Question Everything! |
What Could Go Wrong? Plenty
By Charles Hugh Smith
October 07, 2020 "Information Clearing House" The conventional assumptions are remarkably rosy: the "recovery" is V-shaped in all the ways that count (i.e. the top 10% are once again doing well), the Federal Reserve will never let stocks go down or interest rates rise ever again (never never ever!), and the Federal government will borrow and blow endless trillions in stimulus ($2 trillion every six months seems about right, but since there's no limit, we'll double it if that's needed to bail out every zombie corporation, bloated bureaucracy, skim and scam in the land).Quite a lot of things can go wrong, especially if the mainstream's rose-tinted sunglasses induce a delusional confidence in fantasy.
What could go wrong? Gordon Long and I considered the question and came up with: quite a lot of things can go wrong, especially if the mainstream's rose-tinted sunglasses induce a delusional confidence in fantasy.
1. A key part of the happy story is the US dollar (USD) will continue its decline, which is wunnerful for stocks and exporters: dollar down, stocks up, yea!
The official explanation for this free-fall is the USD will weaken as the Fed eases / prints. The mainstream thinking is that Japan and the Euro bloc are farther along in their socialization of debt (i.e. their central banks are monetizing fiscal deficits) and so the US will have to play catch-up, weakening the USD.
What could go wrong?
US-centric analysts forget the USD is the primary reserve currency and due to Triffin's Paradox, it doesn't just serve the US economy, it serves the global economy. You will never hear a Fed representative admit this publicly, because the PR / fantasy is that the Fed only cares about the American public (awww, gosh-darn it, aren't they sweet?) and keeping inflation low and employment high.
In reality, the Fed's core interests are enriching and protecting private banking globally, and maintaining U.S. global hegemony via a strong dollar. Recall that geopolitically, no empire ever got stronger by weakening its currency.
The Fed never addresses the USD's global role and so conventional pundits ignore geopolitical forces: capital flows, the global need for dollars to service debt denominated in USD and reserves, etc.
Also recall that China pegs its currency to the US dollar, not the other way around. That alone tells you the role each currency plays in the global economy.
For the USD to weaken, the yen and the euro would need to significantly strengthen. But there's a problem with this thesis.
Rather than being stronger, Japan and the EU are weaker than the US. Credit impulse is essentially zero in both Japan and the EU, both their banking sectors are insolvent, their economies have been stagnant for years (EU) or decades (Japan) and their demographic declines are accelerating. Both are export-dependent, an Achilles Heel as world trade / globalization enters a secular decline that could easily gather momentum.
The US needs capital flows into the US economy, so negative rates are a non-starter. Non-US borrowers have USD denominated debts of around $3 trillion, so demand for USD is not optional, it is a function of credit, commerce and reserves.
Simply put, the US is not about to sacrifice
the euro-dollar / petro-dollar and its
commercial hegemony just to satisfy domestic
pleading for negative rates. Furthermore, Japan
and Europe have proven that negative rates only
weaken the private banking sector--the exact
opposite of the Fed's Prime Directive.
If the USD strengthens substantially, which it
tends to do in crises, that will be very
negative for equities. (No, no, no, the Fed has
our backs! The Fed will never let my precious
portfolio drop a single dollar!)
So sorry, but the Fed's Prime Directives are not
related to your portfolio at all. The Fed's PR
is all about domestic stocks, implicitly or
explicitly, but when push comes to shove, your
portfolio will be sacrificed without any
hesitation to protect private banking and USD
hegemony. The empire eats first, and only the
tragically misguided believe US stocks are all
that matters to the Fed.
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2. The Fed's easing, QE, etc. will spark a
new round of credit expansion.
What could go wrong?
Credit expansion is on life support.
There are very few investment opportunities,
which is one reason why corporations have poured
earnings into stock buybacks. The Fed can't
create low-risk, high-profit investment
opportunities, not can it make poor credit risks
into good credit risks.
Banks can't afford to lend to insolvent
households, zombie corporations or small
businesses. The credit expansion impulse is
impaired by the overhang of bad debt, excessive
leverage, zombie corporations, etc. and there's
nothing the Fed can do about it. The Fed is
pushing on a string.
Furthermore, the Fed is now encountering
political resistance to its "enrich the wealthy
and bail out zombie corporations" monetary
policies. Its room to bail out the
super-wealthy is increasingly constrained
politically. The Fed is signaling that its focus
is shifting from free money for financiers
to funneling new money directly to households.
3. The federal government will borrow and
spend trillions, sparking renewed growth.
What could go wrong?
As noted, banks cannot lend to poor credit
risks, nor can they force those who don't want
to borrow more to take on new loans. Federal
spending doesn't magically create good credit
risks or well-collateralized creditors.
Small businesses cannot lower their fixed costs
enough to survive, and many of these costs such
as taxes and fees will be rising as cash-starved
local governments seek more revenues.
The free money will flow not into productive
investments but into demand for goods and
services which are constrained by declines in
trade, high fixed production costs, retirement
of key workers, etc.
Inflation will leap, surprising everyone who
believed the "low inflation forever" story. As
inflation soars, the purchasing power of the
federal spending will plummet accordingly.
As UBI, Fed helicopter money, etc. becomes
institutionalized, the working poor will exit
low-paying, high-stress jobs, creating labor
shortages. Small business won't be able to pay
higher wages and survive, and low-margin
corporations will be squeezed as well.
Charles Hugh Smith is a contributing editor to PeakProsperity.com and the proprietor of the popular blog OfTwoMinds.com. He is the author of numerous books, including Why Everything Is Falling Apart: An Unconventional Guide To Investing In Troubled Times. - "Source" -
His new book is available! A Hacker's Teleology: Sharing the Wealth of Our Shrinking Planet 20% and 15% discounts end September 30 (Kindle $7, print $17) - Read excerpts of the book for free (PDF). - The Story Behind the Book and the Introduction. - "Source" -