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Bubble, Bubble Toil, and Trouble

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By Bill Bonner, Monday, 10 October 2022

YODO…you only die once. Print it out. Put it on your refrigerator. The great bubble distorted markets. It distorted the economy. It distorted politics and government. It distorted everything. It bent spoons. It curdled milk. And it left people with eternal truths that weren’t true for one minute.

YODO…you only die once. Print it out. Put it on your refrigerator.

The great bubble distorted markets. It distorted the economy. It distorted politics and government. It distorted everything. It bent spoons. It curdled milk. And it left people with eternal truths that weren’t true for one minute.

Almost everything was weirded through the bubble prism. Money appeared to be almost unlimited…stocks always went up…the feds could spend billions…or even trillions…on any goofy project they wanted…and the US — financed by its fake money — ruled the world.

YOLO, you only live once, was the prevailing zeitgeist. You had to take advantage of this once-in-a-lifetime fantasy world: get it while the gittin’ was good.

The young, restless, and reckless bought cryptos or ‘the next Apple’ or ‘the next Google’ or the next something.

Older, more cautious investors followed Warren Buffett. They thought they could buy-and-hold their way to wealth. They were in ‘stocks for the long run’, expecting to make money simply because they were wise enough to stay ‘in the market’.

All for naught

Both young and old, aggressive and cautious, were wrong. Over time, stocks don’t become more valuable. What really happens is that money becomes less valuable, making higher stock prices look better. In terms of real money, gold, prices are about where they were in the boom of the 1920s — a century ago. You could have bought the 30 Dow stocks in 1929 for 18 ounces of gold. And what are the Dow stocks worth today? About 18 ounces of gold. 90 years later…no gain. All of that hullabaloo — the Crash of ‘29…the Great Depression…the Second World War…the Nifty Fifty…the Oil Shock…Inflation…LTCM…Ben Bernanke…the COVID Panic — for nothing.

But in the dreamtime of the Bubble Epoch, the Fed was pumping in money…and the yachts were rising.

Our message today: the gittin’ ain’t good no more. Ante-2022, every pullback in the stock market was an opportunity to ‘buy the dip’ and make money. Losses were temporary; they lasted only for a few months, the time it took for the Fed to get more money into the system. The Fed was backstopping investors for many years.

Now it’s backstabbing them. And now, when the knife goes in your back, it stays there. Because the Fed can’t bring up the ambulance, not without also bringing more inflation.

Last week, we looked at why the Fed can no longer be counted on to raise stock prices.

First, because the momentum of a recession is likely to drag stocks down anyway. A ‘pause’ by the Fed is likely to make little difference.

Second, because the Fed is famously trapped. It can continue inflating…or it can let the Bubble die. It can’t do both at the same time. A U-turn now will mark the beginning of the next phase of inflation. However much asset prices may go up, inflation is likely to cut them down even more.

Don’t think once, it’s all right

The lurid history of inflation should cause policymakers to think twice before pivoting away from inflation fighting. In France, high rates of inflation in 1787–88 led to the bloody French Revolution and the Terror. In Russia, 1917, inflation set the stage for the Bolshevik Revolution. Germany, 1921–23 led to the rise of Adolf Hitler. In Argentina, Brazil, Zimbabwe, Venezuela — there are no inflation stories with happy endings. All end in misery, poverty, war, and/or revolution.

But the elite don’t even think once. And they’re already egging the Fed on…to go back to inflating.

Here’s a typical ‘think piece’ on Substack:

‘Raising interest rates is a blunt means to fight inflation. It worsens living costs and job losses, while tax cuts mainly benefit the rich. Instead, the rich should be taxed more to enhance revenue to increase public provisioning of essential services, such as transport, health and education.’

And here’s Markets Insider dusting off a Nobel winner: ‘Nobel laureate Paul Krugman warns the Fed risks going too far in fighting inflation — and predicts a return to rock-bottom interest rates’:

‘The Nobel Prize-winning economist has also predicted an eventual return to near-zero interest rates once price increases are brought under control.’

And here’s the UN with its own high-minded thoughts. Common Dreams:

‘A United Nations organization on Monday joined critics of the U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks across the globe hiking interest rates with the goal of reining in inflation.

‘“Not only is there a real danger that the policy remedy could prove worse than the economic disease, in terms of declining wages, employment, and government revenues, but the road taken would reverse the pandemic pledges to build a more sustainable, resilient, and inclusive world,” the document warns.’

Closer to home, analysts think the recent falloff in job offerings will harm the poor and put pressure on the Fed to do its U-turn sooner rather than later. They say inflation is temporary, or that it is caused by ‘supply chain bottlenecks’ that can be solved by ‘policy changes’.

Of course, the concern for the poor is as fraudulent as the dollar itself. The poor don’t care if Amazon shares go down; what they care about is the price of milk and gasoline. And as for the policy changes, the only ones that would reduce inflation — cutting spending and regulation — are the ones the policymakers are least likely to make.

But the elite rule the world. And it is just a matter of time until they get their way.

YODO.

Stay tuned…

Regards,

Dan Denning Signature

Bill Bonner,
For The Daily Reckoning Australia

All advice is general advice and has not taken into account your personal circumstances.

Please seek independent financial advice regarding your own situation, or if in doubt about the suitability of an investment.

Bill Bonner

Bill’s Premium Subscriptions

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All advice is general in nature and has not taken into account your personal circumstances. Please seek independent financial advice regarding your own situation, or if in doubt about the suitability of an investment.

The value of any investment and the income derived from it can go down as well as up. Never invest more than you can afford to lose and keep in mind the ultimate risk is that you can lose whatever you’ve invested. While useful for detecting patterns, the past is not a guide to future performance. Some figures contained in our reports are forecasts and may not be a reliable indicator of future results. Any actual or potential gains in these reports may not include taxes, brokerage commissions, or associated fees.

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