Is the bond bubble about to burst?
Dominant Social Theme: Problems... they just never seem to end! Free-Market Analysis: Thanks to Evans-Pritchard who certainly has hard-money sympathies, we learn of another shoe yet to drop. (Well, we learn of it again, anyway.) First housing, then stocks, now bonds. Of course, to listen to the constant din of post mortems, nothing really went wrong recently but regulation. Had the American Democrat/Republicans not done as they did, then everything would have been OK. Thus, out of the woodwork have emerged all sorts of prescient seers, beginning with the Bush administration which supposedly warned (certain apologists maintain) that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were being set up to fail. The disinformation is breath-taking. Somehow everyone knew that bad regulation was driving the American financial system into bankruptcy and no one was quite able to do anything about it. Geez, a $3 trillion federal budget, a two front war and US legislative and administration helplessness yet reigned supreme. You wonder why someone didn't reserve a block of TV time if the situation was so dire. Grant all of this revisionist history and questions loom larger than ever. If it was only a segment of American mortgages, then why have stock markets collapsed around the world? And if the sovereign bond market now collapses, is this too the victim of overpriced shelter? One looks in vain for a more modest and sincere explanation, something that deals with the bottom-line fundamental issue - which is the central banks and their endless, destructive hyping of the money supply, as we will continue to write. Yes, indeed, the latest lnflationary supercycle may go all the way back to 1980. We wonder if it doesn't stretch back to 1945. In any event, the idea that so much could go wrong as a result of mispriced housing is stunning indeed. And deserves a more comprehensive explanation. Or at least a little straight talk, somehow, somewhere. Conclusion: When the bond bubble breaks, as some are now speculating, how much of the Western financial system will be left standing? And what will the result be, ultimately? We can start to see the irregular outlines emerging, and perhaps we will know more in February. But we are relatively certain of a couple of things. Somehow (coincidence no doubt) big-power military confrontations may continue to pick up over the course of this year. And second we would be most surprised if a big push isn't made to dramatically increase financial regulation both locally and globally. This may include a radically revamped Western currency as well. Perhaps an Americas version of the euro will be floated. Call it the Amero - how's that for a name (have we seen it before)? And, finally, only non-mainstream publications will agitate for a return to some sort of honest money. A market-based gold or silver standard certainly makes sense to us, and plenty of others, too, none of whom apparently write for either the New York or London Times. In 2009, common sense seems about as scarce as a business loan. |
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