Editor's Note: With the Dow dipping below 7800 for the first time since 2003, our colleague Chris Mayer, editor of Mayer's Special Situations, stops by to give his take on the Great Reflation of 2009
What's a Few Trillion Between Friends? By Chris Mayer November 20, 2008 Some concepts I can explain to my 9-year old son, Calvin, but economists with advanced degrees seem not to get it. Calvin, named after my favorite ballplayer (Cal Ripken, though my wife hates it when I say that. "We didn't name him after Cal Ripken, we just liked the name!"), wanted to know how the dollar lost value over time. He wanted to know why things got more expensive over time. I explained it very simply. He likes to play this card game in which the players get different creatures and each of them has certain abilities. I explained to him how he valued certain cards highly because they are rare and hard to get. If the cards were easy to get and common, then they would be less valuable. This he understood. So I told him that dollars work the same way. As the government prints more of them, they become less special. They buy less. We call this inflation. ************************************ "They" tried to keep him quiet... Former Elitist Wall Street Insider Pulls Back the Curtain... And Reveals How Average Investors Can Make Quick Profits that Put the "Insiders" to Shame. This "Money Makin' Bonecrusher" may be a very successful investor, but you'll never see him on CNN! Click here if you want to join his profit. ************************************ Today, the Federal Reserve is laying the groundwork for massive inflation. "Over the past year," Grant's Interest Rate Observer notes, "the central bank's balance sheet has grown by 133%. It was only yesterday when annual growth of 13% seemed aggressive, if not reckless, and certainly inflationary. Ten times that aggressive-if-not-reckless-and-certainly-inflationary rate of expansion is a fact that takes some getting used to." Over the last three months, Federal Reserve Bank credit is up 1,560%, reports Grant's. It was only in September that the Fed's balance sheet crossed $1 trillion for the first time. On Nov. 5, it scooted past $2 trillion. By year-end, says the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, it could slide right on past $3 trillion. Our Federal Reserve seems hellbent on making Argentina look like Switzerland in terms of monetary restraint. ************************************ Get a FREE Copy of the Just-Released I.O.U.S.A. DVD... At last, you can own the award-winning I.O.U.S.A. documentary FREE on DVD...over a month before it's even available to the general public
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************************************ Why is this ballooning balance sheet inflationary? The Federal Reserve increases its assets by buying stuff financial assets of banks and others. The Federal Reserve pays for these assets by creating money that did not exist before. That's it. Simple as pie. Of course, our government is not acting alone. Central banks across the globe are doing the same thing, if with somewhat lesser vigor, at the moment. In any event, it means paper money will buy less. We may see nominal prices for oil and gold and metals continue to fall in the short term, but long term, I think we're set up for some huge reflation in 2009. Best Regards, Chris Mayer P.S.: I recently found two companies that have taken an unfair beating and promise to make crushing gains as the market comes back to its senses. You can get the names and tickers of these companies for FREE in the newest installment of Agora Financial's Retirement Recovery Series. The free webinar will debut live on Monday, November 24, 2008, and you can sign up by clicking here
Editor's Note: As always send any questions or concerns to us at jim@pennysleuth.com.
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