The
Mother of All Bells
by Peter Schiff
There is an
old adage on Wall Street that no one rings a bell at major market
tops or bottoms. That may be true in normal times, but as many have
noticed, we are now completely through the looking glass. In this
parallel reality, Ben Bernanke has just rung the loudest bell ever
heard in the foreign exchange and government debt markets. Investors
who ignore the clanging do so at their own peril. The bells
reverberations will be felt by everyday Americans, whose lives are
about to change in ways few can imagine. While nearly every facet
of Americas economy has been devastated over the past six
months, our national currency has thus far skipped through the carnage
with nary a scratch. Ironically, the U.S. dollar has been the beneficiary
of the global economic crises which the United States set in motion.
As a result, our economy has thus far been spared the full force
of the storm.
This week the
Federal Reserve finally made clear what should have been obvious
for some time the only weapon that the Fed is willing to
use to fight the economic downturn is a continuing torrent of pure,
undiluted, inflation. The announcement should be seen as a game
changer that redirects the fury of the financial storm directly
onto our shores.
In its statement,
the Fed announced its intention to purchase an additional $1 trillion
worth of U.S. treasury and agency debt. The purchases, of course,
will be made with money created out of thin air through the Feds
printing presses. Few can doubt that they will persist with these
operations until the economy returns to its former health. Whether
or not this can ever be accomplished with a printing press alone
has never been seriously considered. Bernanke himself admits that
we are in uncharted waters, with no map or compass, just simply
a hope that more dollars are the answer.
Rather than
solving our problems, more inflation will only add to the crisis.
Falling asset prices, the credit crunch, declining consumer spending,
bankruptcies, foreclosures, and layoffs are all part of the necessary
rebalancing of our economy. These wrenching movements, however painful,
are the markets attempts to resolve the serious problems at
the root of our bubble economy. Attempts to literally paper-over
these problems will lead to disaster.
Now
that the Fed has recklessly shown its hand, the mad dash to get
out of Treasuries and dollars should not be far off. The more the
Fed prints to buy bonds the less the dollar is worth. Holders of
our debt (read China and Japan) understand this dynamic. We must
expect that they will not only refuse to buy new bonds, but they
will look to unload those bonds they already own.
Under normal
circumstances, if creditors grew concerned that inflation was eating
into their returns, the Fed would raise interest rates to entice
them to buy. However, the Fed will avoid this course of action as
it fears higher rates are too heavy a burden for our debt-laden
economy to bear. To maintain artificially low rates, the Fed will
be forced to purchase trillions more debt then it expects as it
becomes the only buyer in a sellers market.
Just
last week, Chinese premier Wen Jiabao voiced concern about his countrys
massive investments in U.S. government debt. In the most unequivocal
statement yet by the Chinese leadership on this issue, Wen made
it plain that he was concerned with depreciation, not default. With
his fears now officially confirmed by the Fed statement, we must
wonder when the Chinese will finally change course.
There is a
growing consensus that if China no longer wants to buy our bonds,
we can simply print the money and buy them ourselves. This naïve
view fails to consider the consequences implicit in such a change.
When the Treasury sells bonds to China, no new dollars are printed.
Instead, China prints yuan which it then uses to buy treasuries.
This effectively allows America to export its inflation to China.
However, now that we will be printing the money ourselves, the full
inflationary impact will fall directly on us.
With such a
policy in place, America has now become a banana republic. It wont
be too long before our living standards reflect our new status.
Got Gold?
March
21, 2009
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse.

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