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SPECIAL GUEST: GRAHAM SUMMERS is the Chief Market Strategist for Phoenix Capital Research, , an independent financial research firm based in Charlottesville, VA. He writes Gain, Pains, and Capital, the firm’s FREE daily e-letter covering the equity, commodity, currency, and real estate markets. Graham also writes Private Wealth Advisory, a weekly investment advisory devoted to helping paying clients navigate the financial markets and produce outsized returns from their investments. To whit, Graham called the 2008 Crash and was one of the few newsletter writers to produce positive gains that year. Graham Summers worked as a Senior Financial Analyst covering global markets for several investment firms in the Mid-Atlantic region. He has made presentations on investment ideas to high net worth clients in Dubai, Singapore, Zurich, Playa Del Carmen and his research has been quoted by Crain’s New York Business, Money Talk Radio, Reuters, and RollingStone Magazine to name a few publications.
Published 04-28-15
34 Minutes
“When I think of repression I think of the Psychological concept that repression is the suppression (or pushing back) of something that is too painful to deal with in sort of a conscious way. That is exactly what the central banks of the world have been doing essentially since 2008. What we had in 2008 was the beginning of a debt deleveraging cycle o the dreaded debt deflation. The economists often like to argue that deflation is terrible but they are being overly general because deflation is actually a wonderful thing (we all want to have things we want to buy be cheaper) but the issue for the economists or Keynesian’s is ‘debt deflation’”.
When debt begins to deflate you run the risk of becoming insolvent particularly in the bond market.
“Because we have been in this debt leveraging cycle for over 30 years ( a bond bubble would be the simplest way of putting it) the central banks are all terrified of a bond bear market because that means that almost instantly all developed nations are bankrupt because the way they have papered over the decline in living standard is by issuing more debt. It has gotten to the point now where because we don’t have the money to pay the debt back we are issuing new debt to roll over the old debt (or pay back the old debt).”
“It sounds like a Ponzi scheme and it actually is! It works relatively well while the bond or underlying asset is rising in value because the debt is getting cheaper and the yield is falling
“When it reverses if you don’t have the money to pay back the bond so you start to enter a deflationary cycle which is what we had in 2008.
“Most of what the central banks talk about is nonsense. If you watch their actions it is about how do we stop the bond bubble from blowing up? They have done that by three ways:
“Essentially Repression was the Central Banks trying to repress the terror of debt deflation!”
“All of this has manifested a sort of financial perversion where you seeing capital doing all sorts of crazy things and flowing into areas it would have never gone to before because risk has been so mis-priced by the market.”
“When it gets serious you can expect the central bankers to lie!“
http://gordontlong.com/Macro_Analytics.htm#MA
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