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As internal debates in the Gulf and Asian nations intensify over the need
to continue propping up the U.S. economy, dangerous signals this past week
from the Fed, Freddie Mac, and Wall Street may be pushing them to finally let
go of the lifelines that have kept America afloat.
Despite clear signs of surging prices in the U.S., the Fed took a major step
in undermining its own credibility with its most recent forecast that inflation
would remain below 2% for the next three years. As the forecast clearly paved
the way for additional Fed rate cuts, Wall Street ignored its absurdity and
heralded the announcement as legitimate good news. The celebration is likely
infuriating foreign governments, who must be dumbstruck that the Fed can claim
contained inflation at home while the declining dollar is fueling massive inflation
problems around the world.
In order to maintain their pegs to the dollar, foreign central banks have
been forced to print their own currencies to buy all the dollars accumulated
by their exporters. This has resulted in upward pressure on consumer prices
in their respective nations, with annual increases now reaching alarming rates.
Bernanke's message of benign neglect means U.S. exported inflation will likely
increase substantially in the years ahead, exacerbating the inflation problems
for those nations now supporting the dollar.
In December, OPEC nations will convene to discuss continuing their dollar
pegs. If they were looking for a reason to drop them, the Fed may have just
provided it.
Also this week, Freddie Mac announced billions in losses and indicated additional
capital will be required to avoid insolvency. As shares of both Freddie and
Fannie plunged, it must be increasing obvious to all that the mortgage crisis
now affects the totality of U.S. mortgage-backed securities, many of which
are owned by these very foreign central banks. As bankruptcy for these two
quasi-government agencies becomes a serious threat, the implied U.S. government
guarantee will certainly be called into question. If the government were to
honor it, how many more dollars would be printed, and how much will those dollars
be worth? Either way, contemplating the inflationary implications of these
bankruptcies will weigh heavily on the minds of foreign central bankers with
dollar pegged currencies.
Perhaps the icing on this "let them eat cake" mentality was provided by Wall
Street itself. In a year with record losses, Wall Street firms announced that
they would also be paying record bonuses to their employees. The rationale
for this PR fiasco was that since the losses were not the fault of the employees
(really?), they should not be made to suffer. So rather than sharing the pain
being endured by their firms' shareholders (clearly even less culpable then
themselves), Wall Street's fat cats will rub salt in their owners' wounds by
compounding their losses with the additional expense of lavish bonuses. Following
the outlandish pay packages already given to ousted CEO's who clearly were
responsible for the losses, Wall Street's "heads we win, tails you lose" attitude
will not go over well abroad.
In many nations now supporting our currency, the only thing similarly disgraced
CEOs would have taken would have been their own lives. If Wall Street firms
care so little about their own shareholders, what confidence will customers
have that their interests will be respected? Such disgraceful compensation
in the wake of such horrendous losses, especially following the lousy advice
given to clients to buy these toxic mortgage-backed securities in the first
place, proves that the only wallets Wall Street executives watch are their
own.
For a more in depth analysis of the tenuous position of the American economy,
the housing and mortgage markets, and U.S. dollar denominated investments,
read my new book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse." Click here to
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