Monday, September 21, 2015 |
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YOUR BEST SOURCE FOR THE UNBIASED MARKET COMMENTARY YOU WON'T GET FROM WALL STREET | ||||
The Real Reasons Yellen Didn't Raise Rates | ||||
by Martin Weiss | ||||
Dear Subscriber,
Fed Chairman Yellen says the
Fed didn't raise interest rates last Thursday primarily because of low
inflation and turbulence overseas (i.e. China).
But behind what she says, there's a heck of a lot more going on that she would never say:
Two Elephants in the Room
The first elephant is
the pervasive impact on society of over six long years of zero
interest rates. Even during World War II — the greatest existential
threat to our nation since Independence — the Fed didn't push rates
down that far or hold them down for that long. The result has been a
massive shift in the psychology, the strategy and the portfolios of
millions of investors, corporations and consumers:
Investors who have shifted, en masse, from safe-haven investments to risk assets ...Businesses who have borrowed heavily by floating trillions of dollars in new junk bonds, and ... Consumers who have drained their savings to new lows and favored floating-rate debts like never before.
All because of zero interest rates! All creating rows of dominoes that are potentially very vulnerable to any rate hike!
The second elephant in the room is
the massive amounts of new funny money the Fed has pumped into our
economy since September 2008 ... and the speculative bubbles it has
created.
Since 2008, we've seen the
emergence of a $2.2 trillion bubble in small-cap stocks, a $1.81
trillion bubble in domestic junk bonds, and a series of even larger
bubbles in other debts globally — all extremely vulnerable to higher
interest rates.
I'll get to the bubbles in upcoming Money and Markets editions. Today, let me first show you — graphically and vividly — exactly where they're coming from. Throughout history, the U.S. Federal Reserve almost always expanded the nation's monetary base (bank reserves and money in circulation) at a relatively steady pace. Then, suddenly, in September 2008, the Fed began running its money printing presses like never before. What triggered such an incredibly massive and abrupt policy change at the Fed? Answer: The single most shocking financial failure of our era — Lehman Brothers. But even as Fed governors sought to save the world from collapse, they discovered three things:
First, they discovered that
lowering their official interest rates to zero percent, although
extreme, was not enough. "What good was making money cheap," they said,
"if there was no money being borrowed?" (That's when they decided to
open the money floodgates.)
Second, the whole concept of
"printing money" sounded too much like what Germany did after World War
I, creating massive inflation. Thus, to avoid sounding like money
madmen, they coined a more erudite phrase — "quantitative easing" or
"QE."
Third, they realized that just
one round of QE still wasn't enough. American consumers, investors and
businesses got so addicted to all the new Fed funny money, they needed
new shots in the arm year after year. As a result, the Fed embarked on
three major rounds of QE, called QE1, QE2 and QE3.
Clearly, the day that Lehman Brothers failed, the Federal Reserve —
and the entire financial world as we know it — changed dramatically. How dramatically? Consider these facts:
Fact #1. Just
from Sept. 10, 2008, through March 10, 2010, the U.S. Federal Reserve
increased the nation's monetary base from $850 billion to $2.1 trillion
— an insane increase of 2.5 times in just 18 months. It was, by far,
the greatest monetary expansion in U.S. history.
Fact #2. Before the Lehman Brothers collapse, it
had taken the Fed a total 5,012 days — 13 years and 8 months — to
double the monetary base. In contrast, after the Lehman Brothers
collapse, it took the Fed governors only 112 days to do so. In other
words, they accelerated the pace of bank reserve expansion by a factor of 45 to 1.Fact #3. Even in the most extreme circumstances of recent history, the Fed had never pumped in anything close to that much money in such a short period of time.
For example, before the turn of
the millennium, the Fed scrambled to provide liquidity to U.S. banks to
ward off a feared Y2K catastrophe, bumping up bank reserves from $557
billion on Oct. 6, 1999, to $630 billion by Jan. 12, 2000.
At the time, that
sudden increase was considered unprecedented — a $73 billion in just
three months. In contrast, from September 2008 through September 2015,
the Fed increased the monetary base by $3,225 billion or 44 times more.
Similarly, in the days
following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the Fed had rushed to flood the
banks with liquid funds, adding $40 billion through Sept. 19, 2001. But
the Fed's post-Lehman flood of money has been nearly 81 times larger.
Fact #4. After the Y2K and 9/11 crises had passed,
the Fed promptly reversed its money infusions and sopped up the extra
liquidity from the banking system. But in the six-plus years since the Lehman Brothers collapse, the Fed has done nothing of the kind ... Yet!
And it's this three-letter word
that contains the secret to our entire future — not only for the United
States, but for the entire global economy.
As you can see from the chart,
the Fed reversed its Y2K and 9/11 money pumping episodes quickly and
completely. But it has not yet begun to reverse its history-smashing
money-printing binge of the past seven years.
This raises major, heretofore unanswered
questions for all investors in all asset classes ...
When the Fed does raise rates, how will it impact the psychology and strategies of investors, businesses and consumers?
What will happen as the Fed begins to reverse the massive money-printing of recent years?
Which sectors and markets are the most vulnerable?
For the answer to the last
question, the first place to look will be in all those sectors that have
gotten the biggest influx of super-cheap money since 2008 ... and are
bound to suffer the most from any outflows. They include ...
We will tell you more about these — and how to get out of their way — in the weeks ahead.
In the meantime, be sure to
keep your investment portfolio as safe as possible, with plenty of cash
and a moderate dose of hedging.
Good luck and God bless!
Martin
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Monday, September 21, 2015
The Real Reasons Yellen Didn't Raise Rates
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