Re: The Fed: Dishonest or Incompetent?
re claims on stuff v stuff
from goldmoney.com commentary by james turk: "Less than one year ago REFCO, a New York based financial services company, collapsed. Last week the London Metals Exchange took the extraordinary step to postpone what looks like the inevitable default of contracts in its nickel market. What do these two events have in common?
The customers of these firms who thought they owned metal in fact didn't. The defaults made clear to these firms' customers that they owned someone's promise to deliver metal to them, but they did not own the metal itself."
jimmy rogers' commodities fund thought it owned futures, but it didn't. now it is an unsecured creditor in the refco bankruptcy.
this also connects to bill gross' latest piece, http://www.pimco.com/LeftNav/Late+Br...ember+2006.htm
referred to in another thread here. i've seen gross' argument in a piece some time ago by john mauldin. basically it says that demographics limit the efficacy of any financial solutions to funding the boomers' retirements. if there are only so many people working, producing only a certain amount of stuff, then all the financial claims accumulated by the boomer generation can only purchase that amount of stuff. there's no more to be had.
so one way or another, financial claims can't exceed the value of the stuff those financial claims can purchase. [this is the concrete expression of finster's obsession ;) with the value of the dollar versus the value of stuff.]
Originally posted by Finster
from goldmoney.com commentary by james turk: "Less than one year ago REFCO, a New York based financial services company, collapsed. Last week the London Metals Exchange took the extraordinary step to postpone what looks like the inevitable default of contracts in its nickel market. What do these two events have in common?
The customers of these firms who thought they owned metal in fact didn't. The defaults made clear to these firms' customers that they owned someone's promise to deliver metal to them, but they did not own the metal itself."
jimmy rogers' commodities fund thought it owned futures, but it didn't. now it is an unsecured creditor in the refco bankruptcy.
this also connects to bill gross' latest piece, http://www.pimco.com/LeftNav/Late+Br...ember+2006.htm
referred to in another thread here. i've seen gross' argument in a piece some time ago by john mauldin. basically it says that demographics limit the efficacy of any financial solutions to funding the boomers' retirements. if there are only so many people working, producing only a certain amount of stuff, then all the financial claims accumulated by the boomer generation can only purchase that amount of stuff. there's no more to be had.
so one way or another, financial claims can't exceed the value of the stuff those financial claims can purchase. [this is the concrete expression of finster's obsession ;) with the value of the dollar versus the value of stuff.]
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