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The Financial Crisis is Far From Over

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May 16, 2010 – Comments (12) | RELATED TICKERS: GLD , SKY , HI

I've linked to many articles written by Chris Martenson over the past couple of years. IMHO he's simply one of the best out there. Here is an excerpt and link to his most recent thoughts on the bailout in Europe:

...Buy gold (and silver too).

This is what I've been saying for the past seven years, ever since gold was in the $300's and silver was under $5, so you might be tempted to think I am simply another gold bug.  While I confess to finding a certain allure in heavy bullion coins - they sound great tossed on a counter and feel good in my hand - I am not really a gold bug.

Instead, what I am is a gigantic, unrelenting, anti-fiat-currency bug.  Well, at least I am anti-mismanaged fiat currencies, but that pretty much encompasses them all to varying degrees.

As with all investment,s I have an exit strategy in my mind that will dictate when I sell my gold and silver to place those funds in other productive investments.  Unfortunately, that day seems further away than ever.

Let me explain why.

The Euro Zone Bailout

As I pondered the many details of euro zone bailout, I came to the conclusion that it is little more than a shuffling of debt risk from one place to another, and I couldn't escape the larger conclusion that nothing had been solved at all.  Debt was merely shuffled from one location to another, from the banks to the public.

The bottom line is that Greece is merely the poster child for what happens to a country at the end of a long period of living beyond its means.  But it is by no means unique in having over-promised benefits to its citizens, and now faces a toxic brew of poor growth prospects, enforced austerity, demographic pressures, and an enormous mismatch between what has been promised and what can be delivered.

The only clear winners in the euro zone "solution" are the banks, which (again) have been relieved of the burden of paying for their own mistakes (again) by passing their horrible investment decisions back to the public (again).  I guess moral hazard is a winner in this instance, too.

Banks had loaded up on Greek debt because it paid a higher rate of interest than other sovereign debt.  It did so because it had a higher chance of default, so it was riskier.  Now that it has defaulted, the cost of that mistake has been transferred to the citizens of various countries, including as much as possibly $50 billion from US citizens.

Compare that to the long, protracted legal battle that the residents of the Gulf states will face to extract $1-2 billion from BP/Uncle Sam for the environmental and economic catastrophe unfolding down there, and you've got a pretty good start on understanding why anger is building throughout the land.

The euro zone bailout, unlike its US counterpart, does not create vast quantities of new money out of thin air (as did the MBS purchase program by the Fed), but instead seeks to 'solve' a debt problem by creating new debt.  Many people have come to the conclusion that this solves nothing, and, worse, it exposes the Ponzi-like character of the modern debt-based money system for all to see.

The dirty little secret of banking is that bankers have no interest in seeing the loans they make get paid back. All they want is for the interest payments to be made.  As long as the interest payments are being made, it doesn't really matter how large the outstanding loan balance is.  That just gets rolled over.

Loans default when a borrower misses an interest payment.  The Greek crisis was precipitated by the very real prospect that Greece was going to miss an interest payment on May 19th.  Only once this prospect was raised did the overall amount of Greek debt become a source of concern.  Without Greece potentially missing an interest payment, there was no crisis and no problem.  Which is exactly how we got into this mess.

The Ugly Truth

Even as the financial media parse over the ugly details of Greece's situation and gnash their teeth at the fact that Greece apparently has too much debt, the ugly truth is that there are many countries in similarly bad shape...

...According to this pleasant little myth, the US has a couple of decades before its debt might possibly hit 140% of GDP.  That doesn't sound too bad, now, does it?  After all, we're as far away from that moment as we are from the collapse of the Soviet Union back in 1990.  Seems like a long time. 

And Greece, a country we can now all openly deride as clearly irresponsible, is already at 115% of GDP.

The problem with this little narrative is that it conveniently excludes all the off-balance-sheet obligations that governments routinely exclude to hide the severity of the current predicament...

..So even as we tut-tut over those profligate Greeks and their unserviceable debts, we'd do well to take this opportunity to note that most of the rest of the developed world is in similar straits.

As bad as that is, the even uglier reality is that the true debt situation of a country must include ALL debts public and private.  After all, those are the ones that the productive economy must service over time.  While we might wish to secure a better view of the situation by turning down the lights and squinting slightly before looking in the mirror, we do ourselves no favors by doing so...

...Where Greece now faces extraordinary austerity measures intended to reduce their budget deficit from 13.6% of GDP to 3% of GDP by 2012, nobody is talking about the fact that the US is going to run a 10% of GDP deficit this year to match its 13% deficit last year.  The UK budget deficit this year is pegged at some 12% of GDP.

Pot.  Kettle.  Black.

If the US or UK were 'asked' by the IMF to reduce their budget deficits by a full 10% over the next two years, each would spiral into a deep, dark depression and be crushed by increasingly unbearable debt loads...

...Anybody with a passing interest could calculate that debts cannot grow forever and that there would come a day when debt service costs would consume 100% of the productive output of the world.  On that day, the old game ends and a new game begins.

Where the old game was predicated on perpetual debt roll-overs and rapid economic growth, we now have ample evidence that these features can no longer be counted upon.  Yet many persist in acting as if they are 100% certain to return.

Prudent investors, managers, and policy-makers ought to be seriously considering the prospect that our economic landscape has been fundamentally altered.  What happens if, just like every other time in history, debt saturation leads to prolonged economic stagnation?  Worse, what happens if during our recovery it turns out that Peak Oil is real and we cannot rely on increasing energy throughput to work its magic and stimulate the growth necessary to service increasing interest payments?

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12 Comments – Post Your Own

#1) On May 16, 2010 at 11:56 PM, topsecret09 (79.22) wrote:

 Food for thought.....  TS

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#2) On May 16, 2010 at 11:58 PM, binve (29.35) wrote:

Hey JGus! You and I are thinking along the *exact* same lines : http://caps.fool.com/Blogs/ViewPost.aspx?bpid=391654 . Right on man! :) Thanks bro!

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#3) On May 16, 2010 at 11:59 PM, binve (29.35) wrote:

But you definitely get the most props for the best use of the tickers :)

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#4) On May 17, 2010 at 12:26 AM, JGus (29.60) wrote:

Sorry, Binve, didn't mean to step on your toes. I thought that this article may have already been highlighted on Caps, but somehow I missed your post (which is pretty rare as I make it a point to read them here and on your personal blog). Basically, I was too lazy to go back through the last four or five days worth of blog posts and just went ahead and linked to it. It's probably worth a second mention in case others missed your post.

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#5) On May 17, 2010 at 12:27 AM, JGus (29.60) wrote:

Gave your post a rec to make up for my mistake :)

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#6) On May 17, 2010 at 12:49 AM, binve (29.35) wrote:

JGus,

No worries man! This is just a case of great minds thinking alike :) Thanks man!!..

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#7) On May 17, 2010 at 2:21 AM, 1315623493 wrote:

I'm definitely overweight put options on SPY. Market has significant downward pressure. Ride the monster all the way into the abyss.

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#8) On May 17, 2010 at 6:34 AM, outoffocus (26.88) wrote:

My boyfriend brought up a good question about investing in physical precious metals. Once the crap hits the fan and metals skyrocket, where do you go to sell or exchange your metals in case you need to buy food or something?

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#9) On May 17, 2010 at 7:00 AM, lucangone (< 20) wrote:

That's a question I've considered myself. I suppose by that stage, there'll be gold vending machines and people everywhere talking about buying and selling the stuff. The whole atmosphere will be different.

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#10) On May 17, 2010 at 9:24 AM, russiangambit (29.92) wrote:

> My boyfriend brought up a good question about investing in physical precious metals. Once the crap hits the fan and metals skyrocket, where do you go to sell or exchange your metals in case you need to buy food or something?

You barter at the local market or pawn shop. examples: jews fleeing nazis, russians fleeing the revolution. However, your gold mignt not fetch the price you are hoping for. If you expect this kind of situation, I would think small silver coins are the best. Or a farm ,lol.

 

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#11) On May 17, 2010 at 5:11 PM, leohaas (98.77) wrote:

"Once the crap hits the fan and metals skyrocket, where do you go to sell or exchange your metals in case you need to buy food or something?"

If this really happens, gold and silver will be currency. Nobody will be accepting dollars. So you use your gold coins for large expenses (such as your guns, ammo, and building materials for your bunker), and silver coins for your smaller expenses like canned food. Don't worry about luxury items: there won't be any gas for cars, or electricity for TVs and other gadgets...

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#12) On May 19, 2010 at 11:41 PM, hybridinvestor (27.75) wrote:

"If the US or UK were 'asked' by the IMF to reduce their budget deficits by a full 10% over the next two years, each would spiral into a deep, dark depression and be crushed by increasingly unbearable debt loads..."

This statement to me is exactly why I cannot be a gold/silver/whatever bug.  When economies get killed, I am pretty sure that the demand for gold (investment, industrial, or otherwise) will go along with it.  I find it interesting that gold bugs have great logic as I did not disagree with really any of the article excerpt and then all of a sudden it is "buy gold".  

Sorry folks but this sucker ain't buyin' because someone else wants to sell. 

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