Götterdämmerung
by DETLEV SCHLICHTER
What disturbing and nauseating
image greeted us this morning from the covers of the morning papers: a smiling
and moved Angela Merkel surrounded by a bunch of suited, self-satisfied,
sycophantically grinning parliamentarians happily signing their country’s
economic future away, burdening their fellow countrymen and women with
financial obligations the grotesque size of which have long ago surpassed the
average German’s grasp of large numbers – all in the name of Germany’s
“responsibility for Europe”, and for personal political ambition, a commitment
to party unity, the impulse to follow orders, that sort of thing.
Glueckwunsch, gut gemacht.
The whole thing is surreal
beyond belief.
What lie did I tell yesterday?
The “rule of law” is not an
accurate translation for the German phrase “Rechtsstaat”. The difference is
more than semantic and reveals very distinct legal traditions. In any case, it
doesn’t matter anymore. Neither concept still applies to Germany. The political
class is lying and breaking laws and contracts at will. Political expediency
rules.
As the German professor Stefan
Homburg pointed out in this interview with the German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung, EVERY rule that was
designed to guarantee the financial stability of the eurozone has now been
broken: the Maastricht limits to public debt, the ban on government-funding via
the ECB, the no-bail-out provision.
Frank Schaeffler, one of the
few dissidents, reminded his fellow parliamentarians in his speech in the Bundestag
yesterday, that Chancellor Merkel had told them as recently as October 27,
2010, that the bailout facility would definitely be terminated in 2013, and
that this would be the end of it. That was obviously not true. And the
statement yesterday that the German public will not be asked for more money was
equally a blatant lie.
For just as Merkel’s spineless
supporters smilingly threw another €250 billion ($330 billion) – or roughly 10
percent of Germany’s GDP – on the country’s ever-growing debt-pile, the
international commentariat and the global bureaucratic elite had already moved
on, openly suggesting and discussing their desire for a MUCH BIGGER bailout
fund. The FT’s resident statist and inflationist Martin Wolf, who I quote here, is the perfect example.
“Europe needs a much bigger bazooka.” Probably several trillion Euros.
Surreal. Surreal.
It is, of course, only a
matter of time until Germany will lose its AAA-rating. Its obligations to the
euro- project will undoubtedly finish it off fiscally. What’s the endgame?
Currency collapse, of course.
Logically, in a system in which certain politically favoured entities are never
supposed to default, the printing press is the last line of defence against the
sustained onslaught of the laws of accounting and arithmetic. The pressure on
the ECB – which has broken all of its own rules of good central banking already
– will intensify. By leveraging the EFSF it will ultimately accommodate, via
the printing press, the bailout of sovereign states – or, more precisely, the
bailout of the careless lenders to states, the banks, which are the real
beneficiaries of this bailout frenzy. This is Weimar Republic all over.
Professor Homburg is brutally
honest. Government finances have never before been this bizarrely stretched at
times of peace. So the best guide for what is in store for us is what happened
at the height of war efforts. The state simply takes what it thinks it needs.
We will see massive market intervention (several countries extended their bans
on short-selling of certain stocks last week), capital controls (the financial
transaction tax is a splendid starting point), aggressive taxation and outright
confiscation.
In the final chapter of my
book Paper Money Collapse – The Folly of Elastic Money and
the Coming Monetary Breakdown I identify one of the final stages of a fiat money
crisis as the nationalization of money and credit. We have entered that phase.
The short of the century?
Maybe there is a bit of
(paper) money to be made from Germany’s demise by shorting German government
bonds, Bunds, via the futures market, at least for as long as we are allowed to
do so. I don’t have the trade on yet but I am getting closer. I think this will
soon be the short of the century, combined with shorting U.S. Treasuries. Hedge
funds and banks are getting sucked into extreme long positions right now via
free money from the central banks and promises of zero rates forever, and the
persistence of the cretinous notion that these government bond markets
constitute safe havens. When the extent of Germany’s fiscal destruction is
fully apparent, the market will turn.
At present prices, I consider
gold to be ridiculously cheap.
And one final word to my English
friends. No gloating please about the clever decision to stay out of the
euro-mess. You have the same thing coning your way without the euro. The
coalition’s consolidation course is apparently so ruthless that every month the
state has to borrow MORE, not less. Even official inflation is already 5% but
pressure is growing on the Bank of England to print more money. See the comical
Vince Cable yesterday, or Martin Wolf, the man with the bazooka, in the FT today. Since 1971 the paper money
system has been global. Its endgame will be global, too.
Back to Germany’s professor
Homburg. Is there a way out for the common man?, the professor was asked by the
interviewer. No, he said. Best to adopt a Buddhist attitude and learn how to be
happy when poor.
On that note, have a great
weekend!
No comments:
Post a Comment