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Winehole23
10-11-2010, 11:39 AM
Markets Will Unravel Faster Than Expected

By Chris Martenson Oct 04, 2010 10:15 am


Peak Oil, sovereign insolvency, and currency debasement will permanently transform the economic landscape.



By my analysis, we aren't yet on the final path to recovery, and there are one or more financial "breaks" coming. Underlying structural weaknesses haven't been resolved, and the kick-the-can-down-the-road plan is going to encounter a hard wall in the not-too-distant future. When the next moment of discontinuity finally arrives, events will unfold much more rapidly than most people expect.

My work centers on figuring out which macro trends are in play and then helping people adjust accordingly. Based on trends in fiscal and monetary policy, I began advising accumulation of gold and silver in 2003 and 2004. I shorted homebuilder stocks beginning in 2006 and ending in 2008. These weren't "great" calls; they were simply spotting trends in play, one beginning and one certain to end, and then taking appropriate actions based on those trends.

We happen to live in a non-linear world, a core concept of the Crash Course (http://www.chrismartenson.com/crashcourse). But far too many people expect events to unfold in a more or less orderly manner, with plenty of time to adjust along the way. In other words, linearly. The world doesn't always cooperate, and my concern rests on the observation that we still face the convergence of multiple trends, each of which alone has the power to permanently transform our economic landscape and standards of living.

Three such trends (out of the many I track) that will shape our immediate future are:


Peak Oil
Sovereign Insolvency
Currency (http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/peak-oil-macro-economics-future-of/10/4/2010/id/30375#) Debasement


Individually, these worry me quite a bit; collectively, they have my full attention.

History suggests that instead of a nice smooth line heading either up or down, markets have a pronounced habit of jolting rather suddenly into a new orbit, either higher or lower. Social moods are steady for long periods, and then they shift. This is what we should train ourselves to expect.



No smooth lines between points A and B; instead, long periods of quiet, followed by short bursts of reformation and volatility. Periods of market equilibrium, followed by Minsky moments (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minsky_moment). In the language of the evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould, we live in a system governed by the rules of "punctuated equilibrium."

Complex Systems

Our economy is a complex system. The key feature of such systems is that they're inherently unpredictable with respect to the timing and severity of specific events. For the uninitiated, they can look enormously fragile and prone to flying apart at any minute; for the seasoned observer, there's an appreciation that the immense inertia of the economic system will almost always delay and dampen the eventual adjustments.

Like everybody else, I have no idea exactly what’s going to happen, or precisely when. Anybody who says they do know should be greeted with a furrowed brow and a frown of suspicion. I prefer to assess the risks and then take steps to mitigate those risks based on likelihood and impact.

Which means that although we can't predict the size (exactly how much) or the timing (precisely when) of economic shifts or world-changing events, we can certainly understand the risks and the dimensions of what might happen. Just as we can't predict when an avalanche will release from a steep slope, or even where or how big it will be, we can readily predict that constant snowfall coupled with the right temperature conditions will lead to an avalanche sooner or later, and more likely in this gully than that one. Given certain conditions, we might expect one that's larger or smaller than normal. Although we don't know exactly when or how much, we do know that when snow accumulates, so do the risks of more frequent and/or larger avalanches.

Such is the nature of complex systems. While inherently unpredictable, they can still be described. The most important description of any complex system is that it owes its order and complexity to the constant flow of energy through it. Complex systems require inputs. This is one way in which we can understand them.

Given this view, one easy "prediction" is that an economy (http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/peak-oil-macro-economics-future-of/10/4/2010/id/30375#) without increasing energy flows running through it will stagnate. To take this further, an economy that's being starved of energy becomes simpler in the process -- meaning fewer jobs, less items produced, and a reduced capacity to support extraneous functions.

Accepting "What Is"

The most important part of this story is getting our minds to accept reality without our passionate beliefs interfering. By "beliefs" I mean statements like these:



“Things always get better and are never as bad as they seem.”
“If Peak Oil were ‘real,’ I'd be hearing about it from my trusted sources.”
“Dwelling on the negative is self-fulfilling.”


While each of these things might be true, they also might be false and therefore misleading, especially during periods of transition. Our job is to remain as dispassionate and logical as possible.

Let's now examine more closely the three main events that are converging -- Peak Oil, sovereign insolvency, and currency debasement -- using as much logic as we can muster.

Peak Oil

Peak Oil is now a matter of open inquiry and debate at the highest levels of industry and government (http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/peak-oil-macro-economics-future-of/10/4/2010/id/30375#). Recent reports by Lloyd's of London, the US Department of Defense, the UK industry taskforce on Peak Oil, Honda (HMC (http://finance.minyanville.com/minyanville?Page=QUOTE&Ticker=HMC)), and the German military are evidence of this. But when I say “debate,” I'm not referring to disagreement over whether or not Peak Oil is real, only when it will finally arrive. The emerging consensus is that oil demand will outstrip supplies “soon,” within the next five years and maybe as soon as two. So the correct questions are no longer, "Is Peak Oil real?" and "Are governments aware?” but instead, "When will demand outstrip supply?" and “What implications does this have for me?”

It doesn't really matter when the actual peak arrives; we can leave that to the ivory-tower types and those with a bent for analytical precision. What matters is when we hit “peak exports.” My expectation is that once it becomes fashionable among nation-states to finally admit that Peak Oil is real and here to stay, one or more exporters will withhold some or all of their product "for future generations" or some other rationale (such as, "get a higher price"), which will rather suddenly create a price spiral the likes of which we haven't yet seen.

What matters is an equal mixture of actual oil availability and market perception. As soon as the scarcity meme gets going, things will change very rapidly.

In short, it's time to accept that Peak Oil is real -- and plan accordingly.


Sovereign Insolvency

Once we accept the imminent arrival of Peak Oil, then the issue of sovereign insolvency jumps into the limelight. Why? Because the hopes and dreams of the architects of the financial rescue entirely rest upon the assumption that economic growth will resume. Without additional supplies of oil, such growth won't be possible; in fact, we’ll be doing really, really well if we can prevent the economy from backsliding.

Virtually every single OECD country, due to outlandish pension and entitlement programs, has total debt and liability loads that Arnaud Mares (of Morgan Stanley) pointed out (http://www.investorsinsight.com/blogs/john_mauldins_outside_the_box/archive/2010/09/20/sovereign-subjects-ask-not-whether-governments-will-default-but-how.aspx%20) have resulted in a negative net worth for the governments of Germany, France, Portugal, the US, the UK, Spain, Ireland, and Greece. And not by just a little bit, but exceptionally so, ranging from more than 450% of GDP in the case of Germany on the "low" end to well over 1,500% of GDP for Greece.

Such shortfalls can't possibly be funded out of anything other than a very, very bright economic future. Something on the order of Industrial Age 2.0, fueled by some amazing new source of wealth. Logically, how likely is that? Even if we could magically remove the overhang of debt, what new technologies are on the horizon that could offer the prospect of a brand new economic revival of this magnitude? None that I'm aware of.

In the US, the largest capital market and borrower, even the most optimistic budget (http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/peak-oil-macro-economics-future-of/10/4/2010/id/30375?page=2#) estimates foresee another decade of crushing deficits that will grow the official deficit by some $9 trillion and the real (i.e., “accrual” or “unofficial”) deficit by perhaps another $20 trillion to $30 trillion, once we account (http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/peak-oil-macro-economics-future-of/10/4/2010/id/30375?page=2#) for growth in liabilities. This is, without question, an unsustainable trend.

It’s time to admit the obvious: Debts of these sorts can't be serviced, now or in the future. Expanding them further with fingers firmly crossed in hopes of an enormous economic boom that will bail out the system is a fool’s game. It's little different than doubling down after receiving a bad hand in poker.

The unpleasant implication of various governments going deeper into debt is that a string of sovereign defaults lies in the future. Due to their interconnected borrowings and lendings, one may topple the next like dominoes.

However, it's when we consider the impact of the widespread realization of Peak Oil on the story of growth that the whole idea of sovereign insolvency really assumes a much higher level of probability. More on that later.

For now we should accept that there's almost no chance of growing out from under these mountains of debts and other obligations. We must move our attention to the shape, timing, and the severity of the aftermath of the economic wreckage that will result from a series of sovereign defaults.

Currency Wars

We could trot out a lot of charts here, examine much of history, and make a very solid case that once a country breaches the 300% debt/liability-to-GDP ratio, there's no recovery, only a future containing some form of default (printing or outright).

Recently I wrote:


The currency wars have begun, and the implications to world stability and wealth (http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/peak-oil-macro-economics-future-of/10/4/2010/id/30375?page=2#) could not be more profound. Fortunately ... we've been predicting [it] here for some time.

When pressed, the most predictable decision in all of history is to print, print, print. So I can't take credit for a "prediction" that was just slightly bolder than "predicting" which way a dropped anvil will travel; down or up?

The only problem is, widespread currency debasements will further destabilize an already rickety global financial system (http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/peak-oil-macro-economics-future-of/10/4/2010/id/30375?page=2#) where tens of trillions of fiat dollars flow daily on the currency exchanges.
You can be nearly certain that every single country is seeking a path to a weaker relative currency. The problem is obvious: Everybody can't simultaneously have a weaker currency. Nor can everybody have a positive trade balance.

If a country or government can't grow its way out from under its obligations, then printing (a.k.a. currency debasement) takes on additional allure. It's the "easy way out" and has lots of political support in the home country. Besides the fact that it's already started, we should consider a global program of currency debasement to be a guaranteed feature of our economic future.

Conclusion

Three unsustainable trends or events have been identified here. They aren't independent, but they're interlocked to a very high degree. At present I can find no support for the idea that the economy can expand like it has in the past without increasing energy flows, especially oil. All of the indications point to Peak Oil, or at least "peak exports," happening within five years.

At that point it will become widely recognized that most sovereign debts and liabilities won't be able to be serviced by the miracle of economic growth. Pressures to ease the pain of the resulting financial turmoil and economic stagnation will grow, and currency debasement will prove to be the preferred policy tool of choice.

Instead of unfolding in a nice, linear, straightforward manner, these colliding events will happen quite rapidly and chaotically.

By mentally accepting that this proposition isn't only possible, but probable, we're free to make different choices and take actions that can preserve and protect our wealth and mitigate our risks.

What changes in our actions and investment stances are prudent if we assume that Peak Oil, sovereign insolvency, and currency debasement are "locks" for the future?

When it comes to markets riding on a flawed fundamental premise, perception is everything.

Consider that in December of 2007, the world had plenty of food, but by February of 2008, we saw food riots and the international perception of food scarcity. Almost nothing had changed with respect to the fundamental quantities of food stocks between December and February, and that's the point.

Or consider that one month Iceland was in fine shape and the next month desperately broke. Ditto for Greece. Again, there was nothing that had fundamentally changed from one month to the next, in terms of cash flows (http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/peak-oil-macro-economics-future-of/10/4/2010/id/30375?page=2#) or debt levels, that would justify the size of the adjustments, but they happened nonetheless, and they happened quickly.http://www.minyanville.com/businessmarkets/articles/peak-oil-macro-economics-future-of/10/4/2010/id/30375?page=2

ElNono
10-11-2010, 11:51 AM
That was a good read. Thanks for posting.

Winehole23
10-11-2010, 11:56 AM
Thanks for reading, ElNono. I don't take that for granted.

CosmicCowboy
10-11-2010, 01:01 PM
Excellent post, thanks. That guy GETS IT.

CosmicCowboy
10-11-2010, 01:09 PM
As more people realize the US has backed itself into the debt corner the less treasury debt they will want. The US is already replacing long term debt as it becomes due with short term debt. Our interest rate vulnerability (interest paid on the national debt) goes up exponentially when we just start rolling short term debt. What happens when Treasury finally throws an auction and nobody comes? That day is inevitably coming. 20+% interest rates and the Fed monetizing debt will follow. The dollar will turn to total shit.

boutons_deux
10-11-2010, 01:28 PM
But the Repugs and conservatives had been saying all along that everything (we do) is just fine,

deregulation,

neo-liberalism,

globalization,

what unforeseeable housing bubble?,

incessant increase in carbon energy consumption,

$Ts in botched/bullshit wars?

Repugs doubling the defict from $5T to $10T?

no problem, men, as you were, everything's going be OK



no global warming, etc, etc, It's All Good (except the Dems, they're all BAD)

Winehole23
10-11-2010, 01:31 PM
^^^mirror image of the evil GOP, with a very similar rhetorical style.

boutons_deux
10-11-2010, 02:01 PM
not at all.

Repugs are wrong on every point, I'm right.

Winehole23
10-11-2010, 02:02 PM
That makes you the mirror image.

boutons_deux
10-11-2010, 02:24 PM
The Repugs are lying, I'm not.

Winehole23
10-11-2010, 02:28 PM
You were lying when you kicked all Republicans and conservatives into the same Panglossian ditch and ascribed completely uniform views to them. Conservatism isn't a monolith, and neither is the GOP.

Your sweeping generalizations are beyond tired, b_d.

RandomGuy
10-11-2010, 02:57 PM
Peak Oil

Peak Oil is now a matter of open inquiry and debate at the highest levels of industry and government. Recent reports by Lloyd's of London, the US Department of Defense, the UK industry taskforce on Peak Oil, Honda (HMC), and the German military are evidence of this. But when I say “debate,” I'm not referring to disagreement over whether or not Peak Oil is real, only when it will finally arrive. The emerging consensus is that oil demand will outstrip supplies “soon,” within the next five years and maybe as soon as two. So the correct questions are no longer, "Is Peak Oil real?" and "Are governments aware?” but instead, "When will demand outstrip supply?" and “What implications does this have for me?”

It doesn't really matter when the actual peak arrives; we can leave that to the ivory-tower types and those with a bent for analytical precision. What matters is when we hit “peak exports.” My expectation is that once it becomes fashionable among nation-states to finally admit that Peak Oil is real and here to stay, one or more exporters will withhold some or all of their product "for future generations" or some other rationale (such as, "get a higher price"), which will rather suddenly create a price spiral the likes of which we haven't yet seen.

What matters is an equal mixture of actual oil availability and market perception. As soon as the scarcity meme gets going, things will change very rapidly.

In short, it's time to accept that Peak Oil is real -- and plan accordingly.

The problem I have with such scenarios is that such rapid spikes drive very real "demand destruction".

People switch to smaller cars, etc. Those effects are fairly long lived, especially when you start talking about changes in habit.

If the cost of gas spikes, you get people buying smaller cars, and potentially living closer to where they work, simply because it gets more economical to do so.

I wonder if the gentleman in the OP has factored that into his calculations.

EVAY
10-11-2010, 02:58 PM
extremely interesting read, and very convincing, if any of us were not yet convinced.

Having said that, I wonder what the author's recommendation is for what we do as investors?

I also got out of domestic equities before the spring of 2007 because it was clear that the the market valuations were unsustainable. However, that doesn't mean that I didn't still get burned. Even though I have made back about 90% of what I lost, I am sitting on cash because I have no clue where to put money. I will not put it in gold, and I have a little in oil pipelines right now, but mostly I am waiting to see what happens in the elections and in the tax decisions in the first two quarters of next year.

Regarding sovereign debt and currency wars:

I believe (emphasize believe) that the G20 will come up with a paradigm that will approximate the interventions that occurred in 2008 and 2009 to shore up global fiscal mechanisms. What we will see, regardless of which party is in charge in whatver nation you want to discuss, is massive governmental intervention in financial markets in order to prevent total collapse.

The economy is truly global...it is in everyone's interest that we agree on a set of social constructs that allows us to continue to function, perhaps poorly, perhaps slowly, but still function is some manner.

Let's face it folks, the manner in which we have been operating since the Great depression is all a socially constructed reality. There will be a new construction...I just don't know what it will be, and I'm likely to sit on the sidelines until I can get a hint of the new direction.

boutons_deux
10-11-2010, 03:04 PM
You were lying when you kicked all Republicans and conservatives into the same Panglossian ditch and ascribed completely uniform views to them. Conservatism isn't a monolith, and neither is the GOP.

Your sweeping generalizations are beyond tired, b_d.

I keep hearing conservatives and Repugs are different people.

Conservatives aren't in office, so forget them.

Repugs vote as a rigid block and have purity tests, so lumping the current herd in one corral is accurate.

Sportcamper
10-11-2010, 03:24 PM
That day is inevitably coming. 20+% interest rates and the Fed monetizing debt will follow. The dollar will turn to total kah kah.


If interest rates work their way up to 20% the housing market in places like So Cal will take a huge hit… Stocks & Gold are overvalued... Tell me what to do Cosmic? Where else is there to go but cash?

EVAY
10-11-2010, 03:47 PM
If interest rates work their way up to 20% the housing market in places like So Cal will take a huge hit… Stocks & Gold are overvalued... Tell me what to do Cosmic? Where else is there to go but cash?

I think you answered your own question.

CosmicCowboy
10-11-2010, 03:57 PM
If interest rates work their way up to 20% the housing market in places like So Cal will take a huge hit… Stocks & Gold are overvalued... Tell me what to do Cosmic? Where else is there to go but cash?

IMHO you still want to own some precious metals as a backup plan "just in case". I've got a few ounces of gold, few ounces of Palladium, and several pounds of silver just because. Investments? Cash is the last place you want to be when the Fed starts monetizing debt. The ideal situation would be to be buried up in long term fixed interest debt that was used to purchase hard assets like land. The land will appreciate in value to roughly match the inflation rate and you can pay your debt off in cheap inflated dollars.

RandomGuy
10-11-2010, 04:25 PM
As more people realize the US has backed itself into the debt corner the less treasury debt they will want. The US is already replacing long term debt as it becomes due with short term debt. Our interest rate vulnerability (interest paid on the national debt) goes up exponentially when we just start rolling short term debt. What happens when Treasury finally throws an auction and nobody comes? That day is inevitably coming. 20+% interest rates and the Fed monetizing debt will follow. The dollar will turn to total shit.

We have begun re-issueing 30 year treasury notes. Is that what you were referring to?

What short term debt are you talking about?

RandomGuy
10-11-2010, 04:26 PM
IMHO you still want to own some precious metals as a backup plan "just in case". I've got a few ounces of gold, few ounces of Palladium, and several pounds of silver just because. Investments? Cash is the last place you want to be when the Fed starts monetizing debt. The ideal situation would be to be buried up in long term fixed interest debt that was used to purchase hard assets like land. The land will appreciate in value to roughly match the inflation rate and you can pay your debt off in cheap inflated dollars.

Why not just buy stock in a company with a lot of physical assets?

Currency debasement or not, why not own a positive series of cash flows? That would tend to insulate yourself from inflation.

CosmicCowboy
10-11-2010, 04:36 PM
Why not just buy stock in a company with a lot of physical assets?

Currency debasement or not, why not own a positive series of cash flows? That would tend to insulate yourself from inflation.

thats another valid tactic. Basic commodity type companies will maintain their value as well. Or do both. Buy the stocks and leverage them as collateral to go long/fixed on a real estate play as well. Get the double kick of stock appreciation, land appreciation, and pay it off with cheap dollars.

coyotes_geek
10-11-2010, 04:39 PM
Why not just buy stock in a company with a lot of physical assets?

Currency debasement or not, why not own a positive series of cash flows? That would tend to insulate yourself from inflation.

That's pretty much my approach. Stick with dividend payers.

Sportcamper
10-11-2010, 04:40 PM
I am out of precious metals as of August….Gold may go to 2k but it may fall back to 800 dollars…Its almost like blue chips are one of the few options other than cash…

SA Real Estate is not volatile like So Cal…I have looked online & have seen some nice houses….I already have a pick up truck & a Stetson, so other than finding the right tanning salon & smoothie store I think I can make a smooth transition…:tu

CosmicCowboy
10-11-2010, 04:43 PM
I never really looked at precious metals as an investment to buy/sell, although I bought my gold at $380 and my Palladium at around $100 and Silver at $5.

ElNono
10-11-2010, 05:08 PM
Right, if you're thinking there's going to be dilution of the value of currency, you can't look at precious metals as investment. You look at them as value not tied to currency or bonds/titles.
Doesn't really matter how much it fluctuates, odds are that if there's a depreciation of the currency, it will be much larger than whatever fluctuation is there on the metals.

(Disclaimer: this is not financial advise)

EVAY
10-11-2010, 07:53 PM
IMHO you still want to own some precious metals as a backup plan "just in case". I've got a few ounces of gold, few ounces of Palladium, and several pounds of silver just because. Investments? Cash is the last place you want to be when the Fed starts monetizing debt. The ideal situation would be to be buried up in long term fixed interest debt that was used to purchase hard assets like land. The land will appreciate in value to roughly match the inflation rate and you can pay your debt off in cheap inflated dollars.

But the fed is not gonna be monetizing debt within the next six months, at least. Land may not be as attractive as you think if currency devaluation actually goes bananas. I don't believe that currency will go bananas, but if it did, there wouldn't be any point in owning much of anything, land included, unless you planned to hold it for about 50 years.

If the U.S. currency were to go under, the world's economy would be devastated beyond recovery and we would all be in an economy that predated the middle ages. It is in NO one's best interest, including China, for that to happen. Thus, the g20 will agree to some new construct (I believe), and although the U.S. will take a haircut (and we deserve to) we will survive more or less intact, in much the same way that Great Britain lost its preeminent financial position post-WWI and II, but is still functional.

Our glory days are done for sure, though.

Parker2112
10-11-2010, 09:12 PM
A great excuse to push us to give away American sovereignty in the name of economic "security."

A push for global banks/currency/governance.

Like we have already been pushed to give up our civil liberties for national "security."

SS,DD.

CosmicCowboy
10-12-2010, 08:56 AM
Like I said in a previous post, the Chinese are taking their dollars earned from their trade surplus and investing them world wide in hard assets/commodities that will keep up with inflation when it hits...this time it's natural gas in Texas...

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/business/energy/7242538.html

DarkReign
10-12-2010, 01:27 PM
A great excuse to push us to give away American sovereignty in the name of economic "security."

A push for global banks/currency/governance.

The one time I have agreed with you. A global collapse begets a global currency with debt forgiveness.

Winehole23
10-16-2010, 05:54 AM
(blotto)