tough, but he’s moving toward more fake liquidity and hence more inflationary money printing.

If you think otherwise, the evidence is already before us—and I’m not just talking about “moderating the pace of rate hikes.”

In order to survive, the credit markets need more balance sheet expansion (i.e., QE), which by definition, is inherently inflationary.

Nod to Milton Friedman.

Again: Powell will choose inflation (and currency debasement) over “fighting” inflation, because Powell secretly needs inflation and negative real rates to inflate away Uncle Sam’s bar tab.

Nod to Stan Fischer.

This eventually means letting the USD expand in supply and hence sink in value.

Or stated simply: A currency crisis.

Just Follow the Pattern/Banks

Toward this end, the other major central banks and currencies of the world are already doing this.

The yen, euro and pound of 2022, for example, have sunk to record lows to monetize local debts—the USD will eventually follow in 2023.

In fact, this unspoken preference for liquidity over “inflation fighting” is already evident rather than speculative.

As per the chart immediately below, November saw $45B in Treasury spending and another $139B in repo liquidity—for a total of 131B in net liquidity into the market, a number which far overshadows the $53B of so-called “QT” tightening by Powell.

In short, one may speak like a hawk but act like a dove.

Meanwhile, stocks and bonds were falling together.

Can we all say: “Uh-oh”?

As per the bars at the far right of the graph below, for the 1st time in 60years, we saw a UST market (blue bar) fell faster and further than a top-20 stock market drawdown (grey bar).

Hmmm. Can we blame this historical fall in USTs on inflation?

Nope.

In the 1970’s, and as per chart above, we saw inflation, but never USTs (blue bar) falling further than stocks.

Why the critical difference today?

Easy. Bonds are falling in price because demand is falling in fact.  This bond drop is not because of inflation, but because no one trusts the debtor—i.e., Uncle Sam.

Unlike the 70’s, US debt to GDP today is at 125+%, and thus American IOUs today just aren’t what they were yesterday.

…and fiscal deficits are at 10% of GDP.

That’s what I call a debt iceberg…The bigger it gets, the lest investors trust the debtor beneath the surface.

Toward this end, foreign banks are turning their backs on Uncle Sam’s unloved USTs (IOUs)…

Frankly, I’ve never seen such a grotesque convergence of debt icebergs heading for our economic bow.

Watch the Currencies—They’re Already Drowning

As global central banks debase their currencies (yen, euro and pound) to monetize their unloved and unpayable sovereign debts/bonds, we can expect more volatility in the FX markets and pairings as the current USD, like the bow of the Titanic, rises temporarily high above the waves before sinking deep, deep below them.

Can the Fed save that sinking dollar/Titanic by cranking up rates ala Powell at the expense of the US economy and markets as well as at the expense of its global friends and enemies who can’t pay back $14T worth of USD-denominated debts when the USD is too expensive?

I think not.

Nor am I alone in calling out this impossible dilemma of bad options and bad bonds. Druckenmiller and Dimon are saying the same thing.

Stated simply, the only way current central banks can keep their unloved bond market afloat is by drowning their currencies in more QE, which, needless to say, will be very good for gold

This QE (currently hiding in the ignored repo markets) will be the last resort until the widely telegraphed and pre-planned “great [disorderly] reset” toward CBDC becomes the next embarrassing reality.

This collective lack of faith in USTs and USDs is why global central banks are swapping out USTs and buying physical gold…

As I’ve written and said before, it’s hard to imagine how we ever got to this obvious consequence of too much debt and too much artificial, centralized “capitalism.”

Were policy makers sinister (i.e., intentionally creating a red carpet toward CBDC and more total control) or just irretrievably stupid?

Either way, the end result is the same: The global financial system will sink, and though the USD may be the last to go under, under she will go.

Facts vs. Fed-Speak: A Comical History with Tragic Consequences

What the U.S. in particular, and the West in general, are failing to confess is that today’s so-called “Developed Economies” are in actual fact more like yesterday’s debt-straddled Emerging Market economies, and like a real banana republic, the only option ahead for our clueless elites is inflationary (and intentionally so).

Titanic Ignorance

I’ve often cryptically joked that listening to investors, mainstream financial pundits or downstream politicians debating about near-term asset class direction, inflation “management” or central bank miracle solutions is like listening to First Class passengers on the Titanic debating about desert choices on the menu in their hands rather than the debt iceberg off their bow.

In short: The real issues are right in front of us, yet ignored until the economic ship is already dipping beneath the waves.

Rising Debt + Declining Income = Uh-Oh.

As for such hard facts (i.e., icebergs), the most obvious are fatal global and national debt levels rising at levels which can never be repaid….

Global debt is a harbinger of the rise of the banana republic in the west.

Meanwhile, national income from GDP and tax receipts are falling, which means debts are grossly outpacing revenues, which any kitchen-table, boardroom or even cabinet meeting conversation should know is a bad thing…

Toward this end, it’s worth lifting our eyes above the A-deck menu and taking a hard look at the following iceberg scrapping the bow, namely: Tanking US tax receipts:

What Biden and Powell might wish to remind themselves is that U.S. tax receipts have fallen YoY by 16%, and are likely to fall even further as markets continue their trend South at the same time the US steers toward a recessionary block of ice.

No Love for Uncle Sam’s IOUs

What’s even more alarming is this stubborn fact: as U.S. Federal deficits are rising, foreign interest in Uncle Sam’s IOU’s (i.e., U.S. Treasuries) are tanking.

China’s interest in U.S. Treasuries, for example, has hit a 12-year low and Japan, as I’ve warned elsewhere, is too broke (and too busy buying its own JGB’s with mouse-klick Yen) to afford bailing out Uncle Sam.

The level of magical Yen creation (reminiscent of the Weimar era) coming out of Japan to “support” its pathetic bond market is simply mind-blowing:

Given the artificial and relative current strength of the USD and the fact that FX-hedged UST yields are negative in EUR, it’s fairly safe to conclude that there will be more sellers than buyers of UST’s. That means rising yields and rates near-term.

Ouch.

That’s a bad sign for Uncle Sam’s bloated and unloved bar tab. Who but the Fed (and hence more QE) will buy his IOUs by end of August?

Filling the Deficit Gap: Print or Default?

In the past, the spread between rising debts and declining faith in U.S. IOUs was filled by a magical money printer at the not-so-federal “Federal” Reserve.

But with a cornered Fed still tilting toward QT rather than QE, where will this magical money come from, as it sure as heck aint coming from tax receipts, the Japanese, China or Europe?

As I see it, the Fed has only two pathetic options left if it wants to fill the widening gap between its growing deficits and declining faith from foreign bond buyers (or even US banks, see below).

Namely:  It can 1) default on its embarrassing IOU’s and send markets over a cliff, or 2) pivot from QT to QE and create more magical (i.e., inflationary and toxic) money.

When it comes between embarrassment or toxicity, my bet is on option #2, which means expect more rather than less QE and inflationary currency debasement ahead.

Why?

Saving the Politico’s, Drowning the Citizen

Because neutering one’s currency is the classic/desperate policy taken by all debt-soaked regimes to create a negative-real rate lifeboat for themselves while leaving the average Joe Citizen shivering in an inflationary ocean of pain.

As I’ve said countless times, the Fed WANTS INFLATION to inflate away its debt nightmare and only pretends to fight it.

Rising rates are simply no option as higher rates are simply too expensive for Uncle Sam.

YoY interest payments alone on Uncle Sam’s bar tab were already at $666B by end of May. If one tacks on the extra interest owed on Treasury Bills and maturing notes, that interest expense climbs to just under $900B.

Again, that’s just the interest expense. Do you really think Uncle Sam wants to (or can afford) to charge himself more (i.e., by raising rates) for his own (and otherwise unpayable) debt?

I Could Be Wrong?

But one must hedge even one’s own highest convictions, and I suppose the Fed could try to increase demand for UST’s (as a so-called “Safe-Haven”?) by lifting rates and crashing the stock market rather than re-heating its money printer.

Anything is possible in a world bereft of good options and riddled with bad financial leaders.

But such an equally pathetic option (i.e., an induced market implosion) just means less capital gains tax receipts from the stock-rich and hence places the Fed right back where it started: Starring down the barrel of even less incoming cash, even less consumer spending and hence even less GDP.

In short: I just don’t see anyway around the pathetic QE and pro-inflation end-game ahead, which the Fed pretends to ignore and the feckless corporate media can’t even fathom.

Seeking Rather than Fighting Inflation

And so, I’ll say it again and again: The Fed is not fighting inflation, it wants inflation.

Or in plainer English, and as no surprise to Fed-watchers like me: The Fed is, once again, simply lying to the public.

The West: Just Another Banana Republic

Today, whether we wish to admit it or not, the so-called “Developed Economies” in the U.S., Europe and Japan are really nothing more than debt-broke economies, veritable banana republics.

This means their economic profiles, and hence economic policies, more resemble those of “Emerging Markets” rather than “Developed Markets.”

And what have we learned of the EM policies from Argentina to Yugoslavia and every other debt-strapped nation in history?

It’s simple: INFLATION MUST BE KEPT ABOVE INTEREST RATES TO REDUCE DEBT BY “INFLATING IT AWAY.”

The Volcker Option is Dead

This means inflation levels in the West can eventually reach a base-case similar to that of the 1970’s, but unlike that Volcker era, today’s drunk central bankers can’t induce a recession (i.e., raise rates above the inflation rate) when the public debt is above $30T rather than $900B level of the Volcker era.

Folks, US debt to GDP is 122% today, under Volcker it was 30%. There is no going back to a Volcker (i.e., rate hike) option. Period.

Stated simply: Short of outright default, the US is in too much debt to conduct anything but an inflationary policy.

The Endless Larry Summers

Meanwhile, an increasingly tired (and let’s be honest, failing) President Biden stands on a Delaware beach and pretends we are good hands, telling reporters he has just been on the phone with none other than Larry Summers to create a plan to fight inflation.

Oh, how the ironies do abound.

Larry Summers, the de-regulating patient-zero of the 2008 derivatives debacle and co-signer to the two most destructive pieces of financial madness since World War II (i.e., the repeal of Glass-Steagall and the 2000 Commodities Modernization Act—aka: Enron “loop hole”), is gonna save us?

From what most know of Larry, he’s always looking for an angle to appear like an expert and be at the center of power, while forgetting to remind anyone, including Ray Dalio, that he has been at the very eye of more than one financial hurricane.

In fact, there’s no one I’d trust less to “solve” any financial problem, including the Harvard endowment, which former University President Summers helped crush in 2008 by filling it with the very same toxic derivatives which he had “de-regulated” a decade prior when I was limping around Harvard Yard.

For now, the endless Larry Summers somehow feels a stronger USD and rising bond yields will give foreigners positive real returns and hence attract badly needed foreign interest in U.S. credit markets, when such a plan is likely to have the opposite effect (as per usual with effectively all of Larry’s “plans”).

Big names like China, and broke names like Japan, as noted above, are selling, not buying our debt.

Instead, by raising rates/yields and tightening rather than easing, the “Summers Solution,” like the Powell policy, will merely hasten the demise of the U.S. economy while simultaneously increasing the risk of a U.S. default.

Why?

Because Larry seems to have forgotten that current US debt levels can’t endure rising yields/rates.

Simple History Lesson: Gold Rises as Currencies Debase

Again, the only option left for a debt-soaked banana republic like the U.S. is to look in the mirror and act like the banana republic that it truly is—which just means more QE will re-appear, and more inflation and more currency debasement lies ahead.

Even commercial banks (Goldman, Citi, JP Morgan, Deutsche Bank) are now extremely risk averse, with bond desks recently refusing to execute client trades if it means holding client collateral (i.e., increasingly toxic bond hot potatoes) for even a brief period.

Without central bank “support” for these toxic bonds, no one wants to touch them—not even the big boys. When liquidity dries up, QE will have to replace current QT.

When that happens, cue the inflation warning bells as more fiat liquidity floods an already-drowning financial system.

See why gold’s golden era has yet to even begin?

Eventually, the rising tide of more debased fiat currencies will be impossible to hide and gold’s openly repressed and manipulated pricing levels will rise from the ashes of a broken financial system and an increasingly neutered/debased USD.

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