Dr. Martin Weiss, our founder and publisher, gave readers advanced warnings of the tech bust of 2000 … the real estate bust of 2007 … the credit crisis of 2008 … and the recession of 2009.
So we at Money and Markets managed to get Martin to take a moment out of his busy day to answer the number one question that’s on readers’ minds.
ET: Martin, your call for the most damaging financial crisis since the Great Depression was right on the money. Many say that the worst is behind us. Do you agree?
Martin Weiss: To a very limited extent, yes. The housing and auto markets are stabilizing. And Bernanke’s statement that the recession is “very likely over” has given investors a little more confidence. But there’s a bigger problem lurking in the shadows that way too many pundits are ignoring.
ET: And that is …
Martin Weiss: Right now, the Treasury’s finances are collapsing … its bond prices plunging … its interest rates surging.
ET: But after all we’ve been through this decade, how bad could this possibly be?
Martin Weiss: Really bad! In fact, the Treasury’s financial crisis looms so large, it could wreck more havoc on the economy and deliver more pain to average Americans than the subprime mortgage disaster, the housing bust, the banking crisis, and the collapse of General Motors put together …
It could create a rising tide of interest rates that wipes out the effects of any stimulus, undermines any recovery, and sabotages any new bailouts …
ET: Martin, surely this kind of collapse can be prevented.
Martin Weiss: Hardly. You see, unlike GM, Fannie Mae, Citigroup, AIG, and the many others that the U.S. Treasury has bailed out, there’s no institution on the planet big or rich enough to bail out the U.S. Treasury itself.
Further, unlike all prior episodes in this great debt crisis, the Treasury’s financial troubles cannot be covered up, papered over, or kicked down the road like an empty tin can.
Already, Treasury bond prices are crashing, and doing so with greater speed that at any time in history.
Already, interest rates, which automatically go up when bond prices fall, are surging, with the rate on 10-year U.S. Treasuries rising almost 1.4 percentage points since December 18, 2008, from 2.08 percent to 3.47 percent.
And already, the interest rates on 30-year fixed mortgages, auto loans, commercial loans, and other debt are going through the roof.
ET: So are the Treasuries’ worst long-term problems over then?
Martin Weiss: No. This is just the beginning of the Treasury crisis. And it could continue for years.
Look, it’s widely known that America’s federal deficit is out of control.
But so many dire deficit warnings have been issued so often, they now fall mostly on deaf ears. Wall Street pundits roll their eyes. Washington politicians laugh at those who would cry “wolf.”
What they don’t realize is that this time, due to a series of devastating facts they’ve chosen to ignore, the day of reckoning is here.
ET: And you have those facts?
Martin Weiss: Yes. Let me lay them out for you:
First, according to the government’s official estimate, the federal deficit for fiscal year 2009 will be $1.84 trillion, or 13.4 percent of GDP!
It is the worst deficit in U.S. history.
It means the deficit has now exploded to a level that is so far beyond the range of anything we’ve experienced before, it’s impossible to imagine any scenario in which it does not have a devastating impact.
Second, the actual deficit could be much larger.The administration’s $1.84 trillion deficit forecast presupposes a dramatic turnaround in the economy, which, by definition, is virtually impossible with the government running trillion-dollar deficits!
How can the administration possibly predict an economic turnaround when its own Treasury Department is sucking nearly $2 trillion in funds out of credit markets — the same credit markets that derailed the economy late last year?
Similarly, how can the government predict a turnaround when its own borrowing frenzy is already driving up mortgage rates and undermining real estate, the one sector that’s most responsible for the economy’s decline in the first place?
Third, there’s no end in sight.Since the United States declared its independence nearly 233 years ago, the only time the federal deficit approached or exceeded 10 percent of GDP was during major wars — the Civil War, World War I, and World War II. But in each case, the deficit financing began promptly — and ended promptly — with the war.
Unfortunately, that’s not the case this time. Although the U.S. is fighting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, their cost represents only a small fraction of the budget shortfall. Even if the Iraqi and Afghan wars could be ended tomorrow, America’s great budget crisis would still be just beginning.
Fourth, today’s deficits are far worse than those of the Great Depression. America’s first big, multi-year peacetime deficits came in the 1930s. Tax revenues plunged with the sinking economy. And in the years that ensued, government expenditures — mostly for a series of programs to bail out the economy — went through the roof.
But even with a 90 percent collapse in the stock market in 1929-32 and even after three years of double-digit GDP declines that make today’s look mild by comparison, the federal deficit in 1933 was just 3.27 percent of GDP, less than one-fourth of what’s projected for this year.
And subsequently, even when the U.S. government embarked on the most ambitious stimulus and bailout programs of its 150-year history, the biggest single deficit — in 1936 — was 4.76 percent of GDP, only about one-third the size of today’s.
And fifth, there are major structural deficits.
Our nation’s second encounter with giant peacetime deficits was in the 1980s, but with a big difference: This time, there was no Great Depression. This time, the government’s fiscal woes were mostly structural — deeply ingrained in the bloated size of government and in our society’s dependence on government for much of its sustenance.
And eventhen, the federal deficit never rose to more than 5.63 percent of GDP, less than HALF its size today.
ET: How do things compare today?
Martin Weiss: The big difference today is that our current structural deficits are far larger than in the 1980s because the government is now liable for $65 trillion in future payments for Social Security, Medicare, government pension benefits, and other obligations that are now kicking in at a quickening pace.
Let me give you the final fact …
Beyond the $1.84 trillion of red ink projected for 2009 and beyond the trillions more in future obligations, the U.S. government has just assumed responsibility for nearly $14 trillion in new loans, commitments, and guarantees to bail out brokers, banks, insurers, auto makers, and the broader economy.
If just one of these suffers greater-than-expected losses, we could see wave after wave of new demands on the government to honor its guarantees, bloating the deficit far further.
ET: So why can’t the Fed stop Treasury bonds from falling?
Martin Weiss: I can assure you, it’s not for lack of trying.
In a massive attempt to boost Treasury bond prices launched March 25, the Fed has now bought $285.2 billion in Treasury notes and bonds, the most ever in such a short period of time. But despite all the Fed’s buying, T-bond prices have continued to plunge and interest rates have continued to surge.
Plus, in an even larger effort to support mortgage prices — and to suppress mortgage rates — the Fed has poured a whopping $836 billion into direct purchases of mortgage-backed securities (MBSs). But again, even after spending more than a half trillion dollars to bid them up, mortgage prices have still collapsed and rates have still surged.
In sum, the U.S. Federal Reserve has failed to stop this new phase of the crisis, and one of the key reasons is obvious:
To buy bonds, the Fed must print money. But the more it prints, the more it fans inflation fears and the more it chases away bond investors, who realize they’ll be paid back in cheaper dollars.
ET: Can’t the Fed simply print all the money it wants to finance the massive deficits?
Martin Weiss: Unfortunately, in the real world, it doesn’t work that way.
The reason: The government has not one, but TWO debt problems simultaneously:
The new debt problem is massive Treasury borrowings of close to $2 trillion just to fill the gaping holes in the current federal budget.
Plus, there’s still the old debt problem of $ 15.29 trillion in Treasury securities, government agency securities, and MBSs outstanding.
If just 10 percent of those are dumped on the market, it would trigger the sale of $1.45 trillion worth, easily overwhelming the Fed’s purchases.
Remember, the main reasons investors sell — fear of inflation and damage to the U.S. government’s credit — are, themselves, fueled by the Fed’s money printing and bond buying.
So the more the Fed buys bonds, the more it risks triggering massive investor selling.
And if you’re counting on the Federal Reserve to bail out the U.S. Treasury Department, forget it.
In the government’s grand balance sheet, printing money does nothing more than shift debts from one government account to another. It does not create wealth. It certainly does not stop bond prices from plunging and interest rates from surging.
ET: What then, are the far-reaching consequences for our readers?
Martin Weiss: Never underestimate the impact of surging rates — especially with near double-digit official unemployment and the worst debt crisis since the Great Depression.
Rising rates in this environment will be pure poison for the nation’s insurance companies, banks, utilities, and home prices.
Heck, stocks, long-term bonds, and virtually all types of real estate properties are ALL extremely vulnerable to surging interest rates.
ET: So what should our Money and Markets readers do?
Martin Weiss: Definitely get the heck away from long-term bonds and shift to shortest term securities.
And to profit from falling bond prices, consider inverse ETFs designed to rise as Treasury bonds fall.
Also look for investment opportunities in the strongest companies, and avoid the weakest with a ten-foot pole.
About Martin Weiss
Dr. Weiss is the founder of Weiss Research and the editor of the financial newsletter, Safe Money, known for its track record in picking major turns in interest rates. He is also the author of The Ultimate Depression Survival Guide, The Ultimate Safe Money Guide: How Everyone 50 and Over Can Protect, Save and Grow Their Money.
Martin Weiss holds a bachelor’s degree from New York University and a Ph.D. from Columbia University.