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Nearly two years ago, we downgraded JPMorgan Chase to a Weiss Ratings of D, implying grossly excessive risk taking by the bank.
And virtually every chance since, we repeatedly published this warning about JPMorgan in Money and Markets, Safe Money Report, and multiple press releases.
Then, last week, we jumped online with a video that took our warnings to the next level — with this forecast:
“Some of the world’s largest banks will suffer massive losses and huge new bailouts will be needed.”
Sure enough, just 48 hours later, JPMorgan Chase shocked the investment world with the announcement of massive losses.
But it’s only the first of many — from JPMorgan and other banks around the world, raising urgent questions for investors.
What are the consequences? Will the world’s most powerful central banks crank up the printing presses? How much? And when?
For the answers, simply read the transcript of our recent online briefing below — the focus of today’s issue.
8 Shocking New Forecasts for 2012 and Beyond
With Martin D. Weiss, Larry Edelson and Mike Larson
Martin Weiss: Thank you for joining me today in this emergency briefing, 8 Shocking New Forecasts for 2012 and Beyond. And thank you for your overwhelming response to my emails asking you to share your own forecasts, fears, and financial desires with me on my blog.
The number one question you’ve asked is a compelling one:
“Is the great financial crisis that has plagued America and the world for four long years finally over? Or is this just the calm before the next phase of the storm?
“In other words, should we go back to Wall Street investing as usual, or is this the time to buy gold, silver and other alternative investments?”
Today, it’s our turn to give you our forecasts, and my guests today are two men whose past predictions — on bull markets and bear markets, booms and busts — have proven to be astonishingly accurate over many years.
Larry Edelson, editor of the Real Wealth Report, is our expert on precious metals and other tangible assets. He is one of the very few in the world who nailed the bottom of the gold market at $255 per ounce in 1999 and helped his Real Wealth subscribers profit from the entire bull market, to as high as $1,921 per ounce, so far!
Mike Larson, editor of Safe Money Report, is our expert on conservative investments, interest rates and real estate. He is one of the very few who predicted the housing bust, the debt crisis and the Great Recession well ahead of time, and who also saw the turn as the housing market hit a bottom.
Together, they make a great team, especially now that their forecasts have come to fruition, especially now that we move into what we believe is a brand new phase with enormous consequences for investors.
Larry, you’re famous as a gold bull, but in recent months, you have been probably one of the only gold bulls in the world who warned of a major correction in gold. What’s up?
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Larry Edelson: Well, yes that is correct, and initially many of my subscribers were disappointed that I didn’t give them the green-light “GO” signal to buy gold right away. I told them to wait, and now, they’re very glad they did.
Martin: So exactly when and where do you see gold moving? And what about silver?
Larry: I don’t want to jump ahead. Mike and I have eight new forecasts that we are going to issue today, and I think you have to understand the first seven before I can give you the eighth, which is on silver and gold. But, I can assure you, my gold forecast will not disappoint you.
Forecast #1
Country after country will abandon
their so-called “austerity” programs.
Politicians all over the world are going to jump back to their old habits. They’re going to borrow and spend, borrow and spend.
Look at what’s already happening in the U.S. You saw all the hullabaloo last year in Washington about the budget. You saw all the big fighting in congress and all of the politicking, and what did they do to cut the deficit?
Martin: Diddlysquat!
Larry: And guess what! The red ink is already gushing again. We have a fiscal deficit this year of $1.3 trillion and counting.
Also look at what’s happening right now in Europe. Last year, after months of agonizing debate, the Europeans finally cobbled together an agreement to cut deficits.
They called it their new “fiscal pact.” But in just the last couple of weeks, the entire agreement has started to collapse.
Sarkozi in France, a major linchpin of the fiscal pact, has fallen from grace, and the social democrats are taking over France.
The government of the Netherlands, another major supporter of the budget pact, has collapsed.
The elections in Greece could be another game changer.
We have seen new protests and riots on the streets in cities all across Europe, and they are just beginning to kick up the firestorm, just beginning to spread.
So suddenly and without warning, the pressure is building for more spending, bigger deficits, and a bigger pile-up of … guess what! Debt!
Martin: Larry, stop there for a moment, because in some countries, they are already committed to cutting deficits. So how does that pan out?
Mike Larson: Martin, let me take that question, if you don’t mind. We already know the answer, and it’s our forecast #2.
Forecast #2
If governments cut spending,
the debts will pile up even faster!
Never forget, government spending is a major booster for these European economies. So in any country that pursues deficit reduction despite all the political backlash, here’s what happens:
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The more they cut, the more their economies shrink!
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And the more their economies shrink, the less they collect in tax revenues, which, in turn creates …
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Even bigger deficits and forces them to cut even more. It is a fatal vicious cycle.
We first saw this cycle play out in Greece over a year ago, and now we’re seeing it hit other countries as well.
We have Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands and the Czech Republic already in recession.
Plus, Spain and the U.K. officially sank back into recession just in the last couple weeks.
You have taxes and other government revenues plunging and their deficits growing by leaps and bounds, which means …
Debt levels soar!
Martin: And this is why we see such a violent political backlash.
Mike: That’s an understatement!
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For over three years we have said that Greece was the canary in the coal mine, and that’s exactly what has happened.
The Athens government radically slashed salaries and pensions. It cut entitlements. It raised taxes. And it did all of that to supposedly cut its deficit.
But guess what! Instead of shrinking, its deficit ballooned from 139% of GDP to 159% of GDP.
And its total sovereign debt load is now 17 billion euros higher than it was in 2009.
Martin: But it’s not just Greece.
Mike: No. Ireland’s debt is up by 76 billion euros.
Italy’s debt has surged by 175 billion euros.
Spain’s debt is now larger to the tune of 275 billion euros, and …
France’s debt has jumped by 353 billion euros.
Martin: What about the U.K.?
Mike: They cut teachers’ salaries. They wiped out subsidies for student tuition costs. And yet despite all that, the national debt has still increased by the equivalent of 519 billion euros.
Martin: So what’s the bottom line?
Mike: We are seeing some countries already abandoning austerity …
We see some countries on the verge of abandoning austerity …
And we see some that may try to stick it out through thick and thin.
But no matter what they do, government debts are going to continue to soar globally!
Martin: And those are just the economic pressures for money printing.
Mike: Right. But there are MORE pressures, as you can see with my next forecast …
Forecast #3
Some of the world’s largest banks
will suffer massive losses and huge
new bailouts will be needed.
Martin: More losses from what? From real estate?
Mike: Sure, there are more real estate losses in the pipeline, but that’s almost old news to me.
What I’m mostly talking about is an entirely different disaster. And it’s potentially much bigger than the banking disasters we saw in the U.S. three years ago.
Think about it this way: All U.S. banks combined have roughly $14 trillion in assets, which is obviously a big number.
But the banks of the European Union have almost $45 trillion, or three times more. And they’re loaded down with bad government bonds that are sinking because of those budget and debt disasters that I just told you about.
Martin: In the last debt crisis they got killed in real estate. So they ran to the safety of government bonds.
Mike: Safety? Right. But now they’re getting killed in those supposedly “safe” government bonds, and there’s just no other place to run to.
Martin: Our Weiss Ratings division is tracking this bank by bank. And we’re soon going to launch our new global bank ratings, which you work with also.
Can you give us a sneak preview of those ratings right now?
Mike: Sure.
Deutsche Bank, the largest bank in the world, has assets of more than $3 trillion, and it gets a Weiss rating of D; which means weak.
Plus look at some other huge banks with D- and E+ ratings:
Bank | Weiss Rating |
Crédit Agricole (France) | D- |
Société Générale (France) | D- |
Barclays (UK) | D- |
Banco Santander (Spain) | D- |
Royal Bank of Scotland (UK) | D- |
Lloyds Bank | E |
UniCredit SpA (Italy) | E+ |
Please understand our ratings scale: A = excellent, B = good, C = fair, D = weak, E = very weak. Minus sign = lower third of a grade range; plus sign = upper third. Also please note that BNP Paribas has been upgraded to C- |
But the most shocking news of all is this: These weak and very weak banks have assets totaling $15.7 trillion.
That’s more than the total assets of ALL U.S. banks combined.
Martin: More than all the U.S. banks combined — just in those few weak banks in Europe!
What are the consequences for investors?
Mike: You could have a massive plunge in bank stocks — for starters.
But more to the point, it means massive new demands for bank bailouts and still more money printing.
Martin: Many of our readers are asking this question …
“With this global disaster rushing towards us like a runaway freight train, why aren’t global stock markets crashing?”
Larry, you predicted this stock market rally scenario just as it’s unfolding. So give us your answer to that question.
Larry: It is a side effect of the money printing. It’s because of wave after wave of money printing by the world’s most powerful central banks.
Martin: Explain how we actually track that.
Larry: For every dollar the central banks print and pump into the economy, they add a dollar to their balance sheets. So you can directly measure the money printing simply by looking at the bloated size of their balance sheet assets.
Martin: What would you say is approximately the normal level for that?
Larry: I would say that each central bank’s assets should be relatively small in proportion to each country’s economy — at about 5% or 6% of GDP.
But the U.S. Federal Reserve has nearly tripled the size of its balance sheet from about 6% of GDP to almost 17% of GDP.
And it has engineered that dramatic, unprecedented change of money printing in just three years.
The Bank of England has followed in lock step with the U.S.
The European Central Bank was the most conservative. But recently, it just exploded its balance sheet to close to 30% of GDP.
And the Bank of Japan, just announced a new round of money printing, it’s also run up the size of its balance sheet assets to about 30% of its economy. Would you care to guess the total size of the balance sheets of these four central banks?
It’s more than $10 trillion! That’s $10 trillion of paper money, fiat paper money, that’s been pumped into the global economy, with nearly half of that hitting in just the last three years.
Martin: What I find most shocking about this is not just how utterly massive and unprecedented it is, but also how passive and disinterested most people are.
Look. My family and I have been tracking speculative bubbles and busts for 80 years.
We have personally witnessed about a dozen recessions, two depressions, four or five stock market crashes, a couple of real estate busts, three bank failure epidemics, and two of the most vicious inflationary spirals of all time.
But we have never seen anything like this.
Larry: Martin, if you think this is extreme, then brace yourself. Because these are just the first waves ushering in a massive tsunami of money printing, which leads me to …
Forecast #4
The European Central Bank (ECB)
will kick its money printing presses
into overdrive and very, very soon.
That’s the only way they know how to react to the riots on the streets, how to finance their budgets, how to rescue their banks and save their own necks politically.
And if you think Europe is too far away from your hometown to matter very much — too far away from Main Street USA — think again.
What they do in Europe will have a direct impact on everything you buy, at the gas pump, in the supermarket, and most immediately, in the financial markets.
In just the last four months, the European Central Bank has embarked on two major, unprecedented waves of money printing.
They’ve just printed 802 billion euros, more than one trillion U.S. dollars, to try to convince investors that the sovereign debt crisis is over! But it is abundantly obvious that the debt crisis is not over.
So they have no choice but to launch yet another round … a third round … a fourth round … and a fifth round.
They’re going to keep kicking the can down the road.
Martin: And they know that.
Larry: Yes they know that they’re confiscating wealth, causing inflation. But they’re buying time in the hope that, somehow, everything will work out fine.
Martin: What makes you so sure they’re going to do this right now?
Larry: Because of everything they’re already doing!
You don’t need to be a Ph.D. or a mind reader to understand these guys.
It’s what they’re doing and it’s what they’re going to continue doing.
They’re not blind. They see all the disastrous numbers we just told you about. They know all about the trouble the economy’s in, and that their banking systems are in. They see no other way out: They must print money.
Mike: But they’re not alone.
Larry: Exactly, which leads me to
Forecast #5
The U.K. and the U.S. will
also join the money printing rampage.
Martin: Okay why don’t you start with the U.K.?
Larry: The British economy never really healed from the debt crisis. It’s got deep, gaping financial wounds. And now, here we go again: Britain has just slipped back into a double-dip recession, the first since Margaret Thatcher. What will their response be? More money printing.
Or go back to the U.S. Despite everything the Fed may say, in the real world, the U.S. Federal Reserve will also unleash a veritable tidal wave of newly-created greenbacks.
Just look at how much the Fed has already printed since August of 2008: $1.963 trillion.
It’s amazing. That’s in just 3-1/2 years.
Martin: Most people don’t have a clear vision of what it means for them personally.
Larry: Let me put it into a very clear context for you: Remember the 1970s, when inflation hit double digits?
Well, that happened after the Fed printed only $83 billion, which is about $332 billion in today’s money.
As a result of that money-printing binge, the buying power of the U.S. dollar plunged. Everyone’s cost of living went through the roof. Overall inflation surged to nearly 15%.
The price of eggs jumped 145%. Corn soared 248%. Wheat skyrocketed 340%. And gasoline more than quintupled in price, exploding 434% higher.
Martin: But this time, we don’t see as much consumer price inflation in the economy.
Larry: I do!
Look, it takes about 18 months for this kind of money printing to work through the economy. And the consumer inflation doesn’t explode immediately. It starts in specific markets that become the targets of speculation. Then it spreads and builds up over time, working its way through the entire economy.
The key is that this time, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has printed nearly six times more money than his predecessors printed in the 1970s, and that’s even after adjusting for inflation.
And now it’s happening again.
We all know our cost of living is going up. Just since Bernanke began his money printing binge, gasoline prices have jumped 200%. Eggs are up 203%. Wheat is up 236%. Corn is up 288%.
But this is just the beginning because it’s all going to work its way through the economy!
Plus, never forget: Bernanke’s boss in the White House is up for re-election. He’s going to try everything in his power to paper over what’s still the worst long-term unemployment in recorded history in the U.S.
Martin: So let’s add up the all these numbers.
Mike: I’ve been doing just that as you were speaking.
The U.K. has printed the equivalent of $520 billion.
In Europe, they’ve printed an equivalent of $1 trillion so far. And here in the U.S., the Fed has printed nearly $2 trillion.
In addition, Japan has already printed the equivalent of nearly $322 billion.
Plus, other central banks have done the same. It adds up to a grand total of at least four trillion dollars-worth of newly created money.
Larry: And it’s all sloshing around in the global economy, with more money printing to come.
It’s colossal. It’s massive. It’s unprecedented. And it’s going to be a tsunami of unbacked, paper money flooding the entire world.
And now, you’ve got a new recession hitting, starting first in Europe and spreading out from there …
Martin: Which means …
Larry: Which means the money printing we’ve seen so far could pale in comparison to what’s coming.
In fact, top global economists are already starting to demand that governments not only continue, but actually accelerate their money printing.
You’ve got Adam S. Posen, an American economist on the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee, who says,
“I am here to warn policy makers in the United States, Europe, everywhere that we cannot take our foot off the pedal. The outlook is grim — the right thing to do now is engage in more monetary stimulus!”
He says it clearly, we can’t take our foot off the pedal.
You’ve got another, David Miles at the Bank of England, who says:
“The weakness of demand, given the amount of spare capacity in the economy, still made a strategy of having monetary policy even more expansionary the right one.”
There you go again — pedal to the metal! These are two top economists with the Bank of England. You have riots on the streets and global investors in flight — all demanding the same thing.
At all four of the world’s most powerful central banks, the Fed, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and the Bank of Japan, the momentum is clearly building for more money printing.
All four are now terrified of recession, bank failures, sovereign debt defaults … and their jobs of course. All four will do everything in their power to avoid these disasters.
Here’s my next forecast …
Forecast #6
Before this great financial crisis comes to
its final tipping point a few years from now,
you’ll probably see up to $20 TRILLION
in global money printing.
The worse things get, the more money they’re going to print.
And when you have a massive tsunami of paper money, there’s only one thing that can happen: The value of that money, it’s buying power, plunges. Through the basement!
Forecast #7
This unprecedented global orgy of money printing
is about to light the fuse on an unprecedented
period of global hyperinflation.
Even if they don’t print one more dollar of paper money, you’re going to see some pretty wild inflation coming up!
Just the money they’ve already printed is going to create that massive inflation.
You have to understand the mechanisms at work here and how they view things. So, I want to read to you one of my favorite quotes from economist John Maynard Keynes, who actually was the granddaddy of money printing and advocated it very strongly.
He wrote this particular note about Lenin in Russia:
“Lenin declared that the best way to destroy the capitalist system was to debauch the currency. By a continuing process of inflation, governments confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens.
“Lenin was right. There is no subtler, no surer means of overturning the existing basis of society than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose.”
What Keynes and Lenin were saying is that the way to destroy sovereign debt is to devalue the currency and inflate those debts away — rather than outright default.
The problem is that the average citizen doesn’t realize their wealth is being confiscated through inflation — like a ghost that comes into their home at night and steals their money.
Mike: Two Harvard economists have written essentially the same thing — that inflation is a way for governments in debt to suppress and seize the financial wealth of the average person.
Martin: This whole situation feels eerily familiar to me personally. I was raised in Brazil. And when the Brazilian government did what these countries are doing today, inflation surged to 100% in the mid-1980s.
We thought that was bad, but then it hit more than 1,000% per year in the late ‘80s. And it didn’t peak until it hit a record of 5,000% in 1993.
Can you imagine that? At 5,000%, prices were jumping 50 times over the course of 12 months.
Larry: The classic case of hyperinflation was the German Weimar Republic after World War I, when the German government printed trillions of marks, and it took three trillion German marks to buy one U.S. dollar.
A German-born oil consultant now living in New York tells the story about his father who was a lawyer in Germany during that period.
In 1903, his father took out an insurance policy, and every month for 20 years, he paid the premiums faithfully. Then, when the policy came due in 1923, he cashed it in. Guess what he was able to buy with that policy! A single loaf of bread!
At Freiburg University in Germany, a student ordered a cup of coffee at a cafe. The price on the menu was 5,000 German marks. Then he ordered a second cup. The bill came. But by that time, the price had gone up to 14,000 marks.
Mike: He should have ordered both cups at the same time.
Larry: That’s why, with inflation, you get a hoarding effect. The more prices go up, the more people buy.
Mike: But I don’t think the Brazilian and German inflations are directly comparable to what we’re seeing here today. There are deflationary forces that could interrupt the inflationary spiral.
Larry: Of course. That’s why I warned about a major correction in natural resources over the past nine months or so.
But consider this: The inflation that Brazil and Germany experienced were the result of money printing by just ONE central bank at a time!
Now, we’re seeing coordinated money printing by at least four major central banks at the same time. So in those episodes, the inflation was mostly local. This time, it’s certain to be global.
Martin: How does all this impact our viewers in their pockets?
Larry: It means that every dollar, every euro, every pound you earn, save and invest is going to be worth a lot less. That’s already happening. That’s why food and energy prices are already rising so quickly.
But this is only the beginning. There’s at least four trillion dollars’ of new paper money sloshing around the global economy, just beginning to impact select markets and investments.
And there’s trillions more that are on the way. This money is clearly going to drive the price of gold, silver, oil, and almost all natural resources higher like never before in our lifetime. It’s also going to create profit opportunities for savvy investors and like never before in our lifetime.
Martin: Specifically, how much higher will gold and silver go?
Larry: That’s my last forecast.
Forecast #8
The gold correction I’ve been
forecasting will soon end, and gold will
ultimately soar to at least $5,000 per ounce!
Martin: What about silver?
Larry: On January 21, 1980, the peak price of silver was about $49, or approximately $150 in today’s dollars. So just to match its previous peak, silver would have to rise to that level, $150 per ounce.
The $5,000 gold and $150 silver assume no further money printing, no further decline in the dollar, and no major global catastrophe, financial or otherwise. Add those factors into the mix, and all bets are off.
And don’t forget one of the most important commodities in the world — oil.
Just the decline in the dollar alone could drive it to $200 per barrel! And if we see global supply disruptions, which I’m sure we will, it could spike even higher.
So those are my baseline predictions for gold, silver and oil — my minimal expectations. And they imply the potential for gains of at least double or triple your money.
Martin: Is that with or without leverage?
Larry: Without any leverage whatsoever. Let me stress:
The days of this natural resource correction are numbered, and we’re now closing in on a huge buying opportunity in tangible assets and natural resources.
Martin: Thank you, Larry, Mike. Thank you for your time and insights today. This has been an exceptionally illuminating session.
{ 25 comments }
According to everyone the Fed has been printing money since 2008. That was when all inflation indicators stopped rising. What has happened now is that the inflation indicators are all falling. Sol what I want to know is why that is so. I see inflation in food prices. That could be serious but why don’t we see more inflation now?
There is no food inflation….whatyou are witnessing is simple suppply and demand..
I shop at some of the most expensive grocery stores in town….their prices have not gone up one iota the last 5 years…
I somtimes shop at the super-discount outlet stores…Winco, etc…their prices have gone up tremendously….as a percentage of unit…
\why is that??…because more people have to shop at the discount stores and the corporations of said stores are raises the prices due to demand..
expensive stores haven’t raised their prices at all so they may keep what customers they have..
basic, basic econ
@da Man, you should watch a Youtube video called “9 Meals To Anarchy”. It’s pretty long, but it documents food and other inflation around the world and the fact that it’s causing riots. And the impact that this will have here, when the dollar crashes.
The reason why your expensive grocery’s prices are not going up as fast is simple: A good portion of American grocery store food is packaging, processing and advertising. Only a little bit of it is the commodity price of the ingredients in the food. In third world countries, people just buy a sack of grain or whatever at pretty close to commodity prices, and they fix their own food from that at home. So when the commodity price of, say, rice, doubles, we don’t feel it as much as they do. However, as the price continues to rise, eventually we do feel it.
When inflation makes the price of fuel go sky high, and this will be when other countries stop accepting the dollar as the world’s reserve currency, then we won’t be able to print our way out of this mess, and the price of fuel will make the price of food skyrocket too. Because it takes fuel to produce and transport food on a large scale.
We are mighty close to losing reserve currency status. China and Japan just agreed to start trading directly with each other and stop going through the dollar, and Iran is now accepting gold for its oil, rather than go through the dollar. (although this is because the US cut them off from the oil/dollar exchange system as a sanction, the net effect is to take power away from the dollar because other countries are still going to buy Iranian oil anyway despite our attempt at sanctions). In 2009 a number of nations and billionaire George Soros had a secret meeting about eliminating the dollar as the reserve currency and substituting a “basket of currencies”. They did not invite the US to this meeting.
The IMF is concerned: they published something in 2011 warning that the US was on shaky ground with all the money printing. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fm/2011/01/pdf/fm1101.pdf
i don’t need a weather man to know which way the wind blows…..supply and demand….then pricng..
learn it, live it, manke money off it…..basic econ…
Hey…I just got huge credits and refunds on my 15 properties from my gas and electrical utilities…and the rates are going down…my property taxes have dropped 30 %..rents went up 35…making thousands extra per month…
So far…i don’t see inflation as is talked about it headlines…..just ain’t out there….
BTW, billions and billions and billions of dollrs are spent everyday on food stamps….every retailer in the country is after those dollars…never seen so many pizza places open a take n bake section making their bottom line eligible for food stamps….why?????..
You make making money so complicated……
Find just 2 more people on this thread that has experienced what you claim you have, and you might have something the rest of might believe as a credible claim that repersents our population. In other words, what you claim as reality, does not happen to anybody else thus rendering your argument non representative of the majority. I would venture to say that your experiences only represent less that 5% of the people of this country and proabably less than 1/10 of 1% of the world
I’m pretty sure that is not how it works. If it were, the .99 cent stor would now be called the $1.50 store, but whatever dude.
YOu mean the Dollar tree??….
You obviously didn’t get in on their stock when it was single digits….it is now over 100 bucks…they didn’t get there by not having customers and investors…
…thanks for proving my point…why would their stock go up so much??…more customers??…supply and demand.
rookie…
As Mike and Larry note above, there are big deflationary forces at work — the debt bubble collapsing, deleveraging. This causes a scarcity of cash, starting with the currency in which the biggest debts are denominated, the $US. It is the central banks’ reaction to deflation that ultimately causes hyperinflation. But not until we go through the deflationary deleveraging. It is the mother of all margin calls, and one last chance to stock up on real, tangible assets.
Agree.
Central bankers are caught in quite the pickle (baseball rundown)…this won’t end well.
The fed has been printing since 1913. That’s its entire reason for being. Its been covert until recently and now that people are waking up to its mandate and its taxation and inflation they make it look like a one off deal.
When will the USD crash against other currencies ? and by how many percent 1000%? 5000%?
If all the banks are expanding at the same time I don’t buy that the same result will be as the “classic case of hyperinflation was the German Weimar Republic after World War I”, the situation then was Germany against the world. The dynamics are very different now, yes coms. may go up, but everything else including wages will too if all banks are printing at the same time, everything just stays relative to how much cash is in circulation. Nothing really changes they’re just adding more 0000s across the board.
Wages (in the west) haven’t kept up with real inflation for decades…this will get worse.
Wages in China and other emerging markets have been rising at break-neck speeds (in percentage terms). The “per-capita” measurement of China makes them look poorer than they are. The fact is that there MUST always be a “peasant” class in China because we would need the resources from 2-3 more planet earths to provide everyone in China with an “American” standard of living. But I think you could easily argue that, if not now, then in the next decade an American sized population of Chinese people will have the income and wealth equivalent to that of the “classic” American middile and upper class (leaving about a billion in what we define as poverty). Unfortunately this is coming at the expense of the American middle class which has been shrinking as a percentage of the American population while poverty grows.
No dude, there will always be at least one thing that “gives”, even if the rest of your analysis is correct.
Hi Martin
Wall street is completely disconnected with the rest of humanity. If I was responsible for losing $2Billion I would not be given a golden parachute north of $30 million. The banks aka (to big to fail) think nothing of privatising profits and then going cap in hand to the FED and socialising losses. They need to re introduce Glass Stegal and close down derivitives trading. Any mug holding stock in these global casinos deserves the write down that’s coming.
At last, a realization that more patches on the world’s spherical patch work quilt are coming.
Buy on doom and gloom and sell on rising euphoria.
For the buy now pay later folks, it is now later or later is coming soon.
Just another ride at the world’s financial carnival.
Timing is everything. I bought commodities in Oct anticipating all of this, and after nursing the position for months, it finally went against me and I lost money. Buying and holding or selling and holding with all this leverage is impossible. Anyone who has been short the stock market the past 3 years lost their shirt. The Dow has started a correction and will drop to the 12,280 to 12,090 area. From there it should make one more high, probably due to QE3 or QE4 being announced. Realize with interest rates at zero and earnings still occuring, stocks will remain firm. Also, there is a flight to quality going on, with money fleeing to the US. I do believe we are in a long-term bear market in the Dow (14,100 was the peak and 6,500 will be taken out at some point), but the US will remain firm a while longer.
Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz……Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz…..here we go again…can’t help themselves, can they?..
jeez…if you read my posts form late last Fall, I predicted a major dip..not a correction…a dip in the month of May…PREDICATED on the dollar reaching 84….NO CORRECTION until 88-90…
I predicted this vetry scenario LAST FALL…simply on seasonalities….
Gee…looks like Francis is right again….and wealthier than ever….when ya know ya know…when ya don’t..you follow the Weiss boyz..
No story here folks…Martin needs to take someof his money and buy a decent suit that fits
Frances,
Good call. I, too, don’t agree with these guys, but I’m not that smart. . What do you predict for the rest of 2012?
HEY I AGREE WITH TOM what do you predict where everything is going what stocks should we buy , should we buy and hold ,sell, increase positions ………….cmon francis let us in on what is going to happen
The problem with this forecast is it makes the same predictions of times past, when inflation and all these elements were a portion of what they are now, and did gold and silver rise in proportion? Nope. In fact, as all these parameters continue their climb, gold and silver are falling. Do you think the jokers at the COMEX and the powers that be will all of a sudden just let the price of gold and silver skyrocket, that they can’t do anything about it? They control the computers and the market. Go figure. And while gold and silver may still have a place, you’d better roll them or a portion into tangible assets you can utilize now to prevent impact against you as conditions get worse. A bird in the hand is better than ten in the bush.
Crime,chaos,fires and famine.Thats the future.Get over yourselves consumer sheeple.
Many thanks to Mr. Martin Weiss and his team for sharing these very fundamental forecasts.
The prediction of hyperinflation is way off mark. Comparisons to the German Weimar Republic after World War I are completely non-analogous. That was an entirely different situation in which the German government literally printed money with the intent to back it later when the economy got better which never happened because people panicked and created a self-fulfilling prophecy of hyperinflation by spending the cash they had as fast as they could for fear it was going to be worthless soon. Basically, the bills the German government printed were I.O.Us to themselves. That is not the case today. Governments are selling bonds to get the money for stimulus spending. That is money already backed by work. Saying they are “printing money” is a misnomer and it is irresponsible to draw the same conclusion as to what happened in Germany and other countries in the past. Gold is not going to sore to $5,000 an ounce.
This whole economic collapse was just the answer the gov wanted to happen so they could bailout the u.s. gov. Nobody else is buying the treasurey bills. Right now there shouldnt be any bad banks in the usa that are under do the math. All the gov has to do is put i trillion dollars in the big bank an leave it there. Then these banks can lend out 10 times that amount to you think it be the people. Wrong they buy treasuery bills with it. Thats why theres hardly any inflation, an the economy is still bad they didnt lend any to the american people the gov got the money