First, you are going to see increasing desperation and extreme central bank financial repression. This is because central banks have painted themselves so deep into the corner that they’re lost and desperate. Almost week by week, we have another central bank — most recently it was Sweden — lowering their money market rates into negative territory. The Swiss National Bank is already there. Denmark’s Nationalbank is there. The European Central Bank is there on the deposit rate. The Bank of Japan is also there. All of the central banks of the world now are desperately driving interest rates into negative territory. I believe that they’re lost. They’re in a race to the bottom whether they acknowledge it or not. The People’s Bank of China, for example, can’t sit still much longer when the renminbi has appreciated something like 30% against the Japanese yen because of the massive bubble of monetary expansion that’s being created by Tokyo. Central banks are out of control and in a race to the bottom, sliding by the seat of their pants and making up incoherent theories as they go. The second thing that’s happening is increasing market disorder and volatility. In the last four months, the stock market has behaved like a drunken sailor. But it’s just a bunch of robots and day traders that are mindlessly trading chart points. It has nothing to do with information or incoming data about the real world. Today we have the 10-year German bond trading at a yield of just 0.61%. The German economy’s been reasonably strong, having been fueled by the Chinese boom. But that export boom is over. The Chinese economy is faltering. And Germany is going to have its own severe problems soon. But clearly, 61 basis points on a 10-year bond is irrational, even in the case of Germany. This is to say nothing of the 160 or so basis points available today on the 10-year bond for Spain and Italy. (Note: A basis point is 1/100th of a percentage point.) Both Spain and Italy are in deep, deep fiscal decline. There is no obvious way for them to dig out of the debt trap they’re in. It’s going to get worse over time. There is huge risk in those bonds. Especially because there’s no guarantee that the European Union will remain intact or that the euro will survive. Why would anybody in their right mind own Italian debt earning 160 basis points a year? Maybe those who anticipate the massive purchases that Mario Draghi at the European Central Bank has promised and the Germans have acquiesced to over the next year or two. But that only kicks the can down the road. One of these days, central banks are going to falter. And the market is going to reset violently to prices that reflect the true risk on all this sovereign debt and the cloudy outlook that’s ahead for the world market. There is now nearly $3 trillion of sovereign debt spread over Japanese issues and the major European countries that are trading at negative yields. That is irrational. It’s also completely unsustainable. And yet it’s another characteristic of what I call Bubble Finance. The third thing that’s happening is that global malinvestment, fueled of course, by central banks, is now coming home to roost. It will be driving a huge deflation of commodity and industrial prices worldwide. You can see that in iron ore, which is now barely holding $48 from a peak of almost $200. You can see this in the oil patch too. Look at the Baltic Dry Index. That’s an index, created by the London-based Baltic Exchange, that tracks changes in the cost to transport raw materials by sea. |