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Could hyperinflation be in America's furture?

Due to all the government spending and printing of money, or will they keep a handle on it . And would PM's and other tangible items vanish overnight?

Comments

  • garsmithgarsmith Posts: 5,894 ✭✭
    Better bend over because the government of the people, by the people and for the people doesn't represent the wishes of the people any more.

    i.e. where screwed.
  • It better work, or else we're headed for an epic collapse. Plain vanilla inflation doesn't work anymore. Put the printing press on Turbo Weimar, captain!
  • roadrunnerroadrunner Posts: 28,303 ✭✭✭✭✭
    What's hyperinflation? 20% 30% 50% 100% Weimar% Zimbabwe%

    Regardless of what you call it, we'll make well into the double digits and possibly over 20%. Whatever you call that, it will be bullish for metals. No doubt the BLS CPI stats will show inflation still in single digits at that point.

    roadrunner
    Barbarous Relic No More, LSCC -GoldSeek--shadow stats--SafeHaven--321gold
  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,668 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Before they started tinkering with the value of the dollar it
    looked like 40% inflation was in the future. If they keep try-
    ing to pencil whip it it's going to be much worse.
    Tempus fugit.
  • storm888storm888 Posts: 11,701 ✭✭✭
    Folks who believe "hyperinflation" is on the way, have to also
    believe that every mortgagor is going to get a free house when
    they pay off their mortgage with the new "cheap" dollars.

    We have now seen that the banks and their government will
    allow the economy to grind to a halt before they are willing to
    admit that the mortgages they own are of little/no value.

    Deflation on an unprecedented scale will be seen LONG before
    inflation becomes an admitted problem.
    Folks Who Bite Get Bitten. Folks Who Don't Bite Get Eaten.
  • renman95renman95 Posts: 7,037 ✭✭✭✭✭
    hey! I want a free house.

    Got Weimar?

    So, deflationary recession first then warp-inflation...and finally we become the USSA.

    Ren, out
  • jmski52jmski52 Posts: 22,899 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Before you get a free house, you have to default on your mortgage. Then, hey - you still qualify.
    Q: Are You Printing Money? Bernanke: Not Literally

    I knew it would happen.
  • 57loaded57loaded Posts: 4,967 ✭✭✭
    either scenario is (or both in a deflation then hyperinflation) puts zero faith in the USD.

    regardless the short term to ten year outlook is bleak either way.



  • Storm,

    This credit/lending tightening by the banks and the defaulted mortgages add up to deflation, but unlike the big DP of the 30's,

    our crisis control leaders are dumping liquidity into the markets all over the world.

    Do you believe that the deflationary aspects of the asset markets declining will will be relatively short lived because of this active liquidity effort?

    Or do you believe that no matter, we are in for a deflationary trend of long duration ie. 3-7 years?

    Please explain.
    NumbersUsa, FairUs, Alipac, CapsWeb, and TeamAmericaPac
  • ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 6,246 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>Folks who believe "hyperinflation" is on the way, have to also
    believe that every mortgagor is going to get a free house when
    they pay off their mortgage with the new "cheap" dollars.

    We have now seen that the banks and their government will
    allow the economy to grind to a halt before they are willing to
    admit that the mortgages they own are of little/no value.

    Deflation on an unprecedented scale will be seen LONG before
    inflation becomes an admitted problem. >>



    so if someone believed hyperinflation were coming, would they want to snap up as much real estate as they can?
  • storm888storm888 Posts: 11,701 ✭✭✭
    "...Do you believe that the deflationary aspects of the asset markets declining will will be relatively short lived because of this active liquidity effort?..."

    ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////


    Yes; "relatively" short lived.

    BUT, I keep telling folks, just like I did in 1980, looking at the "fundamentals"
    of a failed fiat currency - when that currency is the USD - is the road to personal
    bankruptcy.

    Inflation hedges are best-priced - and most safely put on - when deflation is
    near its peak and the pain to working folks is the greatest. We are not really
    very close to max-pain on that front, yet.

    Housing prices have to fall another 20% to 50%, before the "mortgage mess"
    self-corrects. Collateral values must exceed the mortgagees' basis in the
    paper, or the paper will always be at risk..........AND, new paper will be hard
    for mortgagors to issue.

    ......

    (Primer: mortgagor = borrowing home-buyer................mortgagee = bank/lender/paper-holder.)

    //

    Folks Who Bite Get Bitten. Folks Who Don't Bite Get Eaten.
  • storm888storm888 Posts: 11,701 ✭✭✭
    "...so if someone believed hyperinflation were coming, would they want to snap up as much real estate as they can?..."

    ///////////////////////////////////////

    Yes. .......... BUT, ONLY if they can use borrowed money to do so.

    That is how ALL of us got our "free" houses in 1980. We had as many
    mortgaged properties as we could get, AND we had been hoarding
    PMs for years. When PMs spiked, we dumped the metals and paid
    off the mortgages on our real estate.

    The problem/challenge NOW is trying to figure out how much real property
    has to decline in order to make it a "near slam dunk." We don't have to
    guess "perfect," but we need to guess as close as possible.

    We want deflated real-property that we OWE money on. We want PMs
    that were bought "cheap." When the PMs hit the sell numbers, we want
    to use that cash to pay the mortgages off.

    Rinse and Repeat.


    //////////////////////


    EDITED To Add: Through March/April of 2008, TONS of folks dumped metals
    and paid-off their mortgages.

    It is not possible to predict "how often" the program can be implemented,
    but it is safe to say that cycles and waves repeat themselves.

    "Exit Strategies" are about moving your money from one place to another
    where it will better work.

    2005-2006 was a good time to sell real-property, and buy PMs. The
    opposite opportunity will come, BUT I have no idea exactly when. I think
    I will know it when I see it.

    Folks Who Bite Get Bitten. Folks Who Don't Bite Get Eaten.
  • PlacidPlacid Posts: 11,299 ✭✭✭
    I think deflation is more likley short term than inflation as long as the price of oil remains close to where it currently is.

    There was a good amount of inflation when oil went from $100 to close to $150 due to the fact that all goods that need to be transported have to factor in the transportation costs.

    The printing of more money could very well cause a good amount of inflation long term.
  • WalmannWalmann Posts: 2,806
    With all the unfunded liablities at the federal level, the current tax rates and what levels an econmony can bear and still grow, inflation is without a doubt in the cards.


    "Better bend over because the government of the people, by the people and for the people doesn't represent the wishes of the people any more."


    By the way the ending of the Gettysburg address inscribed on the Lincoln Memorial has now been edited to read: and that government of the attorney by the attorney for the attorney, shall not perish from the earth.




  • storm888storm888 Posts: 11,701 ✭✭✭
    "...There was a good amount of inflation when oil went from $100 to close to $150 due to the fact that all goods that need to be transported have to factor in the transportation costs...."

    ///////////////////////////////////////////////

    It is always important NOT to confuse "price inflation" with the kind of
    inflation - "printing press inflation" - that primarily interests us here in
    relation to PMs.

    Price-Inflation can, oddly, be a deflationary signal. Consumers must
    liquidate "hard assets" to fund the purchase of commodities they
    need to survive. This phenom can cause "hard assets" to deflate
    as more of them come to market.

    Printing Press Inflation - the CORE of the PM-bulls' mantra - is, on
    a "fundamental" level, ALWAYS inflationary. The problem is and will
    continue to be that "defenders" of the system of things will always
    have policy adjustments that they can impose to DELAY the final
    reckoning. THAT is why we cannot rely on fundamentals to make
    money in PMs. We will be "right," but we will be broke.

    ///////////////////////////

    For those who don't know my position:

    I think everybody should ALWAYS have some physical PMs. "Some" is relative to each person's comfort level.

    I think folks who want to make a lot of money on PMs need to trade them in/out/long/short.

    I am NOT "anti-bull." I am against putting all the eggs in one basket and clutching the basket to tightly.

    Folks Who Bite Get Bitten. Folks Who Don't Bite Get Eaten.
  • RBinTexRBinTex Posts: 4,328
    Yes.

    No.

    No.
  • mrearlygoldmrearlygold Posts: 17,858 ✭✭✭


    << <i>Due to all the government spending and printing of money, or will they keep a handle on it . q]

    Yeah, they've got a handle on it all right. image
  • I think we are already in a deflationary state.

    It should last through the early part of '09, IMO.

    Then I do expect 20 and 30% inflation for a few years.

    The Fed will tell the sheep that we are only at 6% inflation and people out of work will drop off the rolls every 6 months, so that will be kept artificially low.

    Precious metals will only go up over the next few years, particularly silver and gold.
    "Lenin is certainly right. There is no subtler or more severe means of overturning the existing basis of society(destroy capitalism) than to debauch the currency. The process engages all the hidden forces of economic law on the side of destruction, and it does it in a manner which not one man in a million is able to diagnose."
    John Marnard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, 1920, page 235ff
  • ProofCollectionProofCollection Posts: 6,246 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>I think we are already in a deflationary state. >>



    I haven't noticed the price of anything except real estate go down.
  • storm888storm888 Posts: 11,701 ✭✭✭
    Most of the groceries I buy are down hard in the last two weeks, and falling fast.

    Deflation in soft commodities is here.

    The signal was the first implosion of POT and MOS.

    ..........

    Gasoline could surprise on the downside, soon.

    Folks Who Bite Get Bitten. Folks Who Don't Bite Get Eaten.
  • BearBear Posts: 18,953 ✭✭✭
    Excessive printing of money, is a secret tax on people.

    By cheapening the value of all assets valued in dollars,

    such as stock, homes, bank accounts, bonds, CDs. The

    Government does not have to raise taxes . It is easier

    to just diminish your assets by 20%. This fact has been

    known since ancient Rome when silver coinage was replaced

    with lead coins which were giving a silver wash. It would seem

    that we citizens, have not learned our history lessons.


    In an inflationary environment , the Government doing the excess

    printing, gets the full value of the newly printed bills. However those

    of us at the end of the line get devalued bills as well as the loss of value

    of our assets. While inflation is good for the people in debt, it is terrible for

    folks on fixed incomes, the average wage earner and the Nation as a whole.
    There once was a place called
    Camelotimage
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