http://www.321gold.com/editorials/taylor/taylor060704.htmlDebt in the aggregate, is rising exponentially. Income is rising in a linear fashion at best. There has been a growing inability of consumers to meet their debt obligations, even during the period when interest rates were falling. Such difficulty is seen from a dramatic rise in consumer bankruptcies from a little over 300,000 per year in 1980 to 1.7 million now. Any dramatic rise in interest rates is likely to trigger the cascading deflationary spiral envisioned in Ian Gordon's Kondratieff winter.
So, what the ruling elite have to do is hold down real rates of interest (interest rates less the rate of inflation). But they have some real problems doing that now because the bond vigilantes are coming back. Why are they back? Check the gold price. It is rising. As Lawrence Summers knew, the gold price had to be capped if real interest rates declined. Otherwise, the dollar would decline in value and the reality of America's depraved economic policy would be exposed as foreign creditors would be expected to begin reducing their holdings of dollars. And without the benefit of foreign savings, U.S. interest rates will likely begin to rise dramatically. So why don't the gold manipulators continue to cap the gold price? There are at least two reasons I can think of. First of all, if they could cap the gold price, thereby causing the dollar to remain stronger than its fundamentals warrant, that would lead the U.S. and then the global economy into a deflationary collapse. Secondly, I don't believe the manipulators can cap the gold price any longer. I say that on the basis of the extensive evidence from www.gata.org that the central banks, which according to Alan Greenspan, "stand ready to lease gold in increasing quantities, should the price begin to rise," are running out of gold.
Okay, central banks may not be running out of gold...
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"A Fan & Fred Spectacular"
John Whitney brought this Wall Street Journal editorial to my attention. The article by Susan Lee suggested that two of the most likely catalysts to topple the U.S. financial system into the Kondratieff winter are Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two extremely leveraged funds that "pretend to be housing-finance companies." Ms. Lee pointed out that 34% of these institutions have funded their long-term book with short-term (1 year) money. As interest rates rise, clearly the cost of funding rises faster than income is coming in.
One of the reasons these highly leveraged institutions have been able to take on so much debt, including short-term debt, is because investors have seen these institutions as quasi-government and thus would always be bailed out via the printing presses. The official position of the government, which has been fostered by the Bush Administration, is that the U.S. would not bail out Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and Standard & Poor's has begun rating its debt accordingly. This could start the markets to face the reality of the awful financial condition these two giants are in, which in turn may well start to cause creditors to begin liquidating their holdings in these two organizations.
How big might a defaulting Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae be? The author finished her editorial with the following. "Their combined securities-direct and guaranteed debt-are larger than the Federal government debt, and widely held. Simply put, they have just the right mix of the big and dangerous to generate one spectacular financial crisis."
Indeed, John Exter noted this very problem. Banks tend to borrow short term and lend long term because of the profit from the spread between long-term and short-term rates. Then when short-term rates begin to rise (which they tend to do more quickly than long-term rates), the liquidation process and the downward move from the least liquid assets (like small business and real estate) toward T-Bills, cash, and gold gets underway.
With money and debt growing at a rate in excess of 20%, it looks to me like the Fed is in a panic mode. Something big may be about to happen, which leads me to think it may very well be a Freddie Mac and/or Fannie Mae implosion. And with this debt spread out to such a huge number of Americans who have their money market fund or other holdings invested in these twin killers, we can only hope Susan Lee's fears, as expressed in this article, and the concerns of Federal Reserve St. Louis head, William Poole, are off base.
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