Too Busy Frontrunning Inflation, Nobody Sees the Deflationary Tsunami
March 8, 2021
Those looking up from their "free fish!" frolicking will see the tsunami too late to save
themselves.
It's an amazing sight to see the water recede from the bay, and watch the crowd frolic in the
shallows, scooping up the flopping fish. In this case, the crowd doing the
"so easy to catch, why not grab as much as we can?" scooping is frontrunning inflation, the
universally expected result of the Great Reflation Trade.
You know the Great Reflation Trade: the world has saved up trillions, governments are
spending trillions, it's going to be the greatest boom since the stone masons partied at the
Great Pyramid in Giza. It's so obvious that everyone has jumped in the water to scoop up all
the free fish (i.e. stock market gains). Only an idiot would hesitate to frontrun the
Great Reflation's guaranteed inflation.
Unless, of course, what we really have is a tale of reflation, told by an idiot,
full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. Everyone frolicking in the shallows scooping
up the obvious, easy, guaranteed gains is so busy frontrunning inflation that nobody sees the
tsunami rushing in to extinguish the short-sighted frolickers.
(
When Does This Travesty of a Mockery of a Sham Finally Implode? 3/3/21)
Gordon Long and I discuss
The Deflationary Tsunami racing toward the frolickers in a new video program.
It's not that there aren't inflationary dynamics in play; there are. The issue is that
not all the dynamics in play are inflationary, and the deflationary dynamics have been
building for the past two decades.
Funny things happen when we substitute debt for earnings and speculation for productive
investment. That's what America has done for the past two decades: as wages stagnated for
the bottom 95%, we've inflated speculative bubbles in everything to generate the illusion that
we have "wealth" that we can borrow against, and then use all that "free money" (free fish!)
to consume and speculate in all the shallow safe waters created by interest rates falling
decade after decade, making it ever cheaper to borrow, buy and blow speculative bubbles.
Here's an example of the dynamics near-zero yields and interest rates have unleashed:
in the frenzy of ever-lower rates, one crazed frolicker buys a $200,000 house for $500,000.
Suddenly every homeowner in the neighborhood has $300,000 in "free money" to borrow and blow--
free fish! It would be crazy not to scoop some of that "free money," so homeowners refinance
at low rates and extract the "free money" created by the speculative bubble powered by declining
rates.
So what if your earnings buy less every year--there's "free money" galore--you just have to
borrow it. And never mind value--what's value other than what some frolicker will pay?
What new utility or productivity was created when the $200,000 house was revalued at $500,000?
None. How about the commercial building that went from $2 million to $5 million? None. Or the
stock with phantom fantasies instead of actual profits that went from $2 to $20?
A few problems arise from all this frolicking with the "free money" created by
declining rates and speculative manias. One is that rates/yields have hit zero and are starting to
rise. It's fun to imagine rates sliding into negative territory, but banks can't really afford
to pay us $1,000 a month to borrow money from them. I know it's hard to imagine, but the banks
need us to pay them interest and principal.
That interest and principal piles up, even at near-zero rates. Combine stagnating wages
that buy fewer goods and services every year with ever-higher debt loads and monthly payments,
and then add in higher taxes, and presto, we end up with insolvent households and enterprises
that must borrow more to stay afloat. If they can't borrow more, they default.
Those that can't borrow more can't spend, and that's a problem because the entire economy depends
on everyone borrowing and spending more every year. i.e. "growth."
Just as new loans create money, defaults send money to money heaven. When loans
are paid off or written off due to default, the money supply shrinks. That is deflationary.
When discretionary spending dries up, that's deflationary. When the free fish of speculative
phantom wealth created by bubbles run out, that's deflationary.
It was fun to frolic in the fantasy that we could borrow our way to prosperity on
the phantom collateral of speculative bubbles, but that's not sustainable. The wealth
conjured by zero rates inflating speculative bubbles is illusory. Real wealth requires sustained
increases in productivity that are widely distributed to wage earners. Anything other than that
is illusion destined for a messy, shattering destruction.
Speculative bubbles pop. All phantom wealth vanishes back into the air it emerged
from. Insolvent borrowers counting on ever lower rates of interest and ever higher valuations
default. Lenders who leveraged up to loan gobs of "free money" to uncreditworthy borrowers
will be destroyed by the monumental write-offs of uncollectible debts based on phantom valuations.
Those looking up from their "free fish!" frolicking will see the tsunami too late to save
themselves. None of the frolickers will be able to outrun the tsunami or avoid being crushed
as it sweeps all the debris of a speculative mania into the flooded ruins beyond the shoreline.
There's much more in our 53-minute presentation,
The Coming Deflationary Tsunami:
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