Silver in China & debt saturation
9/08 China’s foreign exchange reserves fall to their lowest since 2011 – Fortune OK, so where did their pile of foreign DEBT notes get off to?
"Unlike their opposite numbers in Japan and the West the Chinese banks are not brain-dead. While they also have a large portfolio of dollar-denominated assets, they are probably fully hedged by their holdings of silver and gold. The Chinese banks don’t have to carry the ideological baggage of anti-gold mentality, so prevalent in the United States. Their financial condition is incomparably superior to that of banks in the dollar orbit."
" Their perspective on the market is entirely different from that of silver investors in the West. Their participation in the silver market is motivated by their desire to earn a return on their holding of silver in silver. "
"The difference between the Chinese banks and their Japanese and Western counterparts is that the Chinese hedge paper with metal, while the Japanese and their American mentors hedge paper with paper. "
"By now it is clear that the cause of the crisis is the banks’ inordinate portfolio of assets concentrated in debt denominated in the irredeemable dollar, unhedged by gold and silver. By contrast the Chinese banks, which also have large dollar assets, are hedged in metal. The Chinese banks are in no need of a bailout. "
http://www.24hgold.com/english/news-...ntal+E.+Fekete
"Today, this is the central bankers' final-and fatal-conundrum: Aggregate levels of debt are now so high, credit can no longer induce sufficient economy expansion to pay off or even service capitalism's constantly compounding debts.
Central bankers' efforts to revive economic growth, e.g. quantitative easing, low, zero and negative interest rates, are like pouring more and more gasoline into an already flooded engine hoping the additional gas will cause the stalled engine to go faster."
"Today, central bankers are trapped by conditions they created. It was their excessive expansion of the money supply after 1971 that lead to the speculative bubbles whose serial collapse resulted in the reawakening of deflationary forces not seen since the Great Depression.
To prevent another Great Depression, central bankers desperately tried to revive economic demand and growth by increasing the monetary base to increase the amounts of loans banks could make."
It is doubtful that the Central bankers started the Viet-Nam war or the "Great Society welfare program.
"But instead of loaning the money, banks redeposited the excess reserves (AMBSL) with central banks; and the hoped-for increase in circulating money (M1, M2, M3, etc.) and credit and debt (TCMDO)-and growth in economic activity-never occurred." No kidding. I suppose that it never occurred to them that we were already debt saturated.
".the increase in the monetary bases was not translated into growth in the money supply because banks have been reluctant to extend loans, choosing instead of accumulate reserves." The money supply increase was locked away in the bank vaults of the upper loop.
"Today, central bankers are attempting to offset the growing global deflationary riptide by 'inflation targeting', i.e. using cheap credit and inflating the monetary base to artificially induce inflationary demand. So far, deflation is winning; but should inflation gain the upper hand, hyperinflation, not inflation, will result as the monetary base is now too large to limit any inflationary surge."
That monetary base is locked away in bank vaults.
http://www.24hgold.com/english/news-...rt+Schoon&mk=1
Junk bonds are the very-risky sector of the investment world. A lot of money has poured into junk bonds by gamblers who seem to be blind to the high risk. All they look at is the proffered interest rate. Now, even that is going away.
Draghi's bubble: Negative-yielding junk bonds coming to Europe - WisdomTree Emerging Markets Corporate Bond ETF (NASDAQ:EMCB) | Seeking Alpha
9/08 China’s foreign exchange reserves fall to their lowest since 2011 – Fortune OK, so where did their pile of foreign DEBT notes get off to?
"Unlike their opposite numbers in Japan and the West the Chinese banks are not brain-dead. While they also have a large portfolio of dollar-denominated assets, they are probably fully hedged by their holdings of silver and gold. The Chinese banks don’t have to carry the ideological baggage of anti-gold mentality, so prevalent in the United States. Their financial condition is incomparably superior to that of banks in the dollar orbit."
" Their perspective on the market is entirely different from that of silver investors in the West. Their participation in the silver market is motivated by their desire to earn a return on their holding of silver in silver. "
"The difference between the Chinese banks and their Japanese and Western counterparts is that the Chinese hedge paper with metal, while the Japanese and their American mentors hedge paper with paper. "
"By now it is clear that the cause of the crisis is the banks’ inordinate portfolio of assets concentrated in debt denominated in the irredeemable dollar, unhedged by gold and silver. By contrast the Chinese banks, which also have large dollar assets, are hedged in metal. The Chinese banks are in no need of a bailout. "
http://www.24hgold.com/english/news-...ntal+E.+Fekete
"Today, this is the central bankers' final-and fatal-conundrum: Aggregate levels of debt are now so high, credit can no longer induce sufficient economy expansion to pay off or even service capitalism's constantly compounding debts.
Central bankers' efforts to revive economic growth, e.g. quantitative easing, low, zero and negative interest rates, are like pouring more and more gasoline into an already flooded engine hoping the additional gas will cause the stalled engine to go faster."
"Today, central bankers are trapped by conditions they created. It was their excessive expansion of the money supply after 1971 that lead to the speculative bubbles whose serial collapse resulted in the reawakening of deflationary forces not seen since the Great Depression.
To prevent another Great Depression, central bankers desperately tried to revive economic demand and growth by increasing the monetary base to increase the amounts of loans banks could make."
It is doubtful that the Central bankers started the Viet-Nam war or the "Great Society welfare program.
"But instead of loaning the money, banks redeposited the excess reserves (AMBSL) with central banks; and the hoped-for increase in circulating money (M1, M2, M3, etc.) and credit and debt (TCMDO)-and growth in economic activity-never occurred." No kidding. I suppose that it never occurred to them that we were already debt saturated.
".the increase in the monetary bases was not translated into growth in the money supply because banks have been reluctant to extend loans, choosing instead of accumulate reserves." The money supply increase was locked away in the bank vaults of the upper loop.
"Today, central bankers are attempting to offset the growing global deflationary riptide by 'inflation targeting', i.e. using cheap credit and inflating the monetary base to artificially induce inflationary demand. So far, deflation is winning; but should inflation gain the upper hand, hyperinflation, not inflation, will result as the monetary base is now too large to limit any inflationary surge."
That monetary base is locked away in bank vaults.
http://www.24hgold.com/english/news-...rt+Schoon&mk=1
Junk bonds are the very-risky sector of the investment world. A lot of money has poured into junk bonds by gamblers who seem to be blind to the high risk. All they look at is the proffered interest rate. Now, even that is going away.
Draghi's bubble: Negative-yielding junk bonds coming to Europe - WisdomTree Emerging Markets Corporate Bond ETF (NASDAQ:EMCB) | Seeking Alpha
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