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Mitigating a Credit Crisis Liquidity Crunch 2014

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By Nicole_Foss

Despite the media talking up optimism and recovery, people are not   seeing the supposed good news playing out in their own lives. As we have    discussed here many times before, the squeeze continues on Main Street,   while QE has generated asset bubbles at the top of the financial food   chain. Complacency reigns, but this is the endgame. Increasingly    delusional collective optimism, based on illusory wealth for the few,    has ben the driving force for 2013, even as the smart money has been    selling everything not nailed down for most of the year – cheerfully    handing the empty bag to a public that demands it. It’s been a five year   long party, where, demonstrably, no lessons were learned from the    excesses preceding the previous peak, and the consequences that followed  from itNow,  as a result of throwing caution to the wind again (mostly  with   other people’s money of course), we face another set of  consequences,   but this time the hangover will be worse. Timely  warnings are rarely   credible, as they contradict the prevailing wisdom of the time, but it   is exactly at this time that warnings are most  needed – when we are   collectively irrationally exuberant on a grand  scale. We need to   understand the situation we are facing, in order to  see why this period   of global excess will resolve itself as a global  credit implosion, what   this means for ourselves and our societies, and what we can hope to do   about it, both in terms of preparing in  advance and mitigating the   impact once we are confronted with a new,  sobering, reality.

We are facing an acute liquidity crunch, not the warning shot  across   the bow that was the financial crisis of 2008/2009, but a  full-blown   implosion of the house of cards that is the global credit  pyramid. Not   that it’s likely to disappear all at once, but over the  next few years,   credit will undergo a relentless contraction,  punctuated by periods of   both rapid collapse and sharp counter-trend  rallies, in a period of   exceptionally high volatility. The primary  impact will stem from the   collapse of the money supply, the vast  majority of which is credit – a   mountain of IOUs constituting the  virtual wealth of the world.

This has happened before, albeit not on this scale. Since  humanity   reached civilizational scale we have lived through cycles of  expansion   and contraction. We tend to associate these with the rise  and fall of   empire, but they typically have a monetary component and  often involve a   credit boom. Bust follows boom as the credit ponzi  scheme collapses.   Mark Twain commented on one such episode in 1873:

“Beautiful credit! The foundation of modern society.    Who shall say that this is not the golden age of mutual trust, of    unlimited reliance upon human promises? That is a peculiar condition of   society which enables a whole nation to instantly recognize point and   meaning in the familiar newspaper anecdote, which puts into the mouth  of   the speculator in lands and mines this remark: — ”I wasn’t worth a cent two years ago, and now I owe two million dollars.””

full article at source: http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article43730.html



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