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Inflation
and Deflation
By
Gary Tanashian
Biiwii.com
Biiwii.blogspot.com March
22, 2009
Excerpted
from the March 21 edition of Notes
From the Rabbit Hole
“To
provide greater support to mortgage lending and housing markets, the
Committee decided today to increase the size of the Federal
Reserve’s balance sheet further by purchasing up to an additional
$750 billion of agency mortgage-backed securities, bringing its
total purchases of these securities to up to $1.25 trillion this
year, and to increase its purchases of agency debt this year by up
to $100 billion to a total of up to $200 billion. Moreover, to
help improve conditions in private credit markets, the Committee
decided to purchase up to $300 billion of longer-term Treasury
securities over the next six months.” –US Federal Reserve
Statement, March 18, 2009
Let the
printing begin, or more accurately, continue in ever more
intense fashion.
The Fed has
chosen the ‘nuclear option’, which of course carries as much
‘all or nothing’ risk as the garden variety call or put option
held to expiry on an equity. In
this case however, the equity we are talking about is that of the
United States’ standing in the world, and this equity (one
definition: the
monetary value of a property or business beyond any amounts owed on
it in mortgages, claims, liens, etc.) is by definition zero, or well
below zero considering the massive liabilities attached.
The only
reason that the United States is able to maintain the illusion of
solvency is because it is merely one insolvent inflator among many,
and it has been the top global dog for so many decades – again,
the collective mindset still exists in yesterday, and as such, we
pursue policy that has been in effect since the creation of the
Federal Reserve. We
pursue inflationary policy, only this time it is the inflationary
policy of incestuously buying up and monetizing our own debt.
Now, I want
NFTRH to go beyond the inflation-deflation debate, where proponents
on either side fixate on prices.
We will instead look at the massive monetary fire hose set on
auto pump (new debt) and the equally massive deflationary
destruction of existing debt. Inflation
and deflation; one cannot exist without the other. You could look at this as a sort of insane balance sheet.
Government has limitless ability to print money and as long
as it is the popular thing to do (inflation expectations are not
even on radar) they have the backing of the citizenry, and the ever
more absurd cycles are not likely to end until the majority of
people wake up to the idea that monetary policy has long
since replaced money and that it is this policy that has
prompted ever more intense boom and bust cycles.
Here is a
look at the True Money Supply, compliments of http://www.mises.org:
Per
mises.org: The
True Money Supply (TMS) was formulated by Murray Rothbard and
represents the amount of money in the economy that is available for
immediate use in exchange. It has been referred to in the past as
the Austrian Money Supply, the Rothbard Money Supply and the True
Money Supply. The benefits of TMS over conventional measures
calculated by the Federal Reserve are that it counts only
immediately available money for exchange and does not double count.
MMMF shares are excluded from TMS precisely because they represent
equity shares in a portfolio of highly liquid, short-term
investments which must be sold in exchange for money before such
shares can be redeemed. For a detailed description and explanation
of the TMS aggregate, see Salerno
(1987) and Shostak
(2000). The TMS consists of the following: Currency Component of
M1, Total Checkable Deposits, Savings Deposits, U.S. Government
Demand Deposits and Note Balances, Demand Deposits Due to Foreign
Commercial Banks, and Demand Deposits Due to Foreign Official
Institutions.
The rising
TMS is the starting point. Now
consider that the Fed is getting up into the $Trillions in
liabilities following Ben Bernanke’s theories on battling
deflation, and there is no doubt that we are inflating.
But we are deflating as well.
Money is growing exponentially to try to meet the debts that
grew exponentially for decades under the guise of a supposedly sound
monetary system. Money
supply is rising and this money will find its way into the most
precious of assets even as the deflation threat keeps many people
perceiving safety in cash and government debt.
What the Fed
is trying to do is instill confidence that would theoretically carry
the ball the rest of the way for the completed ‘Hail Mary’.
What they will actually do is blow another in a long line of
bubbles, and that bubble may include some commodities, but this
being a monetary event on a grand and macro scale, the most likely
bubble is… Beuller? Yes,
it will be a bubble in the ancient monetary relic from the past, at
least in its ratio to everything else, which would translate to
well, gold for the bottom lines of the companies that dig it
out of the ground. This
would all take place as the public slowly realizes how royally their
compliance to conventional wisdom has led them astray and as gold
rises in all currencies and against all other assets.
That is the
longer term. In the
short term, as you know, I have been bullish on oil and other
positively correlated (to ‘hope’ and the economy) commodities
for a several weeks now. But
this is a trade only. The
battle between inflation and deflation is likely to grind on for a
long while before it transitions into a MOAIP (mother of all
inflation problems). Maybe
as long as it takes the large, potential rising wedge in the US
dollar (shown later in the report) to play out.
Instinct is
telling me that the usual suspects – the ones who remained trapped
aboard the peak oil and energy mania straight on through the initial
deflation impulse of the last several months – are more than ready
to begin pumping commodities once again.
NFTRH is now looking ahead to targets for a top in oil,
industrial metals and most importantly, the Silver-Gold ratio, also
discussed later in the report.
Gold will likely be an underperformer for as long as the
hopeful and bullish condition – actually a resetting of sentiment
– persists.
If
you are reading this newsletter, it is likely because you are not
looking for reinforcement of popular beliefs.
You are looking for an edge of some sort, a different vantage
point. It is helpful
not to think in terms of inflation or deflation, but rather in terms
of a big picture in which the perceptions of the old world are
slated for the scrap heap as we slowly and painfully transition into
the new normalcy, while two compelling forces go head on in a battle
that is likely to one day end the very system in which they hold
sway.
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