by shortonoil » Sat 13 Jun 2009, 17:10:17
patience said:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ond dislocation is the price of bonds falling continuously for a comparatively long time, say a few %/ month over several months, with the obvious implication that there is too much risk in them for the buyers' taste, or simply oversupply of bonds for the amount of available investors.
With foreign investors, like China and the Saudis, buying less, the US Treasury is having some trouble selling the longest term bonds, probably due to the expectation of diluted currency over the long term. As this problem begins to hit the shorter term bonds, some analysts are worried that it could mean a dislocation has begun.
Good explanation
patience. It is when the government has lost a substantial amount of its ability to borrow money. That is to be expected when a substantial number of its population has lost the ability to borrow money.
We can see this now happening by the stellar expansion of the monetary base, and not much growth in M1 or M2. There is now not enough return on $s for banks to move that money into other asset classes (loans). Banks don’t make money when their collateral is declining in value, and their customers are losing the ability to repay their loans.
The recent jump in yields on Treasury bills, notes and bonds indicate that those assets are also losing value. When the “real” return on those assets goes negative (with deflation setting in they may already be there -- that is the face value of the bond declines more than the interest rate it pays) the government will lose the ability to raise enough funds to cover its expenditures.
There will then be a big increase in interest rates (that will further depress the economy, that will reduce government revenue) and as
DantesPeak said when the world’s saving pool is exhausted the government will have to do massive deleveraging.
Deleveraging for the government will entail massive cuts in spending. The federal government is now “hoping” to borrow half of the money it is spending. Cuts in spending will mean huge cuts in the number of employees and benefits. The agency infighting might even tear the government totally apart.
A bond dislocation will certainly indicate that the end of the present system is on the horizon. It might even mean that it is right in front of our noses!
AvailableEnergy