Get Ready For Higher Interest Rates, A Major Recession And A Giant Stock Crash
By Michael Snyder/Economic Collapse Blog November 21, 2016 Share this article:
Since Donald Trump's victory on election night we have seen the
worst bond crash in 15 years. Global bond investors have seen trillions
of dollars of wealth wiped out since November 8th, and analysts are
warning of another tough week ahead.
The
general consensus in the investing community is that a Trump
administration will mean much higher inflation, and as a result
investors are already starting to demand higher interest rates.
Unfortunately for all of us, history has shown that higher interest
rates always cause an economic slowdown.
And
this makes perfect sense, because economic activity naturally slows down
when it becomes more expensive to borrow money. The Obama
administration had already set up the next president for a major
recession anyway, but now this bond crash threatens to bring it on
sooner rather than later.
For those that are
not familiar with the bond market, when yields go up bond prices go
down. And when bond prices go down, that is bad news for economic
growth.
So we generally don't want yields to go up.
Unfortunately,
yields have been absolutely soaring over the past couple of weeks, and
the yield on 10 year Treasury notes has now jumped "one full percentage
point since July"...
The 10-year Treasury
yield jumped to 2.36% in late trading on Friday, the highest since
December 2015, up 66 basis point since the election, and up one full
percentage point since July!
The
10-year yield is at a critical juncture. In terms of reality, the first
thing that might happen is a rate increase by the Fed in December, after
a year of flip-flopping. A slew of post-election pronouncements by Fed
heads - including Yellen's "relatively soon" - have pushed the odds of a
rate hike to 98%.
As I noted the other
day, so many things in our financial system are tied to yields on U.S.
Treasury notes. Just look at what is happening to mortgages. As Wolf
Richter has noted, the average rate on 30 year mortgages is shooting
into the stratosphere...
The carnage in
bonds has consequences. The average interest rate of the a conforming
30-year fixed mortgage as of Friday was quoted at 4.125% for top credit
scores. That's up about 0.5 percentage point from just before the
election, according to Mortgage News Daily. It put the month "on a short
list of 4 worst months in more than a decade."
If mortgage rates continue to shoot higher, there will be another housing crash.
Rates
on auto loans, credit cards and student loans will also be affected.
Throughout our economic system it will become much more costly to
borrow money, and that will inevitably slow the overall economy down.
Why bond investors are so on edge these days is because of statements such as this one from Steve Bannon...
In
a nascent administration that seems, at best, random in its beliefs,
Bannon can seem to be not just a focused voice, but almost a messianic
one:
"Like [Andrew] Jackson's
populism, we're going to build an entirely new political movement," he
says. "It's everything related to jobs. The conservatives are going to
go crazy. I'm the guy pushing a trillion-dollar infrastructure plan.
With negative interest rates throughout the world, it's the greatest
opportunity to rebuild everything. Ship yards, iron works, get them all
jacked up. We're just going to throw it up against the wall and see if
it sticks. It will be as exciting as the 1930s, greater than the Reagan
revolution -- conservatives, plus populists, in an economic nationalist
movement."
Steve Bannon is going to be one
of the most influential voices in the new Trump administration, and he
is absolutely determined to get this "trillion dollar infrastructure
plan" through Congress.
And that is going to
mean a lot more borrowing and a lot more spending for a government that
is already on pace to add 2.4 trillion dollars to the national debt this
fiscal year.
Sadly, all of this comes at a
time when the U.S. economy is already starting to show significant signs
of slowing down. It is being projected that we will see a sixth
straight decline in year-over-year earnings for the S&P 500, and
industrial production has now contracted for 14 months in a row.
The truth is that the economy has been barely treading
water for quite some time now, and it isn't going to take much to push
us over the edge. The following comes from Lance Roberts...
With
an economy running at below 2%, consumers already heavily indebted,
wage growth weak for the bulk of American's, there is not a lot of
wiggle room for policy mistakes.
Combine
weak economics with higher interest rates, which negatively impacts
consumption, and a stronger dollar, which weighs on exports, and you
have a real potential of a recession occurring sooner rather than later.
Yes,
the stock market soared immediately following Trump's election, but it
wasn't because economic conditions actually improved.
If
you look at history, a stock market crash almost always follows a major
bond crash. So if bond prices keep declining rapidly that is going to
be a very ominous sign for stock traders.
And
history has also shown us that no bull market can survive a major
recession. If the economy suffers a major downturn early in the Trump
administration, it is inevitable that stock prices will follow.
The
waning days of the Obama administration have set us up perfectly for
higher interest rates, a major recession and a giant stock market crash.
Of
course any problems that occur after January 20th, 2017 will be blamed
on Trump, but the truth is that Obama will be far more responsible for
what happens than Trump will be.
Right now so many people have been lulled into a sense of complacency because Donald Trump won the election.
That is an enormous mistake.
A shaking has already begun in the financial world, and this shaking could easily become an avalanche.
Now is not a time to party. Rather, it is time to batten down the hatches and to prepare for very rough seas ahead.
All
of the things that so many experts warned were coming may have been
delayed slightly, but without a doubt they are still on the way.
So get prepared while you still can, because time is running out.
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