Treasury Bond bubble, collapse
derryb
Posts: 36,795 ✭✭✭✭✭
From the guy predicting hyperinflation when the bond collapse occurs. Says all the taxpayer money being loaned to the banks is being loaned back to Washington via the purchase of Treasury bonds. Sounds like a helium event to me!
Another good argument for holding PMs
Another good argument for holding PMs
"Interest rates, the price of money, are the most important market. And, perversely, they’re the market that’s most manipulated by the Fed." - Doug Casey
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you can go to 321gold and find it's link today (Sept 1st, or August 31st)
I can't find it, but there was a screamer of a political cartoon with Government in one boat, banks in the other and each was bailing each other out and pouring the water into their own boat. It's exactly what you described.
The debt keeps piling up, nothing is fixed and it's all a sham. Let it end soon.
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<< <i>From the guy predicting hyperinflation when the bond collapse occurs. Says all the taxpayer money being loaned to the banks is being loaned back to Washington via the purchase of Treasury bonds. Sounds like a helium event to me!
Another good argument for holding PMs >>
derryb, thank you for posting this article. Indeed this is another good argument for holding PMs. I would go further. It is an excellent argument to purchase as many PMs as you can as quickly as you can. I have reached my silver goal and will likely hit my gold goal by the end of this year. Now I am wondering if my goals were too modest.
The old idea of 5% PMs in one's portfolio to me looks woefully insufficient.
https://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/gold/liberty-head-2-1-gold-major-sets/liberty-head-2-1-gold-basic-set-circulation-strikes-1840-1907-cac/alltimeset/268163
"Interest rates, the price of money, are the most important market. And, perversely, they’re the market that’s most manipulated by the Fed." - Doug Casey
(This is another non-trusted source)
But then again, if it makes the case for buying more gold at the short-term top of the market, so be it.
<< <i>After hitting PM goals you might consider transfering some of your dollar savings into PMs. They're not earning much in the bank! >>
Truth.
I've got an idle grand sitting in a savings account. Made a whopping 32 cents interest in the past year.
Moving on - let's talk policy and not personality.
Tax cuts are used to stimulate economic investment, so there is always a tradeoff between jobs, economic growth and debt.
Debt generated by not taxing? That's not really the whole issue. Government spending is the "other half" of the issue in terms of debt creation. Let's not ignore it as a problem.
It's the prioritization of government spending that is ALWAYS the issue. The fact that *no* politicians want to be responsible for any cutbacks in spending - is the root of this problem. That that problem translates directly into who is on the receiving end of all those government checks, doesn't it?
We could have a top tax rate of 28% or 88%, but the issue remains the level of spending and what the money is being spent on.
I knew it would happen.
"Interest rates, the price of money, are the most important market. And, perversely, they’re the market that’s most manipulated by the Fed." - Doug Casey
I didn't omit anything. And that is why I said, "Debt generated by not taxing? That's not really the whole issue. Government spending is the "other half" of the issue in terms of debt creation. Let's not ignore it as a problem."
I've never heard a justification for taxation like yours before, which is "debt generated by not taxing more", as I stated it above. It may be a concept, but this is simply the first time I've thought of it in this way. No biggie, it's still only half of the equation.
Another silly thought analogous to that concept would be, "surplus created by not spending more," when you are already deep in the hole. If you are in a deep well that is over your head, your only hope is that the water doesn't start seeping in faster than you can pump it out, not whether you can continue to tread water forever.
I knew it would happen.
And the tax cut was not paid for so it added directly to the debt. I'm not talking about its benifits, just that it wasn't paid for.
Edited to add: It could have been paid for by reducing spending.
Another silly thought analogous to that concept would be, "surplus created by not spending more," when you are already deep in the hole. If you are in a deep well that is over your head, your only hope is that the water doesn't start seeping in faster than you can pump it out, not whether you can continue to tread water forever.
It's not justification, it is fact. If you lessen revenue with the same spending, or increase spending with the same revenue, you will add to the defict.
The analogy doesn't fit the premise.
So now o'l Bush was a Socialist? The biggest spender ever! (oh but he taxed less so it's OK. )
"Interest rates, the price of money, are the most important market. And, perversely, they’re the market that’s most manipulated by the Fed." - Doug Casey
"Interest rates, the price of money, are the most important market. And, perversely, they’re the market that’s most manipulated by the Fed." - Doug Casey
Is there some alternate universe out there that doesn't read the paper?
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
wa wa waaaaaat?
I am surprised so many people are going into treasuries now - rates cannot go much lower, so the risk is rate increases. In Economics 101 they teach that when rates go up, bond prices go down. Rates and bond prices have an inverse relationship. If one were to invest in bonds, it ought to be in bonds with less than 1 year maturity, so that you get the interest rate back and not worry about bond prices. Intermediate and long term bond (or bond funds) should be avoided.
If one is interested in longer term preservation of capital, or better return, then make your own decisions (stocks, PM, real estate, whatever). I would strongly recommend against bonds, as rates are so low, the risk is too great.
<< <i>Now they sort of re-insitituted Pay-as-you go, so it is getting under control. >>
Pay-as-you go???? Save that one for the regime's more unquestioning supporters - perhaps the Washington press corps.
https://www.pcgs.com/setregistry/gold/liberty-head-2-1-gold-major-sets/liberty-head-2-1-gold-basic-set-circulation-strikes-1840-1907-cac/alltimeset/268163
Is that what you call it when you pay for benefits that aren't supposed to kick in until 2014? Gotta hand it to them, they learned their trade from the Social Security "pay as you go" accounting method.
Let's look at the US financial position as a ledger sheet. Lots of liabilities. A few streams of income. Even more streams of outflow.
Yup, it's the "sort of" accounting method. duh.
I knew it would happen.
<< <i> I am surprised so many people are going into treasuries now - rates cannot go much lower, so the risk is rate increases. >>
Investors are not running to Treasuries for the return. Many of them see Treasuries as the safest place to park their money in an uncertain economic environment. Most Treasuries are being unknowingly bought by taxpayers as the Fed has become the purchaser of last resort. This is the true meaning of monetizing the federal debt.
What will be interesting is where the money will run to when faith in the US's ability to pay its debt declines. I would say PMs, but if that were the case I believe most Treasury holders would be in PMs now instead of Treasuries. I believe when the cat gets out of the bag on Treasuries, investors will flee and turn to hard commodities such as oil, gas, agriculture and also to the hot flavor of the day in foreign currencies.
I'm betting the farm on PMs and a crash in the DJIA.
"Interest rates, the price of money, are the most important market. And, perversely, they’re the market that’s most manipulated by the Fed." - Doug Casey
I feel about the same as I did regarding the NASDAQ in 1998, and the housing market in 2004. Seems to me this 'bubble' keeps inflating as long as its considered a safe haven from other asset classes... even if it means allowing/pushing other things to fail.
Personally I was amazed, shocked, etc. just how far the NASDAQ/Housing market went before the perverbial pin... so I'm thinking we have at least 2 years to go... minimum. I'm hoping for the best, prepared for the worst.
<< <i>Now they sort of re-insitituted Pay-as-you go
Is that what you call it when you pay for benefits that aren't supposed to kick in until 2014? Gotta hand it to them, they learned their trade from the Social Security "pay as you go" accounting method.
Let's look at the US financial position as a ledger sheet. Lots of liabilities. A few streams of income. Even more streams of outflow.
Yup, it's the "sort of" accounting method. duh. >>
It's the new math. Spend enough to guarantee that future generations will be essentially indentured servants, before they are even born.
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
If you support a "socialistic state" where re-distribution of wealth is the grand order of business, then the current party in power is for you.
If you are on the receiving side of entitlements, then the current party in power is for you.
It does strike me funny that some members here would support that logic, as discretionary spending on hobbies like coin collecting are probably the first things to go when you lack funds......
Haven't seen too many entitlement receiving families out at the coin show looking to spend on their collections?