Tag Archives: financial assets

“When No Man Has a Farthing…” by Jeff Thomas

Sell paper assets, buy real ones. Maybe wait a while after executing the former to execute the latter. From Jeff Thomas at internationalman.com:

economic collapse

Market cycles have existed since the advent of lending institutions. As far back as 2,000 BC, in Assyria, merchants provided loans to farmers and traders. Often, this created prosperity, with greater amounts of money passing from hand to hand with greater frequency.

Not surprisingly, the interest paid to the merchants inspired them to increase the amounts they would lend, again increasing prosperity.

But periodically, hard times returned and those who borrowed were unable to pay back the loans, leading to recessions.

Since at least the 14th century, rather than lending out gold and silver, goldsmiths in Europe issued letters of credit. Then, in the 17th century, fractional reserve banking emerged as a common practice.

The concept was that a bank might lend out the majority of its deposits, retaining a small percentage for day-to-day business. But for many banks, at some point, the temptation to lend out more in promissory notes than the bank actually had on deposit became too great.

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Here We Go Again: Our Double-Bubble Economy, by Charles Hugh Smith

Blowing bubbles has become the official economic policy. From Charles Hugh Smith at oftwominds.com:

The bubbles in assets are supported by the invisible bubble in greed, euphoria and credulity.
Well, folks, here we go again: we have a double-bubble economy in housing and stocks, and a third difficult-to-chart bubble in greed, euphoria and credulity.
Feast your eyes on Housing Bubble #2, a.k.a. the Echo Bubble:
Here’s the S&P 500 stock index (SPX): no bubble here, we’re told, just a typical 9-year long Bull Market that has soared from a low in 2009 of 666 to a recent high of 2802 in January of this year:
Here’s a view of the same bubble in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA):
Is anyone actually dumb enough not to recognize these are bubbles? Of course not. Those proclaiming that “these bubbles are not bubbles” know full well they’re bubbles, but their livelihoods depend on public denial of this reality.
And so we’re inundated with justifications of bubble valuations, neatly bound with statistical mumbo-jumbo: forward earnings (better every day in every way!), P-E expansion, and all the rest of the usual blather that’s spewed by status quo commentators and fund managers at the top of every bubble.
The problem with bubbles is they always pop. The market runs out of Greater Fools and/or creditworthy borrowers, and so sellers overwhelm the thinning ranks of buyers.
Those dancing euphorically, expecting the music will never stop, are caught off guard (despite their confidence that they are far too clever to be caught by surprise), and the panic-driven crowd clogs the narrow exit, leaving a ballroom of bag-holders to absorb the losses.
The other problem with bubbles is that we’ve become dependent on them as props holding up a rotten, corrupt status quo. Since the economy can no longer generate sufficient prosperity to go around via actual increases in productivity and efficiency, those skimming most of the gains rely on “the wealth effect” generated by expanding asset bubbles to create a dreamy illusion of prosperity.
Here’s the third consequence of bubbles: the gains flow to the very top of the wealth-power pyramid: there is no other possible output of the bubble, since roughly 80% of all assets are owned by the top tier of households, and the majority of financial assets are owned by the top .1% (one-tenth of one percent).