It is easy to predict
the end of the world looking at the numbers that are assembled here. Yet the substance can be a mouse. So start by not trusting this rather shallow
interpretation. The hard reality is that
the printing press over at the fed is buying up the long treasuries creating a
shortage of long paper and driving cash out into the market to look for yields. This is how stimulus looks.
Otherwise it has been
ineffective at best. The middle class or
top two thirds of the economy need ready access to expanded credit to actually
expand their wealth and drive the economy.
The bottom third need a secure and deliverable minimum wage base set
around as high as $15.00 per hour as a meaningful substitute for welfare. We have addressed this in another post.
With that in place all
the funny money games become almost meaningless as they should be.
The Most Important
Number In The Entire U.S. Economy
There is one
vitally important number that everyone needs to be watching right now, and it
doesn’t have anything to do with unemployment, inflation or housing. If
this number gets too high, it will collapse the entire U.S. financial
system. The number that I am talking about is the yield on 10 year U.S.
Treasuries. When that number goes up, long-term interest rates all across
the financial system start increasing. When long-term interest rates
rise, it becomes more expensive for the federal government to borrow money, it
becomes more expensive for state and local governments to borrow money,
existing bonds lose value and bond investors lose a lot of money, mortgage rates go up and monthly payments on new mortgages
rise, and interest rates throughout the entire economy go up and this causes
economic activity to slow down.
On top of
everything else, there are more than 440 trillion dollars worth of interest rate derivatives sitting out there, and
rapidly rising interest rates could cause that gigantic time bomb to go off and
implode our entire financial system. We are living in the midst of the greatest
debt bubble in the history of the world, and the only way that the game can
continue is for interest rates to stay super low. Unfortunately, the
yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries has started to rise, and many experts are
projecting that it is going to continue to rise.
On August 2nd of
last year, the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries was just 1.48%, and our entire
debt-based economy was basking in the glow of ultra-low interest rates.
But now things are rapidly changing. On Wednesday, the yield on 10 year
U.S. Treasuries hit 2.70% before falling back to 2.58% on “good news” from the
Federal Reserve.
Historically
speaking, rates are still super low, but what is alarming is that it looks like
we hit a “bottom” last year and that interest rates are only going to go up
from here. In fact, according to CNBC many experts believe that we will soon be
pushing up toward the 3 percent mark…
Round numbers like 1,700 on the S&P 500 are well and
good, but savvy traders have their minds on another integer: 2.75 percent
That was the high for the 10-year yield this year, and traders say yields are bound to go back to that level. The one overhanging question is how stocks will react when they see that number.
“If we start to push up to new highs on the 10-year yield so that’s the 2.75 level—I think you’d probably see a bit of anxiety creep back into the marketplace,” Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s head of global technical strategy, MacNeil Curry, told “Futures Now” on Tuesday.
And Curry sees yields getting back to that level in the short term, and then some. “In the next couple of weeks to two months or so I think we’ve got a push coming up to the 2.85, 2.95 zone,” he said.
This rise in
interest rates has been expected for a very long time – it is just that nobody
knew exactly when it would happen. Now that it has begun, nobody is quite
sure how high interest rates will eventually go. For some very
interesting technical analysis, I encourage
everyone to check out an article by Peter Brandt that you can find right here.
And all of this
is very bad news for stocks. The chart below was created by Chartist Friend from Pittsburgh, and it shows
that stock prices have generally risen as the yield on 10
year U.S. Treasuries has steadily declined over the past 30 years…
When interest
rates go down, that spurs economic activity, and that is good for stock prices.
So when interest
rates start going up rapidly, that is not a good thing for the stock market at
all.
The Federal Reserve has tried to keep long-term interest rates
down by wildly printing money and buying bonds, and even the suggestion that
the Fed may eventually “taper” quantitative easing caused the yield on 10 year
U.S. Treasuries to absolutely soar a few weeks ago.
So the Fed has
backed off on the “taper” talk for now, but what happens if the yield on 10
year U.S. Treasuries continues to rise even with the wild money printing that
the Fed has been doing?
At that point,
the Fed would begin to totally lose control over the situation. And if
that happens, Bill Fleckenstein told King World News the other day that he believes that we could
see the stock market suddenly plunge by 25 percent…
Let’s say Ben (Bernanke) comes out tomorrow and says, ‘We
are not going to taper.’ But let’s just say the bond market trades down anyway,
and the next thing you know we go through the recent highs and a month from now
the 10-Year is at 3%. And people start to realize they are not even tapering
and the bond market is backed up….
They will say, ‘Why is this happening?’ Then they may realize the bond market is discounting the inflation we already have.
At some point the bond markets are going to say, ‘We are not comfortable with these policies.’ Obviously you can’t print money forever or no emerging country would ever have gone broke. So the bond market starts to back up and the economy gets worse than it is now because rates are rising. So the Fed says, ‘We can’t have this,’ and they decide to print more (money) and the bond market backs up (even more).
All of the sudden it becomes clear that money printing not only isn’t the solution, but it’s the problem. Well, with rates going from where they are to 3%+ on the 10-Year, one of these days the S&P futures are going to get destroyed. And if the computers ever get loose on the downside the market could break 25% in three days.
And as I have
written about previously, we have seen a
huge spike in margin debt in recent months, and this could make it even easier
for a stock market collapse to happen. A recent note from Deutsche Bank
explained precisely why
margin debt is so dangerous…
Margin debt can be described as a tool used by stock
speculators to borrow money from brokerages to buy more stock than they could
otherwise afford on their own. These loans are collateralized by stock
holdings, so when the market goes south, investors are either required to
inject more cash/assets or become forced to sell immediately to pay off their
loans – sometimes leading to mass pullouts or crashes.
But of much
greater concern than a stock market crash is the 441 trillion dollar interest rate derivatives bubble that could implode if interest rates
continue to rise rapidly.
Deutsche Bank is
the largest bank in Europe, and at this point they have 55.6 trillion euros of total exposure to derivatives.
But the GDP of
the entire nation of Germany is only about 2.7 trillion euros for a whole year.
We are facing a
similar situation in the United States. Our GDP for 2013 will be
somewhere between 15 and 16 trillion dollars, but many of our big banks have
exposure to derivatives that absolutely dwarfs our GDP. The following
numbers come from one of my previous articles entitled “The Coming
Derivatives Panic That Will Destroy Global Financial Markets“…
JPMorgan Chase
Total Assets: $1,812,837,000,000 (just over 1.8 trillion
dollars)
Total Exposure To Derivatives: $69,238,349,000,000 (more
than 69 trillion dollars)
Citibank
Total Assets: $1,347,841,000,000 (a bit more than 1.3
trillion dollars)
Total Exposure To Derivatives: $52,150,970,000,000 (more
than 52 trillion dollars)
Bank Of America
Total Assets: $1,445,093,000,000 (a bit more than 1.4
trillion dollars)
Total Exposure To Derivatives: $44,405,372,000,000 (more
than 44 trillion dollars
Goldman Sachs
Total Assets: $114,693,000,000 (a bit more than 114
billion dollars – yes, you read that correctly)
Total Exposure To Derivatives: $41,580,395,000,000 (more than 41 trillion dollars)
That means that the total exposure that Goldman Sachs has to derivatives contracts is more than 362 times greater than their total assets.
Total Exposure To Derivatives: $41,580,395,000,000 (more than 41 trillion dollars)
That means that the total exposure that Goldman Sachs has to derivatives contracts is more than 362 times greater than their total assets.
And remember,
the biggest chunk of those derivatives contracts is made up of interest rate
derivatives.
Just imagine
what would happen if a life insurance company wrote millions upon millions of
life insurance contracts and then everyone suddenly died.
What would
happen to that life insurance company?
It would go
completely broke of course.
Well, that is
what our major banks are facing today.
They have
written trillions upon trillions of dollars worth of interest rate derivatives
contracts, and they are betting that interest rates will not go up rapidly.
But what if they
do?
And the truth is
that interest rates have a whole lot of room to go up. The chart below
shows how the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries has moved over the past couple
of decades…
As you can see,
the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries was hovering around the 6 percent mark
back in the year 2000.
Back in 1990,
the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries hovered between 8 and 9 percent.
If we return to
“normal” levels, our financial system will implode. There is no way that
our debt-addicted system would be able to handle it.
So watch the
yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries very carefully. It is the most important
number in the entire U.S. economy.
If that number
gets too high, the game is over.
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Image credit:
see: People Friendly Taxation at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2152860
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