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Weird Finance: Redux

The New York and Washington DC financial geniuses continue in their wayward path. Their specialty is weird finance and they desperately cling to implementing even more bizarre strategies. This would make a great comedy series if it wasn’t so tragic.

My last article regarding weird finance was October, 2008 when the following words were penned:

“Let’s see now…the task is to nationalize, bailout and hyperinflate everything in sight. But the corresponding rising interest rates (inevitable) stand to implode the system. Remember those qazillions in interest rate derivatives. They explode during times of excess volatility. Not good for a system that is based on confidence in the first place.”

The strategies mentioned are still in play. Derivative totals are estimated by the bank of International Settlements (BIS) to now stand at well over one quadrillion dollars. More toxic waste is being dumped across the existing waste. Derivatives are about greed and fascist control.

What else are our elitist money leaders doing as their end game approaches? It should be patently clear that Wall Street refugees are the ones in charge of the decision making and string pulling process. The Goldman Sachs connected boys have assumed the helm … Henry Paulson, Tim Geithner, Larry Summers and an entire host of others.

OK, maybe that’s not exactly weird, but just plain dumb. You make the call. In the real world, there are consequences for screwing up on an historic basis.

Since last fall, our financial wizards have promised $12.8 trillion in bailout funds to primarily well connected cronies. The US national debt since the birth of this great nation now stands at a comparable $11 trillion. None of these debts will ever be paid off and it’s hard to fathom how anyone believes to the contrary.

The printing press is also being used to artificially maintain low interest rates via market interventions. Derivatives have long been focused there but now the Fed has resorted to direct action. The Fed is in the market buying our own Treasury Bonds. $300 billion is the first estimate, but you know how government estimates tend to work out.

Folks, this extreme action is akin to entering the bidding for your own house sale. An advanced central planning degree is required for this desperate maneuver.

It’s the debt, stupid! Mega-debt is now our official motto, but it is being expanded by an order of magnitude instead of being dealt with. If foreigners are no longer willing to purchase our Treasuries and corresponding excesses we’ll just buy them ourselves. Brilliant. Bring in some Caribbean off-shore money center buying to top it all off. A shadow government running shadow markets with shadow money.

The Fed is also in the markets buying Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS). These have been around since 1997 and are supposed to pay higher interest payments with inflation and lower interest payments with deflation. Having the Fed buy these securities also can’t be too comforting for buyers seeking “protection”.

That’s enough chicanery for several articles, but why stop now? The Fed’s “balance sheet” is supposed to be the substancebehind their issuance of money. This balance sheet has been comprised of smoke and mirrors for decades since the total fiat era started in 1973. Those days now look golden compared to the current makeup.

The Fed used to hold almost exclusively Treasury securities with which to perform their various “operations”. Only 24% of their holdings are now in Treasuries. The rest is a toxic soup that they’ve now taken on (mortgage backed securities, commercial paper, money market assets, failed crony paper, etc.) to keep the entire system afloat. The mortgage backed securities, for example, are really worth around 35% on the dollar. The Fed and other banks holding this junk assign pretend values of 100% on them.

The Fed balance sheet had more than doubled to $2.19 trillion since the global meltdown started. It looks like they took the “good bank – bad bank” scenario seriously but made the wrong choice. Watching the world’s most influential bank implode is a rare event.

Most local banks are FDIC insured. These banks also hold just over $200 trillion in obscure derivatives. The reserves to back up these positions are a mere 3.5% as opposed to a more normal 10% backing of solid and traditional loans. Banking gone wild.

Weird finance has also led to $100 trillion in losses in global stock, real estate and commodity markets.

Did I mention the Fed has killed 96% of the dollar’s value over the last 96 years? You can bet they’re up to finishing the task.

Proponents of weird finance demonstrate pure ignorance of the natural laws of economics. Holding interest rates at abnormal levels is folly. Manipulating data is pure folly. Propping up failed entities with failed philosophies does nothing but prolong and amplify the long term pain. The system will get its purge one way or another.

There is a better way! Keynesian and Friedman-style economics have dominated America and most of the planet for the last 95 years. Federal Reserve antics and their funny money products are the inevitable result of this doomed philosophy. Dig through this article about Austrian Economics and you’ll have a better understanding of what went wrong and how to fix it than 98% of your fellow citizens.

Something will arise from the ashes of the government’s ongoing inferno. Do your part to see that we go back to a strong foundation. Separate from the present weird system and protect yourself from its demise. Precious metals remain on sale.

Think Resourcefully,
Rusty

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This post was written by:

Russell McDougal

Russell McDougal - who has written 143 investment articles on Investors Daily Edge.


Dr. Russell McDougal is a practicing dentist of over 30 years as well as a past professor of dentistry. The most fitting description of Rusty is the word “student,” and his appetite for learning was only whetted with his formal education. He is a voracious reader and has been known to focus on a particular topic daily for a decade or more. Rusty has been an active investor for 25 years, holding everything from stocks, bonds and mutual funds, to options, futures, currencies, limited partnerships, private placements and rare coins. Before the days of the internet, he typically subscribed to 10 to 12 financial newsletters at a time. He has learned from the brightest and the best. Since 1993, Dr. McDougal has focused almost exclusively on gold, silver and resource investing. He has a particular affinity for silver and has studied virtually everything available on the topic since 1994. Today, Dr. McDougal’s personal portfolio is a virtual mutual fund of natural resource exploration and development companies. Over the years, he has developed an excellent understanding of the risk and reward elements involved and has discovered exactly what it takes to become ultra-successful in this speculators’ paradise. If you have ever dreamed of engaging in prudent speculations that can return $5... $10... or even $20 for every $1 invested, you’ll want to pay close attention when Rusty writes for Investor’s Daily Edge. Dr. McDougal is a bold and outspoken advocate of honest money, honest markets and honest, constitutional government.


4 Responses to “Weird Finance: Redux”

  1. B Polus says:

    Weird Finance-Redux (May 1,2009), article by Rusty: Appears that maybe the Feds will back the Amero with gold/silver in the near future, when the Dollar value is zero, and has run it’s course. Check out if the Fed’s are preparing by making/printing the Amero in China. B.P.

  2. Ron Retterath says:

    Another excellent article. Great insight. I can see what the Fed is up to in buying long term treasuries, but I can’t understand why they are purchasing TIPS? Thanks.

    Ron

  3. Andrew says:

    Excellent article. What is even more weird is that most people seem to see these financial policies as the panacea of logic. Piling debt on debt. And those who suggest practical solutions are regarded as weird.

    Love the article, would like to hear more weekly.

  4. A.M. Deist says:

    Nations & institutions Reserves (Tonnes)
    USA 8139
    Germany 3469
    IMF 3217
    France 3025
    Switzerland 2590
    Italy 2452

    The chart above shows that the United States controls most of the gold in the world. Since we have almost triple what the second holder has, a solution to our debt problem is to cause the price of gold to rise high enough to use half our gold to pay off our world debt.

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