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Prudent Bear's Doug
Noland has for years been pointing out that one of the drivers of the credit
bubble has been the ever-broadening definition of money. As the global economy
expanded without a hic-up, more and more instruments came to be used as a store
of value or medium of exchange or even a standard against which to value other
things -- in other words, as money. Thus mortgage-backed bonds and even more
exotic things came to be seen as nearly risk-free and infinitely liquid. In
Noland's terms, credit gained "moneyness," which sent the effective global
money supply through the roof. This in turn allowed the U.S. and its trading
partners to keep adding jobs and appearing to grow, despite debt levels that
were rising into the stratosphere. For a while there, borrowing actually made
the world richer, because both the cash received and the debt created functioned
as money.
With a few months of hindsight, it's now clear that debt-as-money was not
one of humanity's better ideas. When the U.S. housing market -- the source
of all that mortgage-backed pseudo money -- began to tank, hedge funds found
out that an asset-backed bond wasn't exactly the same thing as a stack of hundred
dollar bills. The global economy then started taking inventory of what it was
using as money. And it began crossing things off the list. Subprime ABS? Nope,
that's not money. BBB corporate bonds? Nope. High-grade corporates? Alas, no.
Credit default swaps? Are you kidding me?
No longer able to function as money, these instruments are being "repriced" (a
slick little euphemism for "dumped for whatever anyone will pay"), which is
causing a cascade failure of the many business models that depended on infinite
liquidity. The effective global money supply is contracting at a double-digit
rate, reversing out much of the past decade's growth.
Now here's where it gets really interesting. The reaction of the world's central
banks to the freezing-up of the leveraged speculating community has, predictably,
been to create massive amounts of new fiat currency and hand it to the banking
system. They're not dropping twenties out of helicopters yet, but functionally
it's the same thing. By swapping dollars, euros and yen for the no-longer-money
bonds that are plunging in price, creating some paper profits where there once
were catastrophic losses, the Bankers hope to revive the animal spirits of
the leveraged speculators. Specifically, they hope to stop the financial community
from going further down the moneyness checklist and lopping off any more instruments.
But you don't forget a brush with death that easily. The process of debt reclassification
has a momentum that a few hundred billion new dollars won't stop. And once
corporate bonds and agency bonds and emerging market bonds have been crossed
off the list, the system will start eyeing the dollar. Is it really a store
of value after falling by half against oil and gold in the past five years?
Didn't the Fed just create a tidal wave of new dollars and promise to create
infinitely more if needed? Isn't the U.S. economy hobbled by the implosion
in housing and mortgage finance and hedge funds and (soon) derivatives? Don't
Americans owe more per capita than any people in human history? And a realization
will begin to dawn: Maybe the paper currency of an over-indebted country isn't
money either...
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John
Rubino
DollarCollapse.com
John Rubino is author of Clean Money: Picking Winners
in the Green Tech Boom (Wiley, December 2008), co-author, with GoldMoney's
James Turk, of The Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit From It (Doubleday,
January 2008), and author of How to Profit from the Coming Real Estate
Bust (Rodale, 2003). After earning a Finance MBA from New York University,
he spent the 1980s on Wall Street, as a currency trader, equity analyst and
junk bond analyst. During the 1990s he was a featured columnist with TheStreet.com and
a frequent contributor to Individual Investor, Online Investor,
and Consumers Digest, among many other publications. He now writes
for CFA Magazine and edits DollarCollapse.com and GreenStockInvesting.com.
Copyright © 2006-2009 John Rubino
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