the solution to [credit] pollution is [credit] dilution.
we are on a path to a significant spike in inflation. this will "solve" the problem of too much debt. this is why tptb want to "get credit flowing again."
3 reasons to expect inflation:
1. fleckenstein's argument- although the fed says it will take back, or drain, what they have "quantitatively eased" into the system, they won't. the economy will be judged too fragile, and there will be too much political pressure for the fed to drain.
2. janszen's argument- there are already a plethora of dollar assets in existence. at some point foreign holders will get antsy and start to defect from the dollar- trying to cash in their dollar assets for real assets all around the globe, including in the u.s. there will be a sharp dollar drop and commodity based inflation.
3. amerman's argument- the present value of the social security and medicare and pension claims of the baby boomers is approx. $1million/younger- and non-boomer household above the poverty line. the only way the "promises" aren't broken [which would cause huge political turmoil] is to lower significantly the value of the dollar. there will be an inflation spike sometime in the next 5-8 years which will more than cut the value of the dollar in half. the inflation spike will not be much reflected in the official cpi, thus allowing for underexpensing indexed payments like social security.
strategies:
1. borrow fixed rate money now. rates are low and future inflation will eventually reduce or erase the burden of the loan.
2. use most of the borrowed money and other funds to buy precious metals and commodities.
3. consider buying income producing assets- real estate, energy producers, farmland..
timing- borrow now. you may want to wait on the purchases, or you may want to scale into purchases a bit at a time.
we are on a path to a significant spike in inflation. this will "solve" the problem of too much debt. this is why tptb want to "get credit flowing again."
3 reasons to expect inflation:
1. fleckenstein's argument- although the fed says it will take back, or drain, what they have "quantitatively eased" into the system, they won't. the economy will be judged too fragile, and there will be too much political pressure for the fed to drain.
2. janszen's argument- there are already a plethora of dollar assets in existence. at some point foreign holders will get antsy and start to defect from the dollar- trying to cash in their dollar assets for real assets all around the globe, including in the u.s. there will be a sharp dollar drop and commodity based inflation.
3. amerman's argument- the present value of the social security and medicare and pension claims of the baby boomers is approx. $1million/younger- and non-boomer household above the poverty line. the only way the "promises" aren't broken [which would cause huge political turmoil] is to lower significantly the value of the dollar. there will be an inflation spike sometime in the next 5-8 years which will more than cut the value of the dollar in half. the inflation spike will not be much reflected in the official cpi, thus allowing for underexpensing indexed payments like social security.
strategies:
1. borrow fixed rate money now. rates are low and future inflation will eventually reduce or erase the burden of the loan.
2. use most of the borrowed money and other funds to buy precious metals and commodities.
3. consider buying income producing assets- real estate, energy producers, farmland..
timing- borrow now. you may want to wait on the purchases, or you may want to scale into purchases a bit at a time.
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