www.zerohedge.com
Authored by Alt-Market's Brandon Smith via Birch Gold Group,
Trillions of dollars in uncontrolled central bank stimulus
and years of artificially low interest rates have poisoned every aspect
of our financial system. Nothing functions as it used to. In
fact, many markets actually move in the exact opposite manner as they
did before the debt crisis began in 2008. The most obvious example has
been stocks, which have enjoyed the most historic bull market ever
despite all fundamental data being contrary to a healthy economy.
With a so far endless supply of cheap fiat from the Federal Reserve
(among other central banks), as well as near zero interest overnight
loans, everyone in the economic world was wondering where all the cash
was flowing to. It certainly wasn’t going into the pockets of the
average citizen. Instead, we find that the real benefactors of central
bank support has been the already mega-rich as the wealth gap widens
beyond all reason. Furthermore, it is clear that central bank
stimulus is the primary culprit behind the magical equities rally that
SEEMS to be invincible.
To illustrate this correlation, one can compare the rise of the Fed’s
balance sheet to the rise of the S&P 500 and see they match up
almost exactly. Coincidence? I think not…
Another strangely behaving market factor that has gone mostly unnoticed has been the Dollar index
(DXY). Beginning after the global financial crisis in 2008, the
dollar’s value in reference to other foreign currencies initially moved
in a rather predictable manner; collapsing in the face of unprecedented
bailout and stimulus programs by the Fed, which required unlimited fiat
creation from thin air. Naturally, commodities responded to fill the
void in wealth protection and exploded in price. Oil markets in
particular, which are priced only in the US dollar (something that is
quickly changing today), nearly quadrupled. Gold witnessed a historic
run, edging toward $2,000.
In the past few years, central banks have initiated a coordinated tightening policy,
first by tapering QE, then raising interest rates, and now by
decreasing their balance sheets. I would note that while oil and many
other commodities plummeted in relative value to the dollar after
tightening measures, gold has actually maintained a strong market
presence, and has remained one of the best performing investments in
recent years.
Something rather odd, however, has been happening with the dollar…
Normally, Fed tightening policies should cause an ever-increasing boost to the dollar index. Instead, the dollar is facing a swift plunge not seen since 2003.
What is going on here? Well, there are a number of factors at play.
First, we have a growing international sentiment against US
treasury bonds (debt), which may be affecting overall demand for the
dollar, and in turn, dollar value. For example, one can see a
relatively steady decline in US treasury holdings by Japan and China
over the course of 2016, with China being the most aggressive in its
move away from US debt:
We also have a subtle, yet increasing, international appetite for an alternative world reserve currency. The
dollar has enjoyed decades of protection from the effects of fiat
printing as the world reserve, but numerous countries including Russia,
China, and Saudi Arabia are moving to bilateral trade agreements which
cut out the US dollar as a mechanism. This will eventually trigger an
avalanche of dollars flooding into the US from overseas, as they are no
longer needed to execute cross-border trade. And, in turn the dollar will continue to fall in relative value to other currencies.
There is also the issue of coordinated fiscal tightening by
central banks around the world, with the ECB and even Japan moving to
cut off stimulus measures and QE. What this means is, other
currencies will now be appreciating in terms of Forex market value
against the dollar, and in turn, the dollar index will decline further.
Unless the Federal Reserve acts more aggressively in its interest rate
hikes, the dollar's decline will be brutal.
Finally, we also have the issue of nearly a decade of Fed
stimulus that has gone without audit (except for the limited TARP audit,
which shows tens of trillions in money/debt creation). We
truly have no idea how much fiat was actually created by the Fed – but
we can guess that it was a massive sum according to the seemingly
endless rise in equities from a point of near total breakdown, funded by
quantitative easing and stock buybacks. You cannot conjure a market
rebound merely with debt. Eventually, that currency creation and the
consequences will have to set a foot down somewhere, and it is possible
that we are witnessing the results first in the dollar, as well as the Treasury yield curve, which is now flattening faster than it did just before the stock market crash in 2008.
A flat yield curve is generally a portent of economic recession.
I believe that this is just the beginning of troubles for the dollar and for US bonds.
Which raises the question, how will the Fed react to a dollar market
that is so far completely ignoring their tightening policies?
Here is where things get interesting.
Throughout 2017, I warned that the Fed would continue to raise
interest rates (despite many people arguing to the contrary) and would
eventually find an excuse to increase rates much faster than previously
stated in their dot plots. I based this prediction on the fact that the
Fed is clearly moving to pop the enormous fiscal bubble it has
engineered since 2008, and that they plan do this while Donald Trump is
in office (whether or not Trump is aware of this plan is hard to say). Trump
has already taken credit on several occasions for the epic stock rally,
and thus, when the plug is pulled on equities life support, who do you
think will get the blame? Definitely not the banking elites who inflated the bubble in the first place.
Even the mainstream financial media has admitted
at times that Trump will “regret” his campaign demands that the Fed
hike rates and stop pumping up stock markets, as he will be inheriting a
fiscal punch in the gut.
The Fed, as well as the mainstream, have also planted the notion that the Fed “will be forced” to raise interest rates faster if the Trump Administration pursues its plans for Hoover-style infrastructure development.
But, on top of this, the “problem” of the falling dollar also
introduces a whole new rationale for speedy interest rate hikes. I
believe that soon after Janet Yellen leaves as Fed chair and Jerome
Powell transitions in, the Fed will begin an exponential increase in
rates and will speed up their balance sheet reductions. And, they will
blame the unusual decline in the dollar index as well as falling
Treasury demand as the cause for more extreme action.
Powell has already backed “gradual rate hikes”
in 2018, and, a few members of the Fed expressed a need for “faster
hikes” in the minutes of the last meeting in December. I predict this
sentiment will expand under Powell.
A small number of Wall Street economists are also warning of more rate hikes in 2018, and that this could cause considerable shock to the virtual stock rally in play right now.
That might be the Fed’s plan. The central bankers need a scapegoat
for the eventual bursting of the market bubble that they have produced.
Why not simply allow that bubble to finally implode in the near term,
blaming the Trump administration and, by extension, all the
conservatives that supported him? To do this, the Fed needs an excuse to
hike rates swiftly; and they now have that excuse with the dollar
dropping like a stone (among other reasons).
But how will this affect gold?
So far, gold has actually spiked along with Fed rate
increases, which might seem counter intuitive, but so is the dollar
falling along with rate increases.
I do think that there will be an initial and marginal drop in gold
prices if the Fed increases the frequency of rate hakes. That said,
eventually reality will set into stock markets that the party is over,
the punch bowl is being taken away, and Trump’s tax reform will not be
enough to offset the loss of access to trillions in cheap fiat dollars
from the central bank.
Once stocks begin to collapse in the wake of Fed hikes and
balance sheet reductions (and they will), and uncertainty in the fate of
the dollar swells, gold will bounce back stronger than ever. In the meantime, I would treat any drop in precious metals as a major buying opportunity. Gold is one of the few assets that always does well during times of crisis.
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