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If somebody could explain it to me I would be pleased to learn something.
If you print enough money then inflation follows no ifs no buts..
but inflation will absolutely be part of the picture.
If you print enough money then inflation follows no ifs no buts.
What is holding the show up at the moment is the amount of de-leveraging going on which causes a deflationary environment.
What I think most people miss is the current shenanigans has never been attempted on this scale before.............ever, what the end game is I don't think anyone really knows but inflation will absolutely be part of the picture.
Agreed. Plus sentiment. You need people to "borrow/invest" this money and for it to flow through.
I’m a bit thick – could somebody please explain this money printing concept discussed in this thread.
All I can see is sovereigns increasing their balance sheet to offset private balance sheet shrinkage but lack of velocity is making the job difficult even at near / actual negative real interest rates, a sign of deflation risk rather than inflation.
At no stage has any sovereign (Zimbabwe excluded) printed without a corresponding commitment to repay at some stage so I see no lack of tools for containing inflation if/when velocity does pick up.
The real money creation enabler occurred prior to the GFC and was a result of trade imbalances and manipulation of some currencies causing major run ups in those countries foreign reserves and in turn funding lower than appropriate interest rates in an optimistic period. – That all seems to be currently and continuing to unwind.
It’s not just my understanding of capital creation that is at odds with the printing press story; the actual statistics don’t compute either.
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If somebody could explain it to me I would be pleased to learn something.
I’ve concluded there is little to gain arguing on the one hand with a guy who turns rabid whenever someone contradicts him, even in a friendly way; and on the other, with a preening narcissist who comes to argumentation in the same state of sexual arousal that Jeffrey Dahmer must have experienced hovering over the fresh corpses of teenage boys. These guys are bad news, as lacking in civility and manners as buzzards in a scrum, and you’d do well to avoid them both. You might try tuning instead to the hyperinflation arguments of Steve Saville, Peter Schiff and a few others who seem less concerned with trouncing, slicing and dicing opponents than with presenting facts that might better prepare you for the financial crisis ahead. The very best of them, in my opinion, is FOFOA blogspot, where the essays are erudite, the discussion elevated and the arguments as knowledgeable as any you will find on the web.
Which is craft's point. They're not printing money they're swapping longer dated debt for cash. They haven't increased the money base.
If you print enough money then inflation follows no ifs no buts.
What is holding the show up at the moment is the amount of de-leveraging going on which causes a deflationary environment.
What I think most people miss is the current shenanigans has never been attempted on this scale before.............ever, what the end game is I don't think anyone really knows but inflation will absolutely be part of the picture.
Just following on from the more general economic discussion and Craft's comments and the responses...
The amount of money/money creation isn't really an issue until there is inflation. At the moment the developed economies are fighting off deflation, and as Craft mentioned, due the lack of credit growth in the private sector and general lack of confidence and aversion to risk. A question...
Will central banks (namely the US Fed) take the necessary action to soak up the money when inflation risks rise? There is some risk here because "now" is never a good time to start contractionary policy. Why was Alan Greenspan so loved (despite the fact that he was an intellectual, simpleton admirer of Ann Rand)?
Regulation of the finance sector is just as important as the inevitably ill-timed, ill-conceived, bubble-forming, capital misallocating, interferences of central banks. The US Fed's role since 1974 has been to prop up a monumental social and economic dystopia, characterised by the Vietnam War, that has only grown more monstrous since then. The greater folly has been the abandonment of any morality let alone an environment for orderly market conduct in global financial markets.
The issue of public sector indebtedness for developed world countries (mixed with aging and in many cases, shrinking, population time-bombs) is something that is going to, over the long run, accelerate the transfer of economic growth and prosperity away from declining developed nations toward the developing nations. Something I take great heart in.
But for now, I just want to know what market the next bubble is going to manifest itself in so I can hitch a ride. It's been thirteen years since the US stock market has been in the money (in nominal terms) - maybe its due? Personally, I suspect the next big rally is another three or four years off.
The amount of money/money creation isn't really an issue until there is inflation. At the moment the developed economies are fighting off deflation, and as Craft mentioned, due the lack of credit growth in the private sector and general lack of confidence and aversion to risk. A question...
Will central banks (namely the US Fed) take the necessary action to soak up the money when inflation risks rise? There is some risk here because "now" is never a good time to start contractionary policy. Why was Alan Greenspan so loved (despite the fact that he was an intellectual, simpleton admirer of Ann Rand)?
Regulation of the finance sector is just as important as the inevitably ill-timed, ill-conceived, bubble-forming, capital misallocating, interferences of central banks. The US Fed's role since 1974 has been to prop up a monumental social and economic dystopia, characterised by the Vietnam War, that has only grown more monstrous since then. The greater folly has been the abandonment of any morality let alone an environment for orderly market conduct in global financial markets.
The issue of public sector indebtedness for developed world countries (mixed with aging and in many cases, shrinking, population time-bombs) is something that is going to, over the long run, accelerate the transfer of economic growth and prosperity away from declining developed nations toward the developing nations. Something I take great heart in.
But for now, I just want to know what market the next bubble is going to manifest itself in so I can hitch a ride. It's been thirteen years since the US stock market has been in the money (in nominal terms) - maybe its due? Personally, I suspect the next big rally is another three or four years off.
I have read several posts now with comments like "have plenty of cash on the sidelines, waiting for investment". Not only are there a lot of individuals with cash waiting for deployment also the banks are flush with funds too. They have been dropping interest rates for investors dramatically and have no interest in looking after their customer base, you could say "if you don't like our rates there's the door".
It has to go somewhere. I mean why invest in cash for 4% or 3% in a super fund? Could real estate get a boost out of this surplus cash? KurwaJegoMac was on to something when he mentioned inflation, where is all this "cash on the sidelines" going to go? Saw an advert tonight from RAMS homeloans, I am pretty sure it said you can buy a home with a 5% deposit, I haven't seen ads like that for a while. (Just to cover my a**e, if that is incorrect I apologise.)
So where will it all end up?
In the short term the winners will be:
• People who are renting
• People have small mortgagees
And anyone looking for an investment property?
Locality dependent again, but houses attracting 300 a week are going for under 250k in Brisbane's west. With the recent floods, 220 and 230 a week are being talked about for 12 month leases.
Iza
There needs to be bunch of people in competition with each other, all with loads of cash, wanting to buy property to drive prices higher.
Does this sound possible in today's financial climate.
They have been dropping interest rates for investors dramatically and have no interest in looking after their customer base, you could say "if you don't like our rates there's the door".
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