We got a problem here folks, and it's going to lead to the next crash -- and sooner than you think.
First, let's talk about the impact of QE on companies. The common mantra is that it makes it "easier" for firms to borrow money. The problem is that borrowing, in general, is a destructive act as you must pay back said borrowing with interest -- no matter how small. The bigger problem, however, is that long-established businesses have obligations that were all contracted with the expectation of lending other people money and earning a spread on it, such as their pensions.
QE is quietly destroying those pensions -- and corporate balance sheets.
Zitat "The continued decline in the pension discount rates, driven by the unprecedented low interest rate environment, has caused a significant noncash increase in our pension expense," said Greg Smith, Boeing's CFO.
No, really? You just noticed this now when I've been pointing it out in this column and in fact called out to union members that they were being systematically destroyed by these policies in The Ticker -- since 2008?
The problem with this impact is that it doesn't disappear when QE ends. It's cumulative and permanent. This is the nature of all compound functions and is why it's so destructive across the board to implement so-called "emergency" policies -- but nowhere is the impact going to be worse from a financial markets perspective than in companies who are now stuck with the pension impacts.
What's worse is that when these plans fail to be able to deliver in a decade or so the impact is going to come right up the chute of those around 50ish now, at the same time their earnings have been destroyed on their retirement funds.
Between now-retired people who have had their portfolio returns in fixed income destroyed over the last few years you can now add everyone who is in the "pre-retirement" mode, specifically those around 10-15 years from retirement. Those are the people who were made promises in pension funds that are not going to be kept because of the impossible-to-recover impact of 5+ years of "crisis" interest rates and repression.
In short what has happened is that the 50+ population segment has had its money stolen in The Fed's "monetary experiment" -- and few if any of them understand what has been done to them.
They will, however, when they're eating catfood -- and that day is coming much sooner than anyone would think.
The destructive effect of this policy cannot be overstated. The peak earnings years for most people are in their 50s, but it is those earnings that fund retirement spending which is to a large degree discretionary for those in middle incomes and above. And those returns, despite claims that "most of the wealth has been returned to people in the stock market", have been trashed.
What's worse is that as the stock market has more than doubled off the lows of 2009 it has sucked people back into the market, especially now in the last couple of months. Most people did not sell out in 2007 or early 2008, despite people like me shouting from the rooftops that you were about to get your head cut off. Nor will anyone listen this time either, yet the problem for most stocks is that the actual value of all stocks in the long term is determined only by the discounted cash flow of dividends; everything else is speculative premium in that someone has to come along that believes in the future appreciation of price or you cannot sell!
Finally, the paradox of "easy money" is that while it appears to make government borrowing "free" it is in fact not free at all. At the same time it makes running large fiscal debts appear sustainable and thus encourages overspending (and in fact is designed to cause such overspending) at the same time it destroys the incentive of banks and other entities to lend money in the private market as there is no return that can be earned by doing so. Since risk must be paid for in the form of interest as the rate is depressed the incentive to take said risk with loans evaporates as the profit in doing so disappears. Remember that nobody ever intentionally lends at a loss.
Finally, we have embedded into our budget process these trillion dollar deficits. Congress must stop this right here and now, but there is scant evidence that it will. If Boehner, Pelosi, McConnell and Reid do not stop the destructive cycle of deficit spending within this budget cycle the risk rises precipitously that the market will pull the rug out from under the charade for them.
Quote: Sanguine wrote in post #2So, he says it's not going to be hyperinflation - then what will it be?
That is the question of the day! I can't keep track of how many articles I have read with either, some predict a deflationary spiral, others (hyper-) inflation!
I suppose a lot depends on how things begin to break apart. I have always assumed hyper-inflation will come eventually. Actually I think that KD should not have used the word "hyperinflationary" in front of "boom" in that sentence. I think he means that we won't see the type of "boom" continue in capital markets running side-by-side with high inflation that I've heard some people predict.