An
Avalanche of Claptrap
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Illusions
pile up
Theyre sure to come down sooner or later
Like snow at
high altitudes, the central banks new money is piling up.
As reported last week, all the worlds major central banks
have turned on their snow machines. The US Federal Reserve has been
authorized to print $1.75 trillion worth of new money
in order to buy Treasury bonds. The Bank of England has its own
program worth 75 billion pounds, so far. Even Switzerland
has been printing money so much that its money supply, as
measured by M2, is growing at 30% per year. And two weeks ago, the
European Central Bank announced that it too would begin creating
money in order to buy corporate bonds.
Quantitative
Easing it is called. As a refresher for readers with real
lives and better things to do, QE is how central banks describe
what is essentially an act of counterfeiting. They buy bonds with
money created electronically specifically for that
purpose. Abracadabra money comes into being.
The feds aim
to provide liquidity for the cities and farms. But so far, only
a trickle is coming down. Instead, chilly weather in the upper reaches
of the financial sector holds it frozen in place. Hundreds of billions
comes down from central banks, but there it stays
waiting for
spring.
Today, here
on the back page, we ask ourselves a simple question: what will
happen to it?
The feds
counterfeit money does such a good imitation of the real thing,
you cant tell them apart. But the problem with all money is
that it is as fickle and unreliable as a bad girlfriend. One minute
she goes along with the flow. The next minute she turns silly and
bubbly. And then, she gives you the cold shoulder.
According to
theory, an increase in the supply of something leads directly to
a decrease in the price of it
That is, if other things remain
constant. Despite the credit crunch, the banking freeze-up, and
the economic recession, the money supply in the US as measured by
M1 is actually rising at 14% per year. Yet consumer prices are not
keeping pace. The latest report shows them actually going down slightly
over the last 60 days.
Turns out,
causing inflation is not as easy as it looked; controlling it probably
will be even harder. Its not enough to manage the quantity
of money; you also need to be able to control its behavior. Money
can be a solid, a liquid, or a gas depending upon the temperature
of the economy. At normal temperatures, money runs freely, watering
the economy. And when things really get hot, it vaporizes, creating
gaseous bubbles such as those of the late Bubble Period. But when
the temperature falls, money shivers in wallets and bank accounts
reluctant to go out into the cold. Economists refer to the
velocity of money to describe the magnifying effects
of motion. When the same dollar bill appears in three different
places in the same day, it is as if the money supply had been multiplied
three-fold. In a freeze, on the other hand, it comes to a dead stop.
When the thaw
will come, we dont know. But the authorities are ready for
it. When consumer prices begin to rise, theyll stop adding
to the money supply. Then, theyll withdraw liquidity, as need
be, to keep it under control.
They know that
runaway inflation would cause problems the collapse of the
dollar
and the US Treasury bond market, for example. So, at
the first signs of inflation, they will move quickly to remove excess
liquidity from the system. How? Their emergency plan is simple enough.
Now, they are buying bonds. When their inflation targets are met,
they will begin selling them.
We thought
the Bubble Epoch was the peak in claptrap and illusions. But we
were only in the foothills. The feds now pretend to bail out the
economy by giving money to companies that pretend to be concerned,
run by people who pretend to know what they are doing. And when
they run short of money, they create more of it, pretend it is real
and
pretend they can tell it what to do.
What
is likely is that money will have a mind of its own. First, the
markets will react
and the authorities will not. They will
remember their own critiques of Japanese and Roosevelt-era monetary
policy. In both cases, they believe central banks removed the punch
bowl too early before the party really got rolling. In both
cases, the recovery was cut off.
Then, while
they are hesitating, money will turn on them. Inflation rates will
rise further. The velocity of money will pick up. And investors
including foreign governments will become eager sellers
of government debt. Suddenly, it will be too late. In order to remove
the monetary inflation they previously added, central banks will
have to sell bonds instead of buying them, trying to re-absorb money
from the economy. The extra cash would then disappear back into
the central banks. But in order to bring inflation under control,
the biggest bond buyers in the world must turn into the worlds
biggest sellers. Bond prices, already falling as investors feared
the worst, will collapse immediately. An avalanche of dollars will
fall upon the world markets as dollar holders all over the
world become desperate to get rid of them.
We dont
know what day it will happen. But we have a good idea as to what
time of day central bankers will realize that they are doomed. About
4 AM is our guess. That is the moment when Ben Bernanke and other
central bankers begin to feel like members of the Donner Party.
That is, like imbeciles.
May
25,
2009
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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