PDA

View Full Version : 12 Warning Signs of U.S. Hyperinflation.



Ponce
27th March 2011, 10:05 AM
12 Warning Signs of U.S. Hyperinflation.

One of the most frequently asked questions we receive at the National Inflation Association (NIA) is what warning signs will there be when hyperinflation is imminent. In our opinion, the majority of the warning signs that hyperinflation is imminent are already here today, but most Americans are failing to properly recognize them. NIA believes that there is a serious risk of hyperinflation breaking out as soon as the second half of this calendar year and that hyperinflation is almost guaranteed to occur by the end of this decade.

In our estimation, the most likely time frame for a full-fledged outbreak of hyperinflation is between the years 2013 and 2015. Americans who wait until 2013 to prepare, will most likely see the majority of their purchasing power wiped out. It is essential that all Americans begin preparing for hyperinflation immediately.

Here are NIA's top 12 warning signs that hyperinflation is about to occur:

1) The Federal Reserve is Buying 70% of U.S. Treasuries. The Federal Reserve has been buying 70% of all new U.S. treasury debt. Up until this year, the U.S. has been successful at exporting most of its inflation to the rest of the world, which is hoarding huge amounts of U.S. dollar reserves due to the U.S. dollar's status as the world's reserve currency. In recent months, foreign central bank purchases of U.S. treasuries have declined from 50% down to 30%, and Federal Reserve purchases have increased from 10% up to 70%. This means U.S. government deficit spending is now directly leading to U.S. inflation that will destroy the standard of living for all Americans.

2) The Private Sector Has Stopped Purchasing U.S. Treasuries. The U.S. private sector was previously a buyer of 30% of U.S. government bonds sold. Today, the U.S. private sector has stopped buying U.S. treasuries and is dumping government debt. The Pimco Total Return Fund was recently the single largest private sector owner of U.S. government bonds, but has just reduced its U.S. treasury holdings down to zero. Although during the financial panic of 2008, investors purchased government bonds as a safe haven, during all future panics we believe precious metals will be the new safe haven.

3) China Moving Away from U.S. Dollar as Reserve Currency. The U.S. dollar became the world's reserve currency because it was backed by gold and the U.S. had the world's largest manufacturing base. Today, the U.S. dollar is no longer backed by gold and China has the world's largest manufacturing base. There is no reason for the world to continue to transact products and commodities in U.S. dollars, when most of everything the world consumes is now produced in China. China has been taking steps to position the yuan to be the world's new reserve currency.

The People's Bank of China stated earlier this month, in a story that went largely unreported by the mainstream media, that it would respond to overseas demand for the yuan to be used as a reserve currency and allow the yuan to flow back into China more easily. China hopes to allow all exporters and importers to settle their cross border transactions in yuan by the end of 2011, as part of their plan to increase the yuan's international role. NIA believes if China really wants to become the world's next superpower and see to it that the U.S. simultaneously becomes the world's next Zimbabwe, all China needs to do is use their $1.15 trillion in U.S. dollar reserves to accumulate gold and use that gold to back the yuan.

4) Japan to Begin Dumping U.S. Treasuries. Japan is the second largest holder of U.S. treasury securities with $885.9 billion in U.S. dollar reserves. Although China has reduced their U.S. treasury holdings for three straight months, Japan has increased their U.S. treasury holdings seven months in a row. Japan is the country that has been the most consistent at buying our debt for the past year, but that is about the change. Japan is likely going to have to spend $300 billion over the next year to rebuild parts of their country that were destroyed by the recent earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster, and NIA believes their U.S. dollar reserves will be the most likely source of this funding. This will come at the worst possible time for the U.S., which needs Japan to increase their purchases of U.S. treasuries in order to fund our record budget deficits.

5) The Fed Funds Rate Remains Near Zero. The Federal Reserve has held the Fed Funds Rate at 0.00-0.25% since December 16th, 2008, a period of over 27 months. This is unprecedented and NIA believes the world is now flooded with excess liquidity of U.S. dollars.

When the nuclear reactors in Japan began overheating two weeks ago after their cooling systems failed due to a lack of electricity, TEPCO was forced to open relief valves to release radioactive steam into the air in order to avoid an explosion. The U.S. stock market is currently acting as a relief valve for all of the excess liquidity of U.S. dollars. The U.S. economy for all intents and purposes should currently be in a massive and extremely steep recession, but because of the Fed's money printing, stock prices are rising because people don't know what else to do with their dollars.

NIA believes gold, and especially silver, are much better hedges against inflation than U.S. equities, which is why for the past couple of years we have been predicting large declines in both the Dow/Gold and Gold/Silver ratios. These two ratios have been in free fall exactly like NIA projected.

The Dow/Gold ratio is the single most important chart all investors need to closely follow, but way too few actually do. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) itself is meaningless because it averages together the dollar based movements of 30 U.S. stocks. With just the DJIA, it is impossible to determine whether stocks are rising due to improving fundamentals and real growing investor demand, or if prices are rising simply because the money supply is expanding.

The Dow/Gold ratio illustrates the cyclical nature of the battle between paper assets like stocks and real hard assets like gold. The Dow/Gold ratio trends upward when an economy sees real economic growth and begins to trend downward when the growth phase ends and everybody becomes concerned about preserving wealth. With interest rates at 0%, the U.S. economy is on life support and wealth preservation is the focus of most investors. NIA believes the Dow/Gold ratio will decline to 1 before the hyperinflationary crisis is over and until the Dow/Gold ratio does decline to 1, investors should keep buying precious metals.

6) Year-Over-Year CPI Growth Has Increased 92% in Three Months. In November of 2010, the Bureau of Labor and Statistics (BLS)'s consumer price index (CPI) grew by 1.1% over November of 2009. In February of 2011, the BLS's CPI grew by 2.11% over February of 2010, above the Fed's informal inflation target of 1.5% to 2%. An increase in year-over-year CPI growth from 1.1% in November of last year to 2.11% in February of this year means that the CPI's growth rate increased by approximately 92% over a period of just three months. Imagine if the year-over-year CPI growth rate continues to increase by 92% every three months. In 9 to 12 months from now we could be looking at a price inflation rate of over 15%. Even if the BLS manages to artificially hold the CPI down around 5% or 6%, NIA believes the real rate of price inflation will still rise into the double-digits within the next year.

7) Mainstream Media Denying Fed's Target Passed. You would think that year-over-year CPI growth rising from 1.1% to 2.11% over a period of three months for an increase of 92% would generate a lot of media attention, especially considering that it has now surpassed the Fed's informal inflation target of 1.5% to 2%. Instead of acknowledging that inflation is beginning to spiral out of control and encouraging Americans to prepare for hyperinflation like NIA has been doing for years, the media decided to conveniently change the way it defines the Fed's informal target.

The media is now claiming that the Fed's informal inflation target of 1.5% to 2% is based off of year-over-year changes in the BLS's core-CPI figures. Core-CPI, as most of you already know, is a meaningless number that excludes food and energy prices. Its sole purpose is to be used to mislead the public in situations like this. We guarantee that if core-CPI had just surpassed 2% and the normal CPI was still below 2%, the media would be focusing on the normal CPI number, claiming that it remains below the Fed's target and therefore inflation is low and not a problem.

The fact of the matter is, food and energy are the two most important things Americans need to live and survive. If the BLS was going to exclude something from the CPI, you would think they would exclude goods that Americans don't consume on a daily basis. The BLS claims food and energy prices are excluded because they are most volatile. However, by excluding food and energy, core-CPI numbers are primarily driven by rents. Considering that we just came out of the largest Real Estate bubble in world history, there is a glut of homes available to rent on the market. NIA has been saying for years that being a landlord will be the worst business to be in during hyperinflation, because it will be impossible for landlords to increase rents at the same rate as overall price inflation. Food and energy prices will always increase at a much faster rate than rents.

8) Record U.S. Budget Deficit in February of $222.5 Billion. The U.S. government just reported a record budget deficit for the month of February of $222.5 billion. February's budget deficit was more than the entire fiscal year of 2007. In fact, February's deficit on an annualized basis was $2.67 trillion. NIA believes this is just a preview of future annual budget deficits, and we will see annual budget deficits surpass $2.67 trillion within the next several years.

9) High Budget Deficit as Percentage of Expenditures. The projected U.S. budget deficit for fiscal year 2011 of $1.645 trillion is 43% of total projected government expenditures in 2011 of $3.819 trillion. That is almost exactly the same level of Brazil's budget deficit as a percentage of expenditures right before they experienced hyperinflation in 1993 and it is higher than Bolivia's budget deficit as a percentage of expenditures right before they experienced hyperinflation in 1985. The only way a country can survive with such a large deficit as a percentage of expenditures and not have hyperinflation, is if foreigners are lending enough money to pay for the bulk of their deficit spending. Hyperinflation broke out in Brazil and Bolivia when foreigners stopped lending and central banks began monetizing the bulk of their deficit spending, and that is exactly what is taking place today in the U.S.

10) Obama Lies About Foreign Policy. President Obama campaigned as an anti-war President who would get our troops out of Iraq. NIA believes that many Libertarian voters actually voted for Obama in 2008 over John McCain because they felt Obama was more likely to end our wars that are adding greatly to our budget deficits and making the U.S. a lot less safe as a result. Obama may have reduced troop levels in Iraq, but he increased troops levels in Afghanistan, and is now sending troops into Libya for no reason.

The U.S. is now beginning to occupy Libya, when Libya didn't do anything to the U.S. and they are no threat to the U.S. Obama has increased our overall overseas troop levels since becoming President and the U.S. is now spending $1 trillion annually on military expenses, which includes the costs to maintain over 700 military bases in 135 countries around the world. There is no way that we can continue on with our overseas military presence without seeing hyperinflation.

11) Obama Changes Definition of Balanced Budget. In the White House's budget projections for the next 10 years, they don't project that the U.S. will ever come close to achieving a real balanced budget. In fact, after projecting declining budget deficits up until the year 2015 (NIA believes we are unlikely to see any major dip in our budget deficits due to rising interest payments on our national debt), the White House projects our budget deficits to begin increasing again up until the year 2021. Obama recently signed an executive order to create the "National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform", with a mission to "propose recommendations designed to balance the budget, excluding interest payments on the debt, by 2015". Obama is redefining a balanced budget to exclude interest payments on our national debt, because he knows interest payments are about to explode and it will be impossible to trul y balance the budget.

12) U.S. Faces Largest Ever Interest Payment Increases. With U.S. inflation beginning to spiral out of control, NIA believes it is 100% guaranteed that we will soon see a large spike in long-term bond yields. Not only that, but within the next couple of years, NIA believes the Federal Reserve will be forced to raise the Fed Funds Rate in a last-ditch effort to prevent hyperinflation. When both short and long-term interest rates start to rise, so will the interest payments on our national debt. With the public portion of our national debt now exceeding $10 trillion, we could see interest payments on our debt reach $500 billion within the next year or two, and over $1 trillion somewhere around mid-decade. When interest payments reach $1 trillion, they will likely be around 30% to 40% of government tax receipts, up from interest payments being only 9% of tax receipts today. No country has ever seen interest payments on their debt reach 40% of tax receipts without hyperinflation occurring in the years to come.

It is important to spread the word about NIA to as many people as possible, as quickly as possible, if you want America to survive hyperinflation. Please tell everybody you know to become members of NIA for free immediately at: http://inflation.us

cthulu
27th March 2011, 10:21 AM
yes, because america is the only country that can buy stuff. :lol:

etc
27th March 2011, 11:17 AM
That is all well and good, but until wages go up (significantly), there will be no hyperinflation.



This is false, what do wages have to do with inflation or hyperinflation? Nothing. You can be out of work in a hyperinflationary environment. This is the worst combination possible: Hyperinflation and no work. You don't get even the worthless hyperinflated FRNs.

Ponce
27th March 2011, 11:20 AM
I will say only this........don't have a garage sale because what you have today will be all that you will have in the future and will be "stuff" that you will be able to trade with for the things that you will really need.

Neuro
27th March 2011, 11:27 AM
That is all well and good, but until wages go up (significantly), there will be no hyperinflation.

Stagflation will continue.
Hyperinflation has never been driven by increase in wages, in any country. Workers will find that salaries will be the last thing that increase. It is trust in the currency, or rather the lack of it that determines hyperinflation. The American worker has for decades been able to consume way more than he/she has produced, hyperinflation will change that.

Carl
27th March 2011, 01:39 PM
Hyperinflation is a monetary event, not a pricing event.

People forget what their "money" is, well I got news for you, it ain't FRNs.

Our economy runs on a bank's promise to pay FRNs or "book keeping money" or "credit dollars", backed by asset values (the value of the FRN being paramount to credit's continued existence).

In fact, nearly every "dollar" claimed to be held overseas is "book keeping money" or "credit dollars", all promises to pay, just like what's in your bank account.

So, you believe the trade in "book keeping money", or "credit dollars", or "promises to pay FRNs", is going to reach hyperinflationary levels?

Talk about wishful thinking..................

.

Neuro
27th March 2011, 02:04 PM
Hyperinflation is a monetary event, not a pricing event.
You got it nearly right, it is a mass psychological event, based on poor prolonged monetary and economic policy. :)

Carl
27th March 2011, 02:15 PM
Hyperinflation is a monetary event, not a pricing event.
You got it nearly right, it is a mass psychological event, based on poor prolonged monetary and economic policy. :)
No, I got it all right. It becomes a mass psychological event, as with all speculative manias, only if the money is there to sustain it.


.

Ponce
27th March 2011, 02:21 PM
Unless people get paid more they won't be able to pay more.......so that someone will get stuck with all goodies they were hoping to get rich with........even gasoline can go so high before almost no one will be able to afford it.

I already made a deal with my gas station owner to trade silver for gas any tme that I wanted to at the current silver price and with the gasoline at .10 below selling price.

Neuro
27th March 2011, 02:29 PM
Hyperinflation is a monetary event, not a pricing event.
You got it nearly right, it is a mass psychological event, based on poor prolonged monetary and economic policy. :)
No, I got it all right. It becomes a mass psychological event, as with all speculative manias, only if the money is there to sustain it.
Oh I see but you forgot to mention that little tidbit? Anyway, how long do you think US government will exist, if electronic transactions would stop? Don't you think they would permit some runaway inflation if the alternative is closing of office?

Bigjon
27th March 2011, 03:55 PM
Hyperinflation is a monetary event, not a pricing event.
You got it nearly right, it is a mass psychological event, based on poor prolonged monetary and economic policy. :)
No, I got it all right. It becomes a mass psychological event, as with all speculative manias, only if the money is there to sustain it.


.


There is no lack of money in our system and FRN's are only a small part of the monetary system.

http://www.artisticchecks.com/Artistic_Assets/images/product/238PCHK_c.jpg

There will be all of these that you want to fuel hyperinflation.

Carl
29th March 2011, 07:53 AM
Hyperinflation is a monetary event, not a pricing event.
You got it nearly right, it is a mass psychological event, based on poor prolonged monetary and economic policy. :)
No, I got it all right. It becomes a mass psychological event, as with all speculative manias, only if the money is there to sustain it.
Oh I see but you forgot to mention that little tidbit? Anyway, how long do you think US government will exist, if electronic transactions would stop? Don't you think they would permit some runaway inflation if the alternative is closing of office?
US government will continue regardless. We'll continue to have inflation for as long as electronic digits (credit dollars) remain viable as a medium of exchange and that is dependant upon asset values, to include the value of the FRN dollar, which the continued viability of the banking industry as well as Wall Street are totally dependant upon for their continued existence and that, the government has absolutely no control over. When people finally decide to cash out, they aren’t going to be interested in collecting digits in failing banks, they’re going to want the paper and that’s the point where hyperinflation usually kicks in. But because there isn’t enough paper to cover the digits already owed, the entire system will collapse. Printing FRNs after the fact will accomplish about the same as was accomplished after the credit currency system collapsed in 1929 only we no longer possess the capability to regenerate.

mick silver
29th March 2011, 07:56 AM
but carl why would they want paper ? most will know at that point that paper dead also

Neuro
29th March 2011, 08:08 AM
but carl why would they want paper ? most will know at that point that paper dead also
Indeed, increasing number of people have started realizing the realities of inflation in shrinking packages, increasing prices, gold gaining an average of 20% annually for the last decade, and it has started accelerating. Sure people will want to get out, but not out of their bank account, but out of Dollars altogether... The Fed made sure that the payment system wouldn't collapse, by feeding it's Favoured banks ENDLESS credit. Instead the medium of exchange, the Dollar, will collapse.

Carl
29th March 2011, 08:08 AM
Hyperinflation is a monetary event, not a pricing event.
You got it nearly right, it is a mass psychological event, based on poor prolonged monetary and economic policy. :)
No, I got it all right. It becomes a mass psychological event, as with all speculative manias, only if the money is there to sustain it.


.


There is no lack of money in our system and FRN's are only a small part of the monetary system.

http://www.artisticchecks.com/Artistic_Assets/images/product/238PCHK_c.jpg

There will be all of these that you want to fuel hyperinflation.


Most businesses don't accept check based I.O.U.s now, what makes you believe they'll accept them in a crisis?

Banks have about $7 Trillion in deposits they can't cover with paper and you expect businesses to accept checks written on those empty accounts?

Carl
29th March 2011, 08:18 AM
but carl why would they want paper ? most will know at that point that paper dead also
It won't be about "wanting paper" so much, it will be about getting what is yours and what you are owed and there aren't enough FRNs in existence to cover any of it. Once that realization sets in, Katy bar the doors because all hell is going to break loose.

Carl
29th March 2011, 09:06 AM
but carl why would they want paper ? most will know at that point that paper dead also
Indeed, increasing number of people have started realizing the realities of inflation in shrinking packages, increasing prices, gold gaining an average of 20% annually for the last decade, and it has started accelerating. Sure people will want to get out, but not out of their bank account, but out of Dollars altogether... The Fed made sure that the payment system wouldn't collapse, by feeding it's Favoured banks ENDLESS credit. Instead the medium of exchange, the Dollar, will collapse.


Attention span lacking........


People forget what their "money" is, well I got news for you, it ain't FRNs.

Our economy runs on a bank's promise to pay FRNs or "book keeping money" or "credit dollars", backed by asset values (the value of the FRN being paramount to credit's continued existence).

In fact, nearly every "dollar" claimed to be held overseas is "book keeping money" or "credit dollars", all promises to pay, just like what's in your bank account.....

Ponce
29th March 2011, 10:10 AM
Got a letter from my bank yesterday telling me that in two months they will be making some great changes and that they will tell me about it little by little.......as far as I can see nothing is broken so I think that is time to change banks..............."Every time that they use the words...for your convenience...it usually means...we just found a new way to screw you".

First post of the day...............good morning to one and all.

Neuro
29th March 2011, 11:06 AM
but carl why would they want paper ? most will know at that point that paper dead also
Indeed, increasing number of people have started realizing the realities of inflation in shrinking packages, increasing prices, gold gaining an average of 20% annually for the last decade, and it has started accelerating. Sure people will want to get out, but not out of their bank account, but out of Dollars altogether... The Fed made sure that the payment system wouldn't collapse, by feeding it's Favoured banks ENDLESS credit. Instead the medium of exchange, the Dollar, will collapse.


Attention span lacking........


People forget what their "money" is, well I got news for you, it ain't FRNs.

Our economy runs on a bank's promise to pay FRNs or "book keeping money" or "credit dollars", backed by asset values (the value of the FRN being paramount to credit's continued existence).

In fact, nearly every "dollar" claimed to be held overseas is "book keeping money" or "credit dollars", all promises to pay, just like what's in your bank account.....

You are confused Carl. I didn't refer to FRN's. I referred to the entire credit system. Yes, sure they could collapse that, and with that all their power, including government... Guess why they don't do that?

Instead they give their owner banks unlimited credit. They make Trillions in currency swaps between friendly central banks, so that they can buy each others governments bonds, liquidity is not a problem, neither is paper shortage. In fact it has never been so easy to inflate, as it is today, you don't even has to put zero's on paper...

Carl
29th March 2011, 11:45 AM
You are confused Carl. I didn't refer to FRN's. I referred to the entire credit system. Yes, sure they could collapse that, and with that all their power, including government... Guess why they don't do that?

Instead they give their owner banks unlimited credit. They make Trillions in currency swaps between friendly central banks, so that they can buy each others governments bonds, liquidity is not a problem, neither is paper shortage. In fact it has never been so easy to inflate, as it is today, you don't even has to put zero's on paper...



Sure people will want to get out, but not out of their bank account, but out of Dollars altogether... The Fed made sure that the payment system wouldn't collapse, by feeding it's Favoured banks ENDLESS credit. Instead the medium of exchange, the Dollar, will collapse. OK, if you weren't talking about FRNs then what is that "dollar" you're referring to?

It appears that you're contradicting yourself. First you say the "dollar" will collapse; now you're saying "they" can inflate to infinity because they're all in cahoots together. Which is it?

Bigjon
29th March 2011, 06:43 PM
Most businesses don't accept check based I.O.U.s now, what makes you believe they'll accept them in a crisis?

Banks have about $7 Trillion in deposits they can't cover with paper and you expect businesses to accept checks written on those empty accounts?


It seems you want it both ways, banks have 7 trillion in deposits and they are empty accounts. === doesn't compute.

Earth to Carl

YOU are Confused

Ponce
29th March 2011, 06:47 PM
Hyperinflation will happen when all that we have now at the stores is gone and new stuff has to be sent for, they will send it......but at a hell of a higher price.........is not what we will have but rather what we will pay.

Trinity
29th March 2011, 07:01 PM
Hyperinflation is a monetary event, not a pricing event.

People forget what their "money" is, well I got news for you, it ain't FRNs.

Our economy runs on a bank's promise to pay FRNs or "book keeping money" or "credit dollars", backed by asset values (the value of the FRN being paramount to credit's continued existence).

In fact, nearly every "dollar" claimed to be held overseas is "book keeping money" or "credit dollars", all promises to pay, just like what's in your bank account.

So, you believe the trade in "book keeping money", or "credit dollars", or "promises to pay FRNs", is going to reach hyperinflationary levels?

Talk about wishful thinking..................

.



What a Jackass.

Bigjon
29th March 2011, 07:45 PM
OK, Carl, what I think you are trying to say is banks have 7 trillion in liabilities called deposits and in their other ledger, the asset ledger, they have loans most of which have gone sour. The asset side of the banks are running on empty, which I would agree with EXCEPT for an entity called the Fed. The Fed has said to their good ( read Jewish) banks, we are here for you and will take all your troubled assets and put them on our book at full value and give you all the credit you need to continue to run over the goyim, while we load the goy with more debt on the public ledger.

You seem to forget the Jews in this equation, who are intent on destroying the Goy, by debasing his money into worthlessness.

Carl
30th March 2011, 07:46 AM
What a Jackass.

I don't disagree.....

Carl
30th March 2011, 07:56 AM
OK, Carl, what I think you are trying to say is banks have 7 trillion in liabilities called deposits and in their other ledger, the asset ledger, they have loans most of which have gone sour. The asset side of the banks are running on empty, which I would agree with EXCEPT for an entity called the Fed. The Fed has said to their good ( read Jewish) banks, we are here for you and will take all your troubled assets and put them on our book at full value and give you all the credit you need to continue to run over the goyim, while we load the goy with more debt on the public ledger.

You seem to forget the Jews in this equation, who are intent on destroying the Goy, by debasing his money into worthlessness.

Blah, blah, blah.......

You evoke jew as if jew is some kind of omnipotent being.

I couldn't give a f--k less about your childish fear of the jew, they are irrelevant to the math involved or the function of markets that do what they are going to do regardless of who deems themselves in charge.

Horn
30th March 2011, 08:08 AM
I will say only this........don't have a garage sale because what you have today will be all that you will have in the future and will be "stuff" that you will be able to trade with for the things that you will really need.


That reminds me, this month is the U.S. Embassy's garage sale.

Bigjon
30th March 2011, 08:12 AM
OK, Carl, what I think you are trying to say is banks have 7 trillion in liabilities called deposits and in their other ledger, the asset ledger, they have loans most of which have gone sour. The asset side of the banks are running on empty, which I would agree with EXCEPT for an entity called the Fed. The Fed has said to their good ( read Jewish) banks, we are here for you and will take all your troubled assets and put them on our book at full value and give you all the credit you need to continue to run over the goyim, while we load the goy with more debt on the public ledger.

You seem to forget the Jews in this equation, who are intent on destroying the Goy, by debasing his money into worthlessness.

Blah, blah, blah.......

You evoke jew as if jew is some kind of omnipotent being.

I couldn't give a f--k less about your childish fear of the jew, they are irrelevant to the math involved or the function of markets that do what they are going to do regardless of who deems themselves in charge.


Yep, what a jackass you are.

Neuro
30th March 2011, 09:58 AM
You are confused Carl. I didn't refer to FRN's. I referred to the entire credit system. Yes, sure they could collapse that, and with that all their power, including government... Guess why they don't do that?

Instead they give their owner banks unlimited credit. They make Trillions in currency swaps between friendly central banks, so that they can buy each others governments bonds, liquidity is not a problem, neither is paper shortage. In fact it has never been so easy to inflate, as it is today, you don't even has to put zero's on paper...



Sure people will want to get out, but not out of their bank account, but out of Dollars altogether... The Fed made sure that the payment system wouldn't collapse, by feeding it's Favoured banks ENDLESS credit. Instead the medium of exchange, the Dollar, will collapse. OK, if you weren't talking about FRNs then what is that "dollar" you're referring to?

It appears that you're contradicting yourself. First you say the "dollar" will collapse; now you're saying "they" can inflate to infinity because they're all in cahoots together. Which is it?
No contradiction at all the value of the Dollar will collapse because it is inflated to infinity. Inferred in the dollar term is what is kept in bankaccounts, paper FRN's, Debt instruments. I thought you were intelligent Carl, but it seems like you are only up to obfuscation.

Horn
30th March 2011, 11:54 AM
http://thefrontlines.com/wp-content/uploads/FAO_food-price-index_1990-2011.png

http://www.paulchefurka.ca/Oil_Food.png

Trinity
30th March 2011, 05:10 PM
OK, Carl, what I think you are trying to say is banks have 7 trillion in liabilities called deposits and in their other ledger, the asset ledger, they have loans most of which have gone sour. The asset side of the banks are running on empty, which I would agree with EXCEPT for an entity called the Fed. The Fed has said to their good ( read Jewish) banks, we are here for you and will take all your troubled assets and put them on our book at full value and give you all the credit you need to continue to run over the goyim, while we load the goy with more debt on the public ledger.

You seem to forget the Jews in this equation, who are intent on destroying the Goy, by debasing his money into worthlessness.

Blah, blah, blah.......

You evoke jew as if jew is some kind of omnipotent being.

I couldn't give a f--k less about your childish fear of the jew, they are irrelevant to the math involved or the function of markets that do what they are going to do regardless of who deems themselves in charge.


Yep, what a jackass you are.

I told you so. A stupid jackass at that.