Podcast
The Framework for Predicting Our Financial Future
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Executive Summary
- Exponential change ‘speeds up’
- When it finally happens, change happens quickly
- Collapse progresses from the outside in
- Complex systems will become simpler when energy is scarce
- We fool ourselves at our peril
- The rules will be changed
- If you can’t accurately assess the risks, don’t play the game
- Investing in a structural bear market
Part I: How to Position Yourself for the Future: Step 1 – Financial Security
If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
Part II: The Framework for Predicting Our Financial Future
Okay, assuming you have the basics covered, I now want to share with you my views on the markets and how things will unfold in the future. My assumption is that you have completed the full Crash Course (or one of the shorter versions) and are familiar with the exponential function and how it permeates our everyday life.
This framework is always subject to revision as new experiences and data points become available, but its central themes have been operative for me for several years.
Again, this body of work represents my personal observations, historical readings, and faith in the idea that cultures and laws may change but humans tend to behave in predictable ways. As always, I reserve the right to change my forecasts as new information becomes available.
Exponential Change ‘Speeds Up’
Understanding the nature of the systems in which we live is the centerpiece of our analytical framework. And at the heart of that is the concept that we live in a world dominated by exponential functions and curves.
The Framework for Predicting Our Financial Future
PREVIEW by Chris MartensonThe Framework for Predicting Our Financial Future
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Executive Summary
- Exponential change ‘speeds up’
- When it finally happens, change happens quickly
- Collapse progresses from the outside in
- Complex systems will become simpler when energy is scarce
- We fool ourselves at our peril
- The rules will be changed
- If you can’t accurately assess the risks, don’t play the game
- Investing in a structural bear market
Part I: How to Position Yourself for the Future: Step 1 – Financial Security
If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
Part II: The Framework for Predicting Our Financial Future
Okay, assuming you have the basics covered, I now want to share with you my views on the markets and how things will unfold in the future. My assumption is that you have completed the full Crash Course (or one of the shorter versions) and are familiar with the exponential function and how it permeates our everyday life.
This framework is always subject to revision as new experiences and data points become available, but its central themes have been operative for me for several years.
Again, this body of work represents my personal observations, historical readings, and faith in the idea that cultures and laws may change but humans tend to behave in predictable ways. As always, I reserve the right to change my forecasts as new information becomes available.
Exponential Change ‘Speeds Up’
Understanding the nature of the systems in which we live is the centerpiece of our analytical framework. And at the heart of that is the concept that we live in a world dominated by exponential functions and curves.
How the European Endgame Will Be the Death Knell For Modern Economics
by Gregor Macdonald, contributing editor
Monday, December 5, 2011
Executive Summary
- Central banks are running out of options, leaving only increasingly desperate choices
- Why Europe is most likely to begrudgingly print a whole lot more money soon
- The harsh judgment day is approaching for mainstream economists
- Why 2012 heralds the dawn of a new era of economic understanding
Part I: It’s Time To Give Up On Mainstream Economics
If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
Part II: How the European Endgame Will Be the Death Knell For Modern Central Banking
Central Banks Becoming Increasingly Desperate
Has Europe decided to print its way out of the crisis? The big-bang announcement last week among global central banks suggests as much. Unfortunately, the global US dollar swap solution only patches up the liquidity portion of Europe’s present dilemma and does nothing to address the solvency issue.
As readers know, I take the mildly heretical view that “money-printing” in our present debt deflation actually functions as a status-quo maintainer. It does not risk hyperinflation, but instead keeps social confidence intact — at low levels, of course — as the familiar institutions of Western economies are maintained. Hard defaults, on the other hand, especially hard defaults that appear out of the hands of either fiscal or monetary policy makers, risk a confidence collapse on a large scale.
In my view, hyperinflation typically begins with a broad rejection of a country’s sovereign debt. This is the initial threshold that is crossed on the path to currency rejection, as foreign holders exit first. Domestic institutions are more restricted, slower to react, often bound by investment mandates, and thus left “holding the bag,” as it were, on a country’s bonds. Eventually, domestic confidence in the currency itself is lost, as the public, having watched its institutions fail, rejects the currency.
In my view, Europe is still at very high risk for such a catastrophic outcome. No global central bank, including the European Central Bank (ECB), can change the fact that the debt of Greece, Portugal, Spain, and Italy cannot be supported realistically through economic growth. But there is still time for the ECB to change its charter and buy that debt. The coordinated central-bank actions this past week will have virtually no consequence unless the ECB conducts QE (quantitative easing) on a massive scale.
Probabilistically, I have to favor the idea that Europe was given the lifeline on the condition that the fiscal union discussed in Europe and the permission granted to the ECB to conduct QE are both forthcoming. For the sake of social stability, I hope this happens. But I am not naive. Much of the debt that the ECB would purchase under such a regime, just like much of the junk debt now on the Fed’s balance sheet, will never recover its par (full price) value. Certainly not in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. But if the ECB does not “print money,” then we will move directly to hard defaults. And the hyperinflation risk that is currently masked by the common currency to the Eurozone will eventually be unveiled.
How the European Endgame Will Be the Death Knell For Modern Economics
PREVIEW by Gregor MacdonaldHow the European Endgame Will Be the Death Knell For Modern Economics
by Gregor Macdonald, contributing editor
Monday, December 5, 2011
Executive Summary
- Central banks are running out of options, leaving only increasingly desperate choices
- Why Europe is most likely to begrudgingly print a whole lot more money soon
- The harsh judgment day is approaching for mainstream economists
- Why 2012 heralds the dawn of a new era of economic understanding
Part I: It’s Time To Give Up On Mainstream Economics
If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
Part II: How the European Endgame Will Be the Death Knell For Modern Central Banking
Central Banks Becoming Increasingly Desperate
Has Europe decided to print its way out of the crisis? The big-bang announcement last week among global central banks suggests as much. Unfortunately, the global US dollar swap solution only patches up the liquidity portion of Europe’s present dilemma and does nothing to address the solvency issue.
As readers know, I take the mildly heretical view that “money-printing” in our present debt deflation actually functions as a status-quo maintainer. It does not risk hyperinflation, but instead keeps social confidence intact — at low levels, of course — as the familiar institutions of Western economies are maintained. Hard defaults, on the other hand, especially hard defaults that appear out of the hands of either fiscal or monetary policy makers, risk a confidence collapse on a large scale.
In my view, hyperinflation typically begins with a broad rejection of a country’s sovereign debt. This is the initial threshold that is crossed on the path to currency rejection, as foreign holders exit first. Domestic institutions are more restricted, slower to react, often bound by investment mandates, and thus left “holding the bag,” as it were, on a country’s bonds. Eventually, domestic confidence in the currency itself is lost, as the public, having watched its institutions fail, rejects the currency.
In my view, Europe is still at very high risk for such a catastrophic outcome. No global central bank, including the European Central Bank (ECB), can change the fact that the debt of Greece, Portugal, Spain, and Italy cannot be supported realistically through economic growth. But there is still time for the ECB to change its charter and buy that debt. The coordinated central-bank actions this past week will have virtually no consequence unless the ECB conducts QE (quantitative easing) on a massive scale.
Probabilistically, I have to favor the idea that Europe was given the lifeline on the condition that the fiscal union discussed in Europe and the permission granted to the ECB to conduct QE are both forthcoming. For the sake of social stability, I hope this happens. But I am not naive. Much of the debt that the ECB would purchase under such a regime, just like much of the junk debt now on the Fed’s balance sheet, will never recover its par (full price) value. Certainly not in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. But if the ECB does not “print money,” then we will move directly to hard defaults. And the hyperinflation risk that is currently masked by the common currency to the Eurozone will eventually be unveiled.
Two weeks ago, Chris flew to Spain to speak at the 2012 Gold & Silver meeting in Madrid. He gave his latest, streamlined version of the Crash Course titled “Unfixable”.
GoldMoney was a sponsor of the event and recorded the presentation, which has subsequently been put onto the Internet. The wide pickup and positive reaction have been a real pleasure to see.
If you’re one of the few who has yet to run across it, here it is. Of particular note is how deftly Chris handles the Q&A segment, which starts about mid-way through.
Unfixable (UPDATED)
by Chris MartensonTwo weeks ago, Chris flew to Spain to speak at the 2012 Gold & Silver meeting in Madrid. He gave his latest, streamlined version of the Crash Course titled “Unfixable”.
GoldMoney was a sponsor of the event and recorded the presentation, which has subsequently been put onto the Internet. The wide pickup and positive reaction have been a real pleasure to see.
If you’re one of the few who has yet to run across it, here it is. Of particular note is how deftly Chris handles the Q&A segment, which starts about mid-way through.
The Skills Most Likely To Be In Demand
by Charles Hugh Smith, contributing editor
Monday, November 28, 2011
Executive Summary
- The New Paradigm For Job Security
- Unlocking Value By Removing Systemic ‘Friction’
- Examples of Promising Business Models
- The Skills That Will Be In High Demand
- Why Changing Your Behavior Will Be as Important as Re-Skilling
Part I: The Future Of Jobs
If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
Part II: The Skills Most Likely To Be In Demand
The New Paradigm for Job Security
The coming decade will turn many long-standing ideas about work and employment on their heads.
For example, in the current Status Quo, inflexibility and resistance to change are the hallmarks of secure employment. Institutional employment is “guaranteed” by contracts, and institutional resistance to change is viewed as a guarantee of secure employment.
In the near future, these brittle forms of security will prove chimerical, as the very rigidity and resistance to change that characterizes institutions renders them increasingly prone to disruption and collapse. The very traits which are currently viewed as protectors of security will be revealed as the causes of insecurity. Flexibility and adaptability—what are now viewed as hallmarks of insecurity—will slowly be recognized as the sources of real security. These include flex-time, free-lance labor, small, local enterprises and self-organizing networks.
The Skills Most Likely To Be In Demand
PREVIEW by charleshughsmithThe Skills Most Likely To Be In Demand
by Charles Hugh Smith, contributing editor
Monday, November 28, 2011
Executive Summary
- The New Paradigm For Job Security
- Unlocking Value By Removing Systemic ‘Friction’
- Examples of Promising Business Models
- The Skills That Will Be In High Demand
- Why Changing Your Behavior Will Be as Important as Re-Skilling
Part I: The Future Of Jobs
If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
Part II: The Skills Most Likely To Be In Demand
The New Paradigm for Job Security
The coming decade will turn many long-standing ideas about work and employment on their heads.
For example, in the current Status Quo, inflexibility and resistance to change are the hallmarks of secure employment. Institutional employment is “guaranteed” by contracts, and institutional resistance to change is viewed as a guarantee of secure employment.
In the near future, these brittle forms of security will prove chimerical, as the very rigidity and resistance to change that characterizes institutions renders them increasingly prone to disruption and collapse. The very traits which are currently viewed as protectors of security will be revealed as the causes of insecurity. Flexibility and adaptability—what are now viewed as hallmarks of insecurity—will slowly be recognized as the sources of real security. These include flex-time, free-lance labor, small, local enterprises and self-organizing networks.