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Monetary Madness -- Money and Markets, Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.

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  • Monetary Madness -- Money and Markets, Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.

    Monetary Madness

    Money and Markets

    Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D.
    11/16/2013

    Excerpt:

    The U.S. economy is now so addicted to the Fed’s monthly $85 billion injection of monetary stimulus … that just the thought of withdrawal is enough to cause violent market convulsions.

    Consider, for example, the absurdity of this recent chain of events:

    * The U.S. Labor Department announces a far better-than-expected report on new jobs …

    * Investors fear that the good economic news may nudge the Fed a tad closer to cutting back its stimulus …

    * They dump their investments by the truckload, and …

    * Bond prices plunge the most in four months, driving interest rates skyward.

    All in response to supposedly good news about the economy!

    All because investors would rather see the economy sink than see the Fed cut back on its monthly megadose of money shot up their veins.

    Or consider the long sequence of excuses Fed Chairman Bernanke has offered for smashing the 100-year Fed prohibition against running the money printing presses 24/7 …

    First, he said they had no choice because of the great debt crisis of 2008.
    “Unless we flood the banking system with money,” went the argument, “megabanks will fail and global financial markets will collapse in a heap of rubble.”

    Second, as soon as the worst of the debt crisis was apparently behind us, they promptly came up with a brand new rationale: Trillion-dollar federal budget deficits year after year.
    “Unless we buy Treasuries by the truckload,” they reasoned, “the deficits will smash the bond markets and sabotage the economic recovery.”

    Next in the long line-up of excuses came the European debt crisis, the Fiscal Cliff and, most recently, the government shutdown.

    Each time, the Fed kept the pedal to the metal on its giant money presses. And each time, there was a new crisis to justify their reckless DUI.

    Yellen takes the cake …

    In the Forked Tongue category, wannabe Fed chief Janet Yellen has now eclipsed Fed Chairman Bernanke for the first prize.

    In her testimony before Congress this week, she says little or nothing about the 2008 debt crisis, federal deficits, European debacles, fiscal cliffs or any others which were among her predecessor’s favorite excuses for the unprecedented money printing she vows to pursue.

    Nor does she talk much about a weak economy.

    Instead, her new rationale is that, although the economy has improved, it hasn’t quite improved “enough.”

    As Mike Larson eloquently notes, it seems the “not-improved-enough” argument is all that’s needed to justify continue running the Fed’s printing presses — and doing so at the same speed as Bernanke did in the immediate aftermath of the Lehman Brothers collapse.

    The end result is vividly illustrated in this chart:
    (see original article to view chart)

    It tracks the U.S. monetary base, a direct measure of how much money the Fed has been printing — and injecting into the banking system.

    It depicts how the sheer magnitude of the Fed’s monstrous expansion is mind-boggling in the extreme.

    To better comprehend this monster, start by looking at the relatively gradual slope of growth in the 1990s and 2000s — before the Lehman Brothers failure. And bear in mind that even that “slower” pace was considered irresponsibly rapid by many experts.

    Next, look at the sudden explosion that began immediately after the Lehman Brothers failure! That’s when the Fed threw all its old rule books into the East River. And that’s when the Fed flew off on a new, high-risk trajectory into the outer space of monetary policy.

    Then, see how the Fed’s immediate response to post-Lehman crisis (QE1) was replicated not just once, but twice — with QE2 and QE3.

    Last, consider these outrageous facts:

    Fact #1. Immediately prior to the Lehman Brothers failure, the Fed reports that the monetary base stood at $849.8 billion.

    This past October 30, it was $3,607.7 billion. That’s an expansion of $2,757.8 billion — over $2.7 trillion.

    ...........................................

    View the complete article at:

    http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/monetary-madness-56217
    B. Steadman

  • #2
    Who Will Head the Fed? It Doesn’t Matter

    Money and Markets

    Larry Edelson
    11/18/2013

    Excerpt:

    Once confirmed, as I am sure she will be, Janet Yellen will stop at nothing to help the economy.

    She will print more money than ever, buy more bonds than ever. Even purchase distressed real estate, equities, probably even European and other sovereign national debt. She will pull out all the stops.

    But based on all of my research, none of it will amount to a hill of beans. Central bank monetary policy will have little or no impact on the markets going forward. At best, all it will do is cause short-term gyrations and confusion.

    Instead, what will matter is this: Politicians in Washington and Brussels.

    Why will they matter more than central bankers in the future?

    Because the simple truth is that they are getting ready to tax you more than ever and even confiscate large portions of your wealth.

    Years ago when I foretold of the financial crisis the Western world is now going through, I didn’t think the leaders of the developed Western world would be acting like they are. I figured central bankers would print money into oblivion, hyper-inflate the debts of the U.S. and Europe, and that would be it.

    There would be little or no interference from politicians around the globe.

    But all that has changed. Instead, we now live in a world where the forces that are quickly unfolding are far greater and stronger than any number of central bankers combined, and the leaders of the world know it.

    The tipping point was September 2011, when gold failed to respond to the announcement of QEIII and began to crash.

    Its fate was sealed in March of this year when European Union (EU) finance ministers confiscated the wealth of all deposits above 100,000 euros in Cyprus banks. And now …

    Leaders in Washington and Europe are getting ready to tax
    you more and even confiscate large portions of your wealth.

    Don’t believe me? Then consider the following …
    • The European Union is now penning a law to legislate Cyprus-style “bail-ins” of depositors in all European Union banks. That would make all deposits above 100,000 euros creditors of the banks. --- Last week, the European Central Bank came out in favor of the bill. If you have money in a bank in the European Union, get it out of there as fast as you can.
    • In France, new and very tough reporting requirements have virtually shuttered the nation’s gold dealers, sending them packing. Try buying gold anywhere in France today. It’s almost impossible.
    • The European Union has passed a financial tax to take effect next year on all stock and bond trades done by any of its citizens worldwide.
    • In Italy, a “Google” tax is being introduced to force multinational companies like Google, Microsoft, Facebook and many others to pay a local tax on the services they render.
    • In September, authorities in Poland confiscated bonds held in private pension funds without giving 1 cent of compensation to pension owners.
    • In Washington, proposals are now under way behind closed doors to enact similar depositor “bail-in policies” for U.S. banks.
    • According to a well-placed source, Washington is now preparing contingency plans to confiscate and nationalize IRAs and 401(k)s.

    And then there’s the ongoing National Security Agency spying, which has not stopped. Admissions on international wiretapping and spying now from Europe. Increasingly authoritarian governing in Washington and Europe.

    All this, and more, is why I say monetary policy won’t matter much in the months and years ahead, and instead, the actions our leaders take will. They are out to save their own hides and their desperate bankrupt governments. Not you.

    It’s all part and parcel of the war cycles I’ve previously told you about and how they began ramping up this year and will rise in a feverish pitch all the way until 2020.

    They will be characterized by rising taxation, confiscation of assets, trade and currency wars, cyber espionage, riots in the streets, civil and international wars.

    These are the forces that will drive the markets in the years ahead. Not monetary policy.

    ........................................

    View the complete article at:

    http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/who-w...t-matter-56223
    B. Steadman

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