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November
14
2017

Get Ready for the "Crack-Up Boom"
Bill Bonner

For nearly two decades, the world’s central banks have labored hard, sweating to coax more digital money out of a stony and grudging economy.

More than $20 trillion did they bring forth via QE (buying stocks and bonds with newly created cash) – a mighty sum indeed.

But that is past. It is what wrought a Dow at 23,000 points… Amazon shares trading for $1,000… and a $6,000 bitcoin.

What it might wring out of the future is our subject for today.

Crack-Up Boom

The coast is clear for a blow-out spree of money printing, borrowing, spending, and debt.

The world’s four major economies are ready for it – with Shinzo� Abe re-elected in Japan… Europe still under the spell of Mario “Whatever It Takes” Draghi… Donald J. Trump ready to do the Deep State’s bidding in America… and China with little choice but to pump in more cash and credit, as now the whole economy has come to depend on it.

(We read recently that the Chinese government is attempting to prop up the real estate market by buying nearly one out of every four new apartments.)

When it comes, the fireworks will probably be like what Austrian School economist Ludwig von Mises had in mind when he described a “crack-up boom,” the sort of nervous frenzy you get before you go to pieces completely.

But not so fast. There’s something missing… another sort of delirium that will bring on the final fever.

Stimulus Theory

Stocks have been going up for the last eight years.

From whence cometh so much buying pressure?

Didn’t people already have enough stocks in 2009? Did they yearn for more?

Or did they earn so much more money… did they save so much with rising profits and wages that the real economy produced… that they ended up with trillions of dollars in unhoused money in need of a good home?

Nope.

Instead, the money came from central banks. European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi has been pumping $70 billion a month into the world’s capital markets.

Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda has been adding another $30 billion.

And China has added $8 trillion in debt (money from nowhere) over the last two years.

Of course, everyone believes in the Stimulus Theory just as fervently and unquestioningly as they once believed in the Virgin Birth or Prohibition.

And we have no doubt that, when the going gets rough, the authorities will go back to the electronic printing presses… from which they will tease out more cash and credit than the planet has ever seen.

But the going is not rough yet. And the authorities aren’t complete boneheads. They know they have pitched their tents in the monetary equivalent of Bangladesh – with only a few feet between them and sea level.

Tightening Up

Apart from Mr. Kuroda in Japan, they are eager to move to higher ground, raising rates so they can lower them, as need be, in the next crisis.

Even Mr. Draghi wants to build a dike. Bloomberg:

Starting in January, the ECB will take a step toward ending one of its more controversial tools by cutting monthly purchases of public and private debt to €30 billion ($35 billion), or half the current pace. The shift in stance comes six years into Draghi’s presidency, a new phase after his unprecedented actions to prevent the breakup of the euro area and stave off deflation.

QE will be extended again if needed, even if only to draw it to a gentle halt, and will take total holdings to at least €2.55 trillion ($2.97 trillion).

In China, the explosion in new credit over the last couple of years has been breathtaking. Total debt – public and private – expanded three times as fast as the economy.

But this expansion may have had a specific and unique cause. Colleague David Stockman (who was President Reagan’s first budget director and who knows a thing or two about government profligacy) suggests that Beijing went wild with credit growth for political reasons.

It wanted to make sure the economy was running hot for the coronation of President Xi Jinping as the “most powerful Chinese ruler since Mao.” David:

Beijing opened up the credit spigots like never before. […] [But] now that Mr. Xi has been installed as China’s most powerful ruler since Mao, its planners and bureaucracy are already back at the far less congenial underlying task. Namely, to find some way to reel in its runaway credit growth and the resulting bloated, lop-sided, investment-driven economy before it collapses on the head of the Chinese Communist Party. Accordingly, a downturn in China macro-performance is virtually baked into the cake.

In short, what is coming down the pike, therefore, is the great China Debt Retrenchment – a globally-impacting braking motion that will get underway in earnest after the 19th Party Congress. And its potential to drastically weaken the global economy and corporate profits – just as it has lifted these in the recent past – should not be underestimated.

Gigantic Bubble

Meanwhile in the U.S., the Fed says it will make hay while the sun shines by reducing its assets (and the world’s monetary footprint).

Slowly at first. But by this time next year, the bonds on the Fed’s balance sheet are supposed to be declining at a $600 billion annual rate.

So, let’s see…

Mr. Xi is tightening up.

Mr. Draghi is tightening up.

Ms. Yellen is tightening up.

They are reversing the policy that a generation of investors, businesses, and households has taken for granted.

From “buy,” they are moving to “sell”… from loose to tight… from “Party Now!” to “Party Later!”

Hmmm… what will that do to the gigantic bubble they have created? We don’t know. But we have a hunch that it will send central bankers scrambling to bring out the biggest punch bowl ever.

Regards,

Bill Bonner
Chairman, Bonner & Partners

 

 

Bill Bonner serves as Senior Vice President of Research & Development and Technical Sales at 21st Century Grain Processing Co. Mr. Bonner is responsible for R&D and key customer relationships for the oat business. He also serves as Technical Director at wheat and corn. Mr. Bonner also serves as Operating Partner – Agribusiness, Ingredients and Processing at Sequel Holdings, L.P. since 2015. He has over 30 years of food industry experience with large branded food companies. Since 1994, he served as Director of Research & Development/Technical Services at ConAgra, where he was responsible for the coated oats product. In that capacity, he was responsible for business development, technical service solutions for customer applications, quality assurance and operations improvement. Prior to ConAgra, Mr. Bonner spent eight years at Nabisco Foods as a Senior Director, responsible for hot and RTE cereal product development, margarine and fat-based emulsion technical development and dry mixes, pet snacks and cereal-based bar products. Prior to Nabisco, Mr. Bonner spent eight years at M&M/Mars and 14 years at Quaker Oats. He has Bachelor degrees in Chemistry and Mathematics from Blackburn College, and a Masters degree in Organic Chemistry from Southern Illinois University.

 

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