Now, having made that loan, which scenario would you, the lender prefer:
I assure you that the last choice you would make is the hyperinflationary one.
Think about it for a minute - you loan me $100,000 for 30 years at 6% interest, but the monetary base is being increased at a far greater rate. You get your $100,000 back and your interest, but when you are done that pile of money buys far less than it did 30 years ago! You have actually lost for having lent me the money!
Now in case (1) The Banker makes an ordinary rate of return, and there is just enough monetary inflation to incentivize me (the consumer) to spend and utilize your debt-origination service. Why? Its because if I sit in cash I slowly erode my purchasing power - therefore I may as well consume.
But what about Case #2?
In that scenario I as the borrower probably default. Why? Because my wages likely go down, and yet my payments do not. The interest and principal consume ever more of my purchasing power until I simply run out of ability to pay. At that point I default on the loan and you get the collateral back, plus whatever I paid thus far.
The only scenario that you absolutely do not want as a lender is the hyperinflationary one. If you are faced with a situation that will result in either hyperinflation or deflation - where "stability" can no longer be maintained (say, for example, because there was a huge speculative credit bubble that has now popped), you will do your level damnedest to insure that deflation, not inflation, is what ensues.
But wait a second - how come our dollar has depreciated if we're not "hyperinflating"?
Well that's quite simple.
We have been outsourcing our manufacturing, effectively "burning our furniture" for years. This sounds great if you're the company that is getting jeans sewed for 15 cents/hour to sell, but in fact it sucks for the broader economy, although the "bad" isn't immediately apparent.
Let's consider what The Dollar really is - it is, in effect, a call option of zero maturity and zero expiration on the future earnings power - the GDP - of America.
Think about it - the dollar is backed by "The Full Faith and Credit" of the United States. But what is that "full faith and credit"? It is in fact the power to levy and collect taxes from the citizens of this nation.
Yet without production and earnings by consumers - which inherently is what GDP devolves down into - there is no power to tax, because there is nothing to levy taxes upon!
So we cheerlead about the "great earnings" of corporations over the last 20 years, but in fact we have offshored and outsourced our productive capacity, and our "great earnings" have been a sham - created from the misallocation of capital and degradation of our future earnings and creative power. We claim we "replaced" this manufacturing with "FIRE" service jobs, but those in fact create nothing - they simply push money around from one person to another, stealing a piece in the process.
In response to this the dollar goes down in value because long term earnings capacity, and thus tax-bearing capacity, has decreased. (It doesn't help when you promise to buy every senior citizen's drugs with the government teat.) In effect the S&P500s earnings are "stolen" from the dollar's value.
Of course this distortion cannot be maintained, because the distortions in the market that lead to these "outsize" profits, specifically FX gains, dissipate as the "offshoring" completes. Its a one-time gain, albiet over a fairly long period of time, and can't be repeated. Shifting production from China to, say, Zimbawbwe won't create a new "credit" back to the US, since there's nothing coming from here.
The era of these outsized "earnings" is essentially over as we've now "offshored" pretty much everything that we can offshore.
Don't believe for a minute that we're going to see "hyperinflation"; the metalheads have been calling for this for over fifty years, and they've been wrong for 50 years. They point to the decline in purchasing power of the dollar in the last 100 years, but in fact the annual rate of depreciation is only 1-2%; it is the power of compounding that leads to that result, and let's face it - 1-2% monetary inflation isn't "hyper" anything.
Bankers - including central bankers - are not about to allow the only thing they sell to become worthless.
What they will (and have) allowed, however, is "financial innovation" in the form of unbridled credit creation, which appears to be hyperinflation. It is, however, no such thing - because when the debt cannot be serviced it explodes in the face of the issuer, taking real wealth out in the process.
So why did they permit it? Because the bankers earned an insane amount of money through fees, and they frankly didn't care whether these products "worked" or not. It is the same incentive that mortgage brokers had to give you a "liar loan" - they made their money not off your performance on the mortgage but on the up-front fees, and sold off your loan to someone else who then bore the risk of you not paying the money back. This "originate to sell" model is profitable for the financial institutions but they do not care if you can perform or not so long as they can keep originating - and until the bubble bursts, the party goes on.
Of course human nature being what it is, eventually some of these "geniuses" started to eat their own cooking, and at that point they contaminated themselves. They saw their customers making a great return and forgot that the reason they sold these things off in the first place was that they knew damn well they would never perform in the long-term!
This of course has now "blown back" on these financial geniuses. In fact every one of them was running nothing more than a fancy Ponzi scheme, and that our regulatory authorities refused to do anything about it speaks to the utter depravity of those who are in charge of doing that regulating. The only justice is that the participants who ate their own cooking will get sick or die just as their dupes will.
There are a few people who "get it", but of course their pique is a bit late. Here's just one example:
"Americas Watchdog is demanding the the Securities & Exchange Commission & every State's Attorney General start investigating "auction rate preferred shares" & the fact that citizens in every US state were sold these extremely risky investments by a bank or stock broker as, "same as cash". Now tens of thousands of US citizens are being told by a bank or stock broker, "we don't know when you will get your money back". Why is this the biggest single case of fraud in US history? Its because the investors did not want risk, they wanted safety, and instead of that they were given an exotic risky investment device by greedy Wall Street investment houses & US banks. Why does this story deserve to be on NBC, CBS, ABC, & CNN? Its because this is by far the largest case of outright fraud in US history."
Where were you five, ten years ago? Being a "lap dog" instead of a "watch dog"? One wonders.
Maybe - just maybe - we the people will finally stand up and insist that "The Cops" do their job.
Maybe.
And maybe - just maybe - we'll see those who were duped by these "merchants" come after them with landsharks a-blazing.
After all, last time I checked Ponzi Schemes were illegal, no matter how complicated or well-disguised.
Hope springs eternal.
PS: Pending home sales down 1.9% month/over/month. Oh, and The Realtors now expect that housing will "improve" in the latter half of the year. Gee, the stupidity continues among these people, does it? Or is that yet more intentional deception?
PPS: Fed minutes are out, and we've got this:
"Indeed, some believed that a prolonged and severe economic downturn could not be ruled out given the further restriction of credit availability and ongoing weakness in the housing market"
No kidding? You mean they just figured it out?
So let me see if I get this right - pundits think we should buy stocks given this outlook eh, even given how late to the party these tards are?
Oooook - I think not.

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