that was yesterday
today is different.I once heard of a guy who went out sailing in the Caribbean. He'd been cruising around for months, facing nothing but the most beautiful weather. Then August rolled around and he received a hurricane warning. "Oh, no" he said. "I've been here quite a while and we never get storms like that." So he did absolutely nothing to get out of the storm's way nor to prepare his boat, which sank with him on it. Too bad about the boat.Well, of course, it's just a made-up story, but you get the point. We've been living in a dream world for so many years, that it's hard to accept the new reality. I think that the economic storm that's coming (and it's just barely being felt so far) will be far, far worse than anything that I have ever experienced, and I'm 62.For decades, the Federal Reserve Bank has prevented the worst crisis by cutting interest rates and pumping money into the economy. They could get away with this because the rest of the world had to accept US dollars. That is now over. When they cut interest rates and pump in more dollars, the dollar falls even further, raising prices. When they try to stem the collapse of the dollar, by raising interest rates, they slow down the economy even more.We have peaking oil supplies, a huge credit bubble that has popped, a dollar that's dropping like a stone along with the stock market, banks that are losing money hand over fist... Remember the movie, "The Perfect Storm" where several storms converged over the Atlantic and the effect was to multiply the super-storm's power many times over?Of course, not all will suffer equally. I hear that the boat yards that are building the multi-million dollar super yachts are still booked up several years into the future.
today is different.I once heard of a guy who went out sailing in the Caribbean. He'd been cruising around for months, facing nothing but the most beautiful weather. Then August rolled around and he received a hurricane warning. "Oh, no" he said. "I've been here quite a while and we never get storms like that." So he did absolutely nothing to get out of the storm's way nor to prepare his boat, which sank with him on it. Too bad about the boat.Well, of course, it's just a made-up story, but you get the point. We've been living in a dream world for so many years, that it's hard to accept the new reality. I think that the economic storm that's coming (and it's just barely being felt so far) will be far, far worse than anything that I have ever experienced, and I'm 62.For decades, the Federal Reserve Bank has prevented the worst crisis by cutting interest rates and pumping money into the economy. They could get away with this because the rest of the world had to accept US dollars. That is now over. When they cut interest rates and pump in more dollars, the dollar falls even further, raising prices. When they try to stem the collapse of the dollar, by raising interest rates, they slow down the economy even more.We have peaking oil supplies, a huge credit bubble that has popped, a dollar that's dropping like a stone along with the stock market, banks that are losing money hand over fist... Remember the movie, "The Perfect Storm" where several storms converged over the Atlantic and the effect was to multiply the super-storm's power many times over?Of course, not all will suffer equally. I hear that the boat yards that are building the multi-million dollar super yachts are still booked up several years into the future.