Time is coming ..when The "only" thing left for U.S. is to invest in each other ..time is gonna force U.S. & let it come :o
wakey wakey ...seepy heads !
Source: Howard Kunstler via Kunstler.com
The rot moves from the margins to the center, but the disease moves from the center to the margins. That
is what has happened in the realm of money in recent weeks due to the
sustained mispricing of the cost of credit by central banks, led by the
US Federal Reserve. Along the way, that outfit has managed to misprice
just about everything else — stocks, houses, exotic securities, food
commodities, precious metals, fine art. Oil is mispriced as well, on the
low side, since oil production only gets more expensive and complex
these days while it depends more on mispriced borrowed money. That situation will be corrected by scarcity, as oil companies discover that real capital is unavailable.And
then the oil will become scarce. The “capital” circulating around the
globe now is a squishy, gelatinous substance called “liquidity.” All it
does is gum up markets. But eventually things do get unstuck.
Meanwhile, the rot of epic mispricing
expresses itself in collapsing currencies and the economies they are
supposed to represent: India, Turkey, Argentina, Hungary so far. Italy,
Spain, and Greece would be in that club if they had currencies of their
own. For now, they just do without driving their cars and burn
furniture to stay warm this winter. Automobile use in Italy is back to
1970s levels of annual miles-driven. That’s quite a drop.
Before too long, the people will be out in the streets engaging with the riot police, as in Ukraine. This
is long overdue, of course, and probably cannot be explained rationally
since extreme changes in public sentiment are subject to murmurations,
the same unseen forces that direct flocks of birds and schools of fish
that all at once suddenly turn in a new direction without any detectable
communication.
Who can otherwise explain the amazing
placidity of the sore beset American public, beyond the standard trope
about bread, circuses, and superbowls? Last
night they were insulted with TV commercials hawking Maserati cars.
Behold, you miserable nation of overfed SNAP card swipers, the fruits of
wealth and celebrity! Savor your unworthiness while you await the
imminent spectacles of the Sochi Olympics and Oscar Night! Things at the margins may yet interrupt the trance at the center. My guess is that true wickedness brews unseen in the hidden, unregulated markets of currency and interest rate swaps.
The big banks are so deep in this derivative ca-ca that eyeballs are turning brown in the upper level executive suites. Notable
bankers are even jumping out of windows, hanging themselves in back
rooms, and blowing their brains out in roadside ditches. Is it not
strange that there are no reports on the contents of their suicide
notes, if they troubled to leave one? (And is it not unlikely that they
would all exit the scene without a word of explanation?) One
of these, William Broeksmit, a risk manager for Deutsche Bank, was
reportedly engaged in “unwinding positions” for that that outfit, which
holds over $70 trillion in swap paper. For
scale, compare that number with Germany’s gross domestic product of
about $3.4 trillion and you could get a glimmer of the mischief in
motion out there. Did poor Mr. Broeksmit despair of his task?
Physicist Stephen
Hawking declared last week that black holes are not exactly what people
thought they were. Stuff does leak back out of them. This will
soon be proven in the unwinding derivatives trades when most of the
putative wealth associated with swaps and such disappears across the
event horizon of bad faith, and little dribbles of their prior existence
leak back out in bankruptcy proceedings and political upheaval.
The event horizon of bad faith is the
exact point where the credulous folk of this modern age, from high to
low, discover that their central banks only pretend to be regulating
agencies, that they ride a juggernaut of which nobody is really in control. The illusion of control has been the governing myth since the Lehman moment in 2008. We needed desperately to believe that the authorities had our backs. They don’t even have their own fronts.
Is the money world at that threshold right now? One
thing seems clear: nobody is able to turn back the plummeting
currencies. They go where they will and their failures must be
infectious as the greater engine of world trade seizes up. Who will
write the letters of credit that make international commerce possible?
Who will trust whom? When do people seriously start to starve and reach
for the pitchforks? When does the action move from Kiev to London, New
York, Frankfurt, and Paris?
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