by Euric » Mon 22 May 2006, 00:06:48
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rwwff', 'C')ouple points.. Of course everyone remembers the wierdness of the 1980's upswing in rates; what they don't remember is the coming down period. Lots of banks stuck holding CD's paying 12% interest when the current interest rate was down to like 8%.
I don't think the banks or the fed are excited enough to bid blindly, forgetting the pain they felt in the 80's. I suspect the fed, the bond market, and the international players are going to work deliberately to lower the dollar as gently as possible, this means a slow, drawn out, strangling regime of interest rate hikes and inflation increases. I think everyone has figured out that the imbalance is ridiculous, now they all want off the bullet train with only a few bumps and bruises. Fortunately for all concerned, I think they figured out that a panic means no one gets off, and deliberate order means that most everyone can step off without getting hammered. Think years, not months.
Expect to see lots of inflow of dollars looking to buy hard assets, or at least stuff that they can use to make money.
A lot easier said then done. If you paid attention over the past few months, you saw the Wall Street Ponzi market rise. Why all of a sudden? Because people saw interest rate hikes coming and that would mean a big bubble burst in the housing market.
Americans may be able to afford an overpriced house but only with low interest hates. High house prices and high interest rates together spell B-O-O-M. Like a balloon bursting. So, sell your investment properties or whatever you don''t want to lose the value on when the bubble bursts.
Now what do you do with all that money you got for your house....you stick in into the dice board on Wall Street and you hope you roll a seven. But, wait....something is wrong here too. Uncle Ben realized if he raises the rates to save the dollar to much, he'll burst the housing bubble, and so he stopped and down went Humpty Dumpty. Now all broken up yet, just a few minor cracks.
Back luck for you though, for as long as there was that threat of more rate hikes, people like you were heading for the stock market. In the meantime the foreigners are getting dizzy and they decide it is time to pull out and guess what? Since the M3 hasn't been reported the outflows have exceeded the inflows.
But you can't go like them. You are stuck in the good 'ole US of A. George Bush wants you to stay, he is even building his southern wall to make sure you don't get any ideas like leaving.
But, where to go? Ponzi stocks? Housing? Decisions! Decisions!.
If Ben hits the right buttons at the right time, he may be the one to make both bubbles burst at the same time. Won't that be fun?
As for a slow venting of gases, that is what you can expect for now, but like all great plans, something always goes wrong, like the flood waters overcoming the efforts to shore up the dike. The dike finally breaks and the water comes rushing in.
Expect to hear that rushing water about the time the Iranian Oil Bourse has been operating and central banks and buyers become confident in the euro oil marker and realize there was nothing that special about the dollar marker anyway. Once the euro (or any other currency afterwards) becomes an oil currency listen hard for that rushing water. It will be there anytime soon.
I know what you are thinking. The Calvary (or is it the Crusaders?) is going to come to the rescue and burn down that nasty 'ol Iranian Bourse. But the Iranian "Injuns" are a bit more clever this time around. They put their bourse on computers with secured mirror sites everywhere in the world. Knock out one and two more pop up. And just to show that nasty Calvary they don't always win, some nice boys from the old CCCP send a nice specially engineered virus into NYMEX and IPE, switching all future sales to euros and all transactions out of New York and London to a nice quiet bank hidden in a Swiss ski resort.
Maybe the bread and soup lines won't be too bad, if there are any.