Doug
Wakefield
“To combat the economic fallout caused by the credit crisis (07-08),
countries have allowed their fiscal deficits to increase dramatically. In order
to pay the bills, governments had to sell enormous amounts of bonds. As more
and more investors stopped buying these government bonds, central banks needed
to step up to the plate. By turning on the (digital) printing presses, they
have been buying up bad debts and government bonds to a total of $10 trillion
worldwide, between 2008 and 2013. Economists describe this process as the
monetization of debt by central banks. Economic textbooks refer to this process
as ‘the nuclear option’ – only to be used when no other method of financing can
be applied effectively. This is a process that is easy to start, but almost
impossible to stop.”
[The
Big Reset: Gold Wars and the Financial Endgame (2014), Willem Middlekoop,
pg 11 of 250, Kindle Edition]
[Source
– 10 Years of ‘Why
Sell Now?”, Dec 11 ‘14]
We
get up in the morning, take a shower, grab something to eat, and head to work.
In the evening, we may run by the store to restock the fridge, before watching
a digital movie, or chatting on FB. The weekend comes, and the bills need to be
paid. We check off the household projects and chores.
Life
is lived out in hundreds of millions of lives as though only “surprises” alter
our day-to-day life. What we experience is real, and what we hear on the
news that is scary has become nothing but noise. Turn if off, and it does not
exist.
The
common theme across the financial world has become that WE are the center of
our goals and dreams, not current events or history. With the “assistance” of
the “nuclear option”, we need not be informed or consider risk, especially at
the system level. Someone is “always”
making certain stocks don’t decline much anymore.
For
those watching this drama since it was first rolled out in 2009 as “the rescue
plan”, Middlekoop’s comments are very well understood. There is no question
that the “nuclear” option has been used worldwide. Debt levels are staggering.
However,
every idea that starts to haunt us with the reality that those staggering debt
levels might someday have serious consequences on this new “road to riches”
scheme, has been quickly quashed with a new “all time high” headline.
Yesterday, on April 23, 2015, it was the NASDAQ Composite, which closed at
5,056. What could be more convincing than the REAL experience from being with
“the crowd” and watching markets leap to make new records!
Those
scary headlines; just noise.
“Greece Facing ‘Lehman’ Moment, As Debt
Cost Soar, CNBC, April 21, ‘15
US
Growth Forecast Dropped To Zero, 24/7 Wall Street, April 3 ‘15
China Debt Spikes By More Than A Third,
CNBC, April, April 24, ‘15
Wall
Street Declines As Worries About Earnings Deepens, Reuters, Apr 13 ‘15
Those
complicated charts from professional traders have no purpose when “the bottom
line” is all one needs to know.
“Too Many Zeros”: China Stock Bubble Proves Too Much for Computers, Apr 20
However,
if we step away from the most intervened markets in history, we start to see
some simple things that should alter our perspective as we look at the NASDAQ
Composite’s record on April 23, 2015.
On
March 10, 2000, the NASDAQ Composite closed at an all time high of 5,048. On
October 9, 2002 it closed at 1,114. The decline of 78% drop in a major US
equity market had not taken place since the Great Depression. 2000-2002 changed
the experience of the crowd.
Easy
To Create a Bubble, Impossible To Stop Its Consequences
Yesterday, a colleague of mine sent me
the following charts.
[Source – Matt McCracken, CTA, McCracken and Co., April 23 ‘15]
For those with no background in
technical analysis, these charts may look like nothing more than colorful
lines. For those who understand technical analysis, operational levels in the
futures markets, and crowds, you understand that these two trends, combined
with the largest global stock and bond bubble on record, are evidence that a change of direction will
NOT be a surprise. This is not just for the NASDAQ Composite, but for
currencies, metals, bonds, and volatility. The long trends of “all gains, no
pains” or “no gains, all pain” these last few years, is pushing hard toward a
major shift.
With the largest exposure in dollar and
euro futures on record in March by the commercial hedgers, and as of April 23rd,
the VIX closing below its 13 level for 8 of the last 10 days (extreme
complacency and feeding stock mania levels) and in a descending wedge, one’s
experience seems extremely likely to change dramatically in the very near
future.
The “Nuclear Debt Option” Is Good For
Our Wealth, Right?
Between
the first year of operation for the Federal Reserve in 1914 until July 19, 2007, the
Federal Reserve’s balance sheet grew from zero to $853 billion.
On
Friday, July 19, 2007, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average, the most watched stock indicator in the world, closed
for the first time in its history above 14,000.
If
history could have stopped on that day in July 2007, the largest financial
collapse in history would never have taken place. There would have been no Bear
Stearns collapse, no Lehman’s bankruptcy, no nationalization of AIG, Fannie, or
Freddie. There would have never been a $60 trillion loss in global wealth, or
initial
$700 billion bailout for the global financial institutions, leading to the
first ever, zero
interest rate policy by the Federal Reserve, which began on December 16, 2008
and remains in place today, over six and a half years later.
If
there is even the slightest doubt in your mind that these numbers, dates, or
events took place, please click the links in this article. All of this is our
history.
Now
we leap to more recent data as of April 23, 2015.
As
pointed out already in the December 10th chart of the Dow above, by
December 5, 2014, the Dow had already climbed more in 69 months from its March
2009 low than it did during the 238 months between its low in 1980 to its high
in 2000. Like breaking the 14,000 level
in July 2007, it came within inches of breaking its 18,000 level on December 5,
2014. By the end of December, it had achieved that objective.
Now
look back at the opening of this article. The chart by the Federal Reserve reveals
the total assets owned by all Federal Reserve Banks as of tax day, April 15,
2015. It is clear, that something very dramatic changed in the role of the
Federal Reserve in 2008. 2008 had not merely been a bear market, but a year
that changed the very nature of the Federal Reserve, and would go on to change
the role of central banks worldwide. This was clearly a new frontier, not a
return to “normal”.
From
the use of the “nuclear option” – going into hyper over drive printing up debt
to buy assets off the balance sheets of the banks and from the markets – the
Federal Reserve’s three quantitative easing programs managed to explode the
amount of assets the Federal Reserve now held on their own balance sheet…
something never seen in its 101 years of existence other than the period since
2008. By artificially inflating asset values through flooding the system with
the cheapest money ever in American history, the balance sheet
of the Federal Reserve rose to $4,446 billion by December 4, 2014.
As
of April 23, 2015, just shy of 5 months since the Dow came within 9 points of
reaching 18,000 for the very first time, the Dow closed at 18,058 as shown in
the second chart of the Dow at the opening of this article, and the April 23, 2015
balance sheet of the Federal Reserve stood at $4,447.
So
what does the math tell us about the actions of the Dow, and its correlation
with the Fed’s balance sheet since QE III ended last October?
On
December 5, 2014 the Dow closed at 17,991. On April 22, 2015, the Dow closed at
18,058. This is a gain of 67 points (.37%) over almost 5 months.
On
December 4, 2014 the balance sheet of the Federal Reserve stood at $4,446
billion. On April 23, 2015, it stood at $4,447 billion. This is a gain of $1
billion (.02%) over the same timeframe.
So
what conclusion can be drawn?
The
Federal Reserve, the highest authority in the financial/political establishment
in the U.S., is running out of time to convince the public that with QEIII shut
down that the U.S. is on the mend, and by June, they will start raising
interest rates, since 6 years of zero interest money is no longer needed.
While
the headlines may appear as though raising interest rates on the largest debt
bubble on record is merely a heated topic for debate for academic types, the
reality of the global debt markets make it absolutely clear this is not the
case.
The
Economy Has Given the Fed and ‘Epic, Historic Window’ to Raise Rates, Business Insider, April 12, 2015
Why The Fed May Almost Never Raise Interest Rates, Washington Times,
April
21, 2015
Half
of All Sovereign Bonds Now Carry Negative Yields, Bonner and Partners, April 22, 2015
Central
bankers took the nuclear option because it was the easier of two options in
2009. We kicked the problems created by cheap money, poor collateral, and wild
speculation down the road….by fostering more cheap money, poor collateral and
wild speculation.
Anyone
listening to some of the biggest names in the world of finance very recently,
knows that THEY are very aware that another crisis is inevitable and yes,
trends do come to an end Virginia.
I
know this is past the 5 minute reading limit, but with so much at stake, take
another couple of minutes and read the comments made by the four men
below, whose experience has placed them
at the highest national, and frankly international, levels of finance. See if
you see a pattern.
The answer is I don't know. I think,
increasingly, they are discomforted. More than anything else I think it's not
just the ex central bankers but increasingly the people that are still holding
the levers. They are starting to ask whether they have somehow been backed into
a place where they don't really want to be. Now, I agree with you, Sean, that
there's an element in everybody, although some more than others, where they're
glad to be looked upon as the saviours of the day. But I rather sense that an
increasingly large number of central banks are actually looking at what is
going on and saying "We are being asked to do something that is
effectively impossible." In a nutshell, most central bankers know that our
economies do not face a liquidity problem but a solvency problem linked to
excessive debt accumulation. If it's a solvency problem, central banks can't
fix it. The only way they can fix it is by inflation which, with the debt
levels being the way they are, could very quickly get out of hand.
[The Road to Nowhere,
An Interview with William White, Part I, Hindesight Letters, March 2015, pg
5]
Finally, lest anyone take comfort that drowning the nation with a
fourth QE is coming from the Federal Reserve, I would have them look at the
size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet (as of April 23, 2015, standing at
$4,447 billion), and consider these words from James Rickards, who has served
as an advisor on global economics and systemic financial threats with the
Department of Defense and the U.S. intelligence community:
“In continuing
to print money to subdue deflation, the Fed may reach the political limits of
printing, perhaps when its balance sheet passes $5 trillion, or when it is
rendered insolvent on a mark-to-market basis.” [The Death
of Money: The Coming Collapse of the International Monetary System (2014)
James Rickards, pg 10 of 356, Kindle Edition]
The
big shift from longs to shorts and shorts to longs continues to rumble, a
warning that continues to grow louder with each passing week now.
Click here to start the next
six months reading the newsletters and trading reports as we come through
this incredible year.
With
the NASDAQ Composite finally breaking its March 10, 2000 high on Thursday,
April 23, 2015, I really cannot think of a better time to benefit from
independent, contrarian research.
Check
out Living2024. It is my personal
blog, not business. I wanted to have a place to write some deeper stories about
where this entire drama seems to be taking us all. Check out my latest post, When Water Goes,
Life Changes. .
Doug
Wakefield
President
Best Minds Inc. a Registered Investment
Advisor
1104
Indian Ridge
Denton,
Texas 76205
Phone
- (940) 591 - 3000
Best Minds, Inc is a registered investment advisor that
looks to the best minds in the world of finance and economics to seek a
direction for our clients. To be a true advocate to our clients, we have found
it necessary to go well beyond the norms in financial planning today. We are
avid readers. In our study of the markets, we research general history,
financial and economic history, fundamental and technical analysis, and mass
and individual psychology.