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The One Market the Fed
Hopes You Won't Find Out About
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As we celebrate year three of the Great Financial Crisis
with the first official bailout of an entire country (Greece), I’m
still astounded and the complete and utter lack of coverage the underlying
cause of this Crisis has received.
We’ve had tens of thousands, if not hundreds of
thousands of articles and research reports have been written about the
Crisis, and yet I would wager less than 1% of them actually bother talking
about what caused it, let alone how the various efforts to stop it have in
fact FAILED to address the key issues.
Remember back in 2007? At that time we were told it was all
about Subprime mortgages. Then in 2008, we were told it was the investment
banks, specifically Lehman Brothers’ failure and AIG’s credit
default swaps. In 2009, we were told it was poor accounting standards and
bad bets made by Wall Street. And here we are in 2010, and we’re
still being told it was simply bad bets made by Wall Street.
All of these answers are partially right, but none of them
are totally 100% accurate. Why? Because they fail to address the one
underlying issue that links ALL of these items. I’m talking about the
Black Hole of Finance: a bottomless pit that no official or regulator
bothers mentioning in public because acknowledging it would mean
acknowledging that all of the efforts to stop the Crisis are truly
paltry.
What caused the Crisis?
Derivatives.
You’ve probably heard this term before, or have some
vague understanding of what it means. But the actual reality of derivatives
and what they mean for the financial markets remains a topic no one in the
mainstream media (or the regulators for that matter) wants to touch.
Why?
Let’s do some quick math.
If you add up the value of every stock on the planet, the
entire market capitalization would be about $36 trillion. If you do the
same process for bonds, you’d get a market capitalization of roughly
$72 trillion.
The notional value of the derivative market is roughly $1+
QUADRILLION.
I realize that number sounds like something out of Looney
tunes, so I’ll try to put it into perspective.
$1+ Quadrillion is roughly:
- 40 TIMES THE WORLD’S STOCK MARKET.
- 10 TIMES the value of EVERY STOCK AND EVERY BOND ON THE
PLANET.
- 23 TIMES WORLD GDP.
What’s a derivative?
As their name implies, derivatives are
“derived” from underlying assets (homes, debt, etc). A lot of
smart people have tried to explain what these things are, but miss the
forest for the trees. A derivative is NOT an asset. It’s, in reality,
nothing, just an imaginary security of no value that banks trade as a kind
of “gentleman’s bet” on the value of future risk or
securities.
Let’s say you and I want to bet on whether our
neighbor Joe will default on his mortgage. Is the bet an asset? Does it
have any real value? Both counts register a definite “no.”
That’s the equivalent of a derivative.
It is total and complete lunacy to claim these items are
anything more than fiction (perpetuated by another fiction: that Wall
Street is able to value these things or price them accurately). But
thanks to Wall Street’s lobbying power, they’ve become the
centerpiece of the financial markets.
If these numbers scare you, you’re not alone. As
early as 1998, soon to be chairperson of the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC), Brooksley Born, approached Alan Greenspan, Bob Rubin,
and Larry Summers (the three heads of economic policy) about derivatives.
She said she thought derivatives should be reined in and regulated because
they were getting too out of control. The response
from Greenspan and company was that if she pushed for regulation that the
market would implode.
Remember, this was back in 1998: a full DECADE before the
Crisis occurred. And already, the guys in charge of the markets knew that
derivatives were such a big problem that trying to regulate them or
increase transparency would destroy the market.
So why are these items so accepted? Well, for one thing
Wall Street makes roughly $35 billion+ per year from trading them, so it
has a powerful incentive to keep them untouched.
Also, it’s kind of difficult for Ben Bernanke and the
world’s central bankers to claim they saved the financial world from
destruction when you realize that even the most liberal estimate of the
bailout costs ($24 trillion) is equal to less than 2% of the derivatives
market.
Indeed, even saying the number ($1+ QUADRILLION) sounds
ridiculous. Every time I’ve mentioned it at a dinner party I get
nothing but blank stares or snickers. Can you imagine if someone in a
position of power actually bothered explaining this on TV? The entire
financial media would respond with, “well, that’s great,
now we…. wait a minute… what did you just say?”
The most common derivatives are based on common financial
entities/ issues: commodities, stocks, bonds, interest rates, etc. However,
the vast bulk of them (84%) are based on interest rates. If you’ve
been confused as to why Bernanke claims the US is in recovery but promises
to keep interest rates at 0% for a long time, there’s your answer.
After all, in 2008 the Credit Default Swap (CDS) market
(which incidentally is only
1/10th the size of the interest
rate-based derivative market) nearly destroyed the entire financial system.
One can only imagine what would happen if the
interest rate-based derivative market (which is ten times as large)
suffered a similar Crisis.
At some point, and I cannot tell you when, the ticking time
bomb that is the derivatives market will implode again. We’ve already
had a warning shot with China telling its state owned enterprises to simply
default on their existing commodity based derivative contracts with US
investment banks.
We are also discovering that Greece and Italy (and likely
other) countries have used derivatives to hide their true debt levels. This
realization has sparked an investigation into derivatives in Europe, which
could of course spark off a chain reaction if things get too ugly.
Suffice to say, the “derivative issue” is
nowhere near over. It’s only a matter of time before we have another
glitch in the system which will kick off Round Two of the Financial Crisis.
In the meantime, there are a few steps you can take to protect your
savings.
- Move some money to a bank with little if any derivative
exposure
- Have some physical cash on hand
- Own some physical bullion/ silver
I personally am doing all of the above. You should do the
same.
Regarding #3, how much bullion you purchase is up to you.
But you should have several months’ worth of expenses in gold and
silver bullion.
Why Gold AND Silver?
Because if the banks are closed or if paper money is
worthless, you don’t want to be walking around with an ounce of gold
(worth $1k+) to buy groceries. No, you will want some precious metals of
smaller denomination to purchase/ barter with, hence the need for some
silver.
Buy some of both now. I am doing so. And I will be doing
so regularly going forward.
In terms of silver, the easiest way to get it is in
pre-1965 coins (often termed “junk” silver). The bullion dealer
I spoke to prices them at 50 cents over spot. However, you can also get
silver one-ounce rounds (coin-like medallions) and 10 ounce bars both of
which can be bought at 95 cents over spot. Finally, you can buy Silver
Eagles at $2.50 over spot.
Again, I cannot tell you which dealer to go with, but look
for someone who’s been dealing for years (not a newbie). You
should also ALWAYS ask for references from the dealer (former clients you
can talk to about their purchases/ experiences).
Good Investing!
PS. If you’d like to learn more about derivatives and
how to protect yourself and your savings from them, you can download a FREE
copy of the Phoenix Investor Personal Protection Kit. This kit is
broken into three separate reports, Protect Your Family, Protect Your
Savings, and Protect Your Portfolio, that detail things
like:
- How to stockpile/ store food: how much you need, what kind of food
to buy, where to store it, and more.
- How much cash to have on hand: why you need cash outside
of the bank, what bills to keep it in, where to buy a personal safe to
store it, etc.
- Why you NEED to own at least SOME physical gold bullion and silver
as well as which coins to buy, where to buy them, and how to store
them.
Graham Summers
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To download your FREE copy today go to: www.gainspains
capital.com/MARKETING/PIPPK.html