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View Full Version : Training Wheels Off, Crash Helmets On



mick silver
24th May 2011, 11:24 AM
http://www.321gold.com/editorials/pento/pento052311.html ... Michael Pento
Euro Pacific Capital
Posted May 23, 2011

Based on many pronouncements by economic policy makers, reams of articles by the top financial journalists and near continuous discussion on the financial news channels, it appears that the quantitative easing juggernaut that has steamed the high seas of macroeconomics for the last three years is finally pulling into port...supposedly for the last time. According to the dominant narrative, QEI and QEII helped stabilize the economy during the Great Recession and now the Federal Reserve is ready to take the training wheels off. If so, the economy may need a helmet because there is virtually no chance that it can avoid major contractions without central banking support.

It is ironic, but there is no doubt that the proposed removal of artificial stimulus would be the best thing for the country in the long term. But very few observers understand how it will inflict short term pain. So confident is the Fed that earlier this week, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard indicated that any notion of additional quantitative easing is off the table. In fact, he said the central bank may tighten policy in 2011 by allowing its balance sheet to shrink. Investors would do well to remember that Bullard was the first Fed official to support the second round of bond purchases now known as QEII. It is likely that he will make a similar reversal if the economy shows any signs of weakening in the months ahead.

Fed policy makers like Bullard are guilty of reckless optimism if they believe the economy has truly healed. The evidence of a pending slowdown is abundant. The Empire State's business conditions index decreased 10 points from April to just 11.9 in May. Meanwhile, the prices paid index rose sharply, with about 70% of respondents reporting price increases for inputs, and none reporting price reductions. That inflation index advanced 12 points to 69.9, its highest level since mid-2008. And things are even worse in Philadelphia. The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's general economic index fell to 3.9 in May from 18.5 a month earlier.

Turning to the labor front, the four week moving average of initial jobless claims rose to 439,000 last week, from 437,750 in the week prior. Of course, the real estate market continues in its malaise. According to the National Association of Realtors, April existing home sales dropped to an annual rate of just 5.05 million. Prices continue to set new post crash lows, with prices down 5% YOY. Despite the fact that the government still accounts for nearly the entire mortgage market and the Fed has rates near zero percent, inventory of existing homes jumped from 3.52 to 3.87 million units and the months' supply climbed from 8.3 to 9.2. Does it sound like the economy is ready to get up on its own two feet?

But the Fed is under pressure to do something about the growing inflation threat. Year over year increases of CPI, PPI and Import prices are 3.2%, 6.8% and 11.1%, respectively. As price increases hit middle class consumers, the Fed is facing intense pressure to push down inflation by draining the balance sheet and raising interest rates. It's a dangerous game.

In its simplest terms quantitative easing is nothing more than the government's attempt to boost consumption by borrowing trillions of dollars. Over the long haul this is no way to run an economy, and a sustainable recovery will be impossible as long as such borrowing continues. But in the short term, a cessation of government borrowing will lift the veil on our artificial economy, and reveal how dependent we have become. U.S. fiscal and monetary austerity will cause GDP to fall as the deleveraging process that was interrupted in 2009 returns with a vengeance. I do not believe the Fed or the Administration has the intestinal fortitude to let that happen.

A bona fide Fed exit from interest rate manipulation means that both nominal and real interest rates would rise significantly. The ten year note yield is less than half its average over the past 40 years. Normalization of rates would provide a serious headwind to markets and the economy.

The high leverage that brought on the Great Recession has not been addressed in the slightest. U.S. household, corporate and government debt as a percentage of GDP has never been greater. So, if interest rates were to rise, why should we expect a different result from what occurred in 2008?

Whether or not the Fed is bluffing has dramatic implications for investors and the country. Mr. Bernanke will eventually have to choose whether he wants another depression or more of the inflation the Fed is so adept at causing and then denying.

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Twisted Titan
24th May 2011, 12:45 PM
THE ONLY SURE BET IS PHYSICAL GOLD AND SILVER

NOTHING ELSE

Ponce
24th May 2011, 12:54 PM
Who cares about the economy when you hold gold and silver........specially silver ;D

Almost forgot.........and tp ;D ;D ;D

gunDriller
24th May 2011, 02:07 PM
i wonder if the difference between 2008 & 2011 is, who loses money.

in 2008, we saw who got the big bail-outs. we know what their ethnicity is.

the US government backstopped the financial affairs of the Bankers, who after about 10 years of making Many Many Trillions of dollars, had their house of cards fall, and, instead of taking the losses on the chin, threatened the economic version of Nuclear Annihilation - resulting in TARP, TALF, and all those other programs.

now that they've been taken care of, who will fall off the cliff when the economy collapses visibly again ?

if The Talmud Worshippers are taken care of, what reason is there to expect that the US gov. will represent the interests of the General Public ?


when interest rates go up, who gets that money ?


i think the US gov. has clearly communicated their priorities.

i would like to see Affirmative Action extended to include the accounting of ethnicity.

having witnessed some very obvious county-wide Jewish nepotism in Sonoma County, where 50% + of the professional jobs in the city & junior college were given to Jewish people ... OK, well, separate subject.

if Jewish people have become en-trenched enough at the state, national, and local level that they are not threatened by a massive economic downturn, what will motivate the US gov. to stop the downturn ?

(that's a question ;D)


when it was time to come up with a few trillion for the bankers, they got it done yesterday ... when hundreds of thousands of auto-workers (at GM & their suppliers) were in jeopardy, it took 6 months to come up with $30 billion.

what's the difference ?

about 1/2 the bankers are Jewish. most of the auto-workers are from Christian communities.


if Jewish people were unemployed at the same rate as the general public ... it would be OH VEY city.


i think the US gov. will continue to print money, nepotism in the Jewish community will continue, and the general public will continue to experience the jobless part of the jobless recovery.

what inspired the bail-outs that started in 2008 was the cascading effects of counter-party risk, banks were un-willing to loan to each other.

in 2011, things may be different. banks have had time to move bad debt onto the books of "other people". insiders have had time to dump their finance industry stocks.


Jewish radio personalities such as Ric Edelman on 560 KSFO in the SF Bay Area go so over-board pushing the general public into the stock market. "what if the Dow goes to 60,000 and you're sitting on the sidelines ? what will you tell your grandchildren ?"

i'm serious - i actually heard him say that once. skillfully laying on a guilt trip for his radio audience.


hence, in a nutshell, we see the inter-twining of the financial, media, and government industries. having said that, i'm thinking they may need another war to really pull through. but they seem to have started that, haven't they ?


i have a hunch that the Collapse of 2011 will be different from the Collapse of 2008 in that one respect. the Banker Rats and their buddies (i hate to impugn rats, but it's the right word to use sometimes) have scurried around and gotten to a position of Safe Harbor.

i'm sure they will share their condolences when times are tough :sarc: