Spend
It Like You Stole It
by
Bill Bonner
Daily Reckoning
Recently by Bill Bonner: How
to Be a Central Bank Celebrity
QE2 is ending
in June. But globally, QE3 has already begun. As usual, Japan is
the pacesetter. As temperatures rose at its Fukushima reactor so
did Japans monetary base at the rate of 100% per week!
What happens to all this new, hot money? No one knows, exactly.
But today, at The Daily Reckoning, we have advice for everyone
central planners, politicians, and householders, too: if
you have money, pretend you robbed a bank.
From the point
of view of a modern economist, nothing stimulates better than a
bank robbery. The money leaves the cold embrace of a bank vault;
soon every pimp and bartender has his pockets full. Hot money gets
around.
An article
in Rolling Stone Magazine provides an illustration. It explains
how one Wall Street wife, and one Wall Street widow, formed a company
specifically to take advantage of the US governments spending
spree known as TALF. Youd think the feds had already done
enough for the Mack family. John Mack runs Morgan Stanley. Had it
not been for the generous support of the US government and the Federal
Reserve, he might be parking cars. Instead, the feds bailed out
the entire financial sector. First, it bought up Wall Streets
bad bets at inflated prices and then lent banks money at artificially
low interest rates; they were invited to lend the money back to
the federal government for a sure profit.
Business was
so good at Morgan Stanley that the distaff side of the Mack household
apparently couldnt resist. In June, 2009, with her friend
Susan Christy, Mack set up an investment company and put in $15
million. Then, they borrowed $220 million from the government. A
brave move on their part? If you think so, you are as naïve
as a turnip. The fix was in; the two used the money to buy non-recourse
loans at deep discount. If the loans increased in value, they would
make a profit. If they fell, the government would take the losses.
Much safer and more profitable than robbing banks. Two months later,
Mr. Mack, perhaps with a little assistance from his blond helpmate,
bought a limestone carriage house in Manhattan, with a 12-space
garage for the getaway cars.
If you dont
have your own little stimulus scam going, you may want to listen
up. Your dollars, pounds, euros and pesos are going to lose value.
Dont trust the governments inflation figures. An honest
measure of the inflation rate is available thanks to
a pair of professors at MIT. Their Billion Prices Project
(BPP) doesnt pussyfoot around. It trolls the Internet, records
prices and reveals the most accurate measure of inflation ever.
This new index shows the rate of consumer price increases for the
last 12 months at 3.2%. This is more than half again as much as
the Labor Departments own tally 2.1%.
Something is
dreadfully wrong. Either a billion prices are in error. Or, people
who buy US treasury bonds are. They accept a real yield (based on
the BPP numbers) of barely 1.2% on a 30-year dollar-denominated,
inflation-sensitive Treasury bond, while the dollar sinks and its
custodians actively try to drown it. And, over the last six months,
according to BPP, prices have been rising nearly twice as fast
at a 6.1% annualized rate. If these figures hold, bond investors
already have a built-in negative yield. The inflation figure for
the last 3 months is even higher, 7.4%, about 300 basis points more
than the yield on the long bond.
Treasury prices
have trended higher for nearly 30 years. Could they be ready to
fall now? Maybe. Inflation is not like holding up a liquor store;
its more like a major bank heist, the product of long planning
by trained professionals. Whenever the nominal amount of available
money increases faster than the real goods and services that money
buys, you can expect rising prices.
In America,
real private-sector output reached a plateau at the end of the 20th
century. In the last 10 years, it has scarcely increased at all.
Total private sector GDP was $9.31 trillion in 2001. Now it is $9.72
trillion. But while real output has been flat, the output of hot
money has not. When they are not stealing it from the
taxpayers, or borrowing it with no intention to pay it back, the
feds are counterfeiting it. The Fed will have printed up
about $1.8 trillion from the end of 2008 to the end of June, 2011
partly to finance staggering federal government deficits
of nearly $4.5 trillion over the three years. This led to an increase
in the GDP, almost entirely from government spending, with 79% of
household income growth from government transfer payments.
Meanwhile,
the US monetary base has tripled in the last 3 years. These increases
are not all immediately available to households as money;
they are mostly still in bank vaults, waiting to be liberated. Then,
watch out. Dollars will be too hot to hold.
Reprinted
with permission from The Daily
Reckoning.
April
30,
2011
Bill
Bonner is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
The New Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis
and the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007). His
latest book is Dice
Have No Memory.
Since 1999, Bill has been a daily contributor and the driving force
behind The Daily Reckoning.
Copyright
© 2011 Daily Reckoning
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