Baby Billy said:
Heineken-Ashi said:
Baby Billy said:
Of course the market will crash. It happens all the time and the end result is always the same. Full recovery and then new highs.
Why is that always the end result?
These kinds of posts are dangerous as they assume that the economic backdrop going forward will be the same as looking back. And it won't.
Not dangerous at all actually. I said the end result is always the same, which is factually correct. I made no assumptions about the economic backdrop because it doesn't matter.
Since the end of WWII, we've gone into a recession about once every 6 years. I count 12 "official" recessions since then, each one of them for different reasons and circumstances. 87% of those months we've been in economic expansion, 13% in recessions. Over that time frame the S&P has gone from 17 at the end of 1945 to 5,300 today. These are facts.
Bolded part 1 - how does it not matter? Please explain in detail
Bolded part 2 - "Since the end of WWII". You mean the last time we had debt to GDP at levels we are today, that was caused FROM war spending and ended because of the boom that ensued with America leading a new world order, and leading the charge of world gold standard (which led to the rise of the MMT and fractional central banking and the petrodollar becoming the world reserve currency)? And we are at the same debt levels, adding $1T every 100 days, with record deficits that require new treasuries to be issued merely to pay the interest on the existing debt?
When I say the economic backdrop will not be the same going forward as it was in the past, this is exactly what I'm referring to. It will not be the same for the next 2-3 decades as it was the 2-3 decades that led to this. Because our government has to go exponentially more in debt just to pay interest on existing debt. No dent can ever possibly be made in the balance on the debt. No dent can really even be made in the deficit. The FED has a massive balance sheet that THEY DIDNT HAVE DURING ANY OTHER RECESSION OR STOCK MARKET DROP. This means that in previous drops, the treasury could issue loads of new treasuries, the FED would buy ALL OF THEM, and the FED would then loan 10x that amount of money to banks who would then loan 10x of THAT amount to the economy. This is how they "printed money".
Treasury issues $1,000. FED buys it all (demand all from one source pushing rates down). FED has to keep 10% of every dollar loaned as reserves. So that $1,000 is the reserve. They can now loan $10,000 to the banks. Banks have to keep 10% of every dollar loaned in reserves. So they can now loan $100,000. And we aren't even getting to the derivative portion of new money creation. So for every $1,000 in treasuries issued, the money supply grows by at least $100,000.
That WAS how they did it. Until Dodd Frank and 2008 (for our own good remember). Where instead of the treasury simply issuing new treasuries for the FED to buy, the FED forced the banks to GIVE THEM THEIR DEPOSITS (your money in the bank). They then went through the same process as the above, except the money wasn't from newly minted treasuries, IT WAS THE TAXPAYERS MONEY. AND IT WILL NEVER BE PAID BACK (go back to paragraph 1 to see why).
And today, the FED has a MASSIVE balance sheet, whereas before, they didn't. Times before.. they had the capacity to add treasuries to their balance sheet. If they tried today, even at lower rates of interest payback, they would BALLOON their interest payments which already account for more than the defense budget.
So what WILL happen? No matter if they try the old method or not, there is no situation that doesn't end in catastrophe. Even without the FED doing QE and adding treasuries to their balance sheet, the interest on the debt is going to continue to require new treasuries to be issued merely to pay for the interest. The secondary market (foreign governments, central banks, global businesses, you, and me) can not keep buying an ever increasing amount of treasuries and getting chump change rates of return. If they are going to have to buy more, they will start to demand a better return. This will push market interest rates up higher and higher.
The FED doesn't ever act against what the market is doing. Go look it up. The market goes up? The FED follows. Rates drop? The FED follows. Rates going up means FED rates will follow. Governments, businesses, everyone will have to refinance balances secured at lower rates into these higher rates. The only outcome of this is a STRENGTHENING dollar (its called a deleveraging), and every single thing remotely tied to debt declining in relation to it. If a stock is at $100 today with a P/E of $10 with 10yr yields at 4.4%, that same PE will be at a lower stock price with rates at 6.5%. And very likely.. the P/E itself will be lower as interest takes up a MUCH larger chunk.
How can you say the economic backdrop doesn't matter? The only way it doesn't matter is if you live in fairy tale land and think the FED can wave a magic wand. Or if you just don't understand money, banking, economics, or history and think that if you just close your eyes and keep telling yourself that "it's never happened in my lifetime" that it won't ever happen again. You are in for a rude awakening.
"H-A: In return for the flattery, can you reduce the size of your signature? It's the only part of your posts that don't add value. In its' place, just put "I'm an investing savant, and make no apologies for it", as oldarmy1 would do."
- I Bleed Maroon (distracted easily by signatures)