Podcast
I want to respond to a couple of member questions to the last report.
Here are two flavors of the same question, written in response to “How This Will All Play Out,” both wondering why I am advocating that people accelerate their plans, whatever they may be, to become more resilient.
Lemonyellowschwin wrote:
Chris wrote:
“If your plans include moving, selling a house, or making big improvements to your current house, I would strongly recommend putting those plans into high gear.”
Is this because of concerns about rapidly-rising interest rates (killing the ability to buy or sell real estate) and inflation increasing the cost of improvements?
nickbert wrote:
I myself am wondering the same thing. My family and I don’t own any real estate anymore (at least not in the US) and are not planning to buy anytime soon so that’s not an issue for us, but if there is another specific reason I would love to hear it.
As usual, there’s no easy answer to this, such as Because everything will stop working on June 12th, 2012 at 3:05 p.m.!! Nobody knows when the next difficulties will begin, obviously, or how serious they will be. Such is the nature of complex systems.
Given this, the best we can do is constantly weigh and then reweigh the various risks as circumstances change.
Why You Should Get Busy Now
PREVIEW by Chris MartensonI want to respond to a couple of member questions to the last report.
Here are two flavors of the same question, written in response to “How This Will All Play Out,” both wondering why I am advocating that people accelerate their plans, whatever they may be, to become more resilient.
Lemonyellowschwin wrote:
Chris wrote:
“If your plans include moving, selling a house, or making big improvements to your current house, I would strongly recommend putting those plans into high gear.”
Is this because of concerns about rapidly-rising interest rates (killing the ability to buy or sell real estate) and inflation increasing the cost of improvements?
nickbert wrote:
I myself am wondering the same thing. My family and I don’t own any real estate anymore (at least not in the US) and are not planning to buy anytime soon so that’s not an issue for us, but if there is another specific reason I would love to hear it.
As usual, there’s no easy answer to this, such as Because everything will stop working on June 12th, 2012 at 3:05 p.m.!! Nobody knows when the next difficulties will begin, obviously, or how serious they will be. Such is the nature of complex systems.
Given this, the best we can do is constantly weigh and then reweigh the various risks as circumstances change.
How This Will Play Out
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Executive Summary
- Why downward pressure on the US dollar is building
- What to expect when the Fed “ends” quantitative easing in June
- The factors most likely to cause a major breakdown in the dollar
- What you should do to protect against a dollar collapse
- Why time is your most precious (and depleting) asset right now
Part I: The Breakdown Draws Near
If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
Part II: How This Will Play Out
Meanwhile…
Inflation continues to climb in every market except the United States, which tells us that US inflation statistics are probably wrong. In a global economy where the dollar is the world’s reserve currency, and given the fact that the dollar is down roughly 8% over the past year, it is practically impossible for inflation to be higher everywhere besides the US.
In Europe, the highest monthly gain in inflation in the record series was just recorded:
How This Will Play Out
PREVIEW by Chris MartensonHow This Will Play Out
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Executive Summary
- Why downward pressure on the US dollar is building
- What to expect when the Fed “ends” quantitative easing in June
- The factors most likely to cause a major breakdown in the dollar
- What you should do to protect against a dollar collapse
- Why time is your most precious (and depleting) asset right now
Part I: The Breakdown Draws Near
If you have not yet read Part I, available free to all readers, please click here to read it first.
Part II: How This Will Play Out
Meanwhile…
Inflation continues to climb in every market except the United States, which tells us that US inflation statistics are probably wrong. In a global economy where the dollar is the world’s reserve currency, and given the fact that the dollar is down roughly 8% over the past year, it is practically impossible for inflation to be higher everywhere besides the US.
In Europe, the highest monthly gain in inflation in the record series was just recorded:
"When a country's public debt exceeds 90% of GDP, that is the magic number. You get to 90%, there is no way back, and that is the number that the U.S. is going through pretty much as we speak. It is also the number which the UK has gone through; all of the PIIGS are going through it, as well. They are all going past the 90% debt to GDP ratio. Obviously, Japan is miles past it already. It's up to 200%+. There does not appear, in the historical analysis, to be any great likelihood of getting back from that level of debt safely. There is this strong evidence that above 90% debt to GDP, you will experience either a cataclysmic default or some form of very serious inflation."
So observes Paul Tustain, gold market analyst and founder of BullionVault. In his view, gold serves as a beacon who's price is currently signaling the monetary system is in grave danger. He and Chris discuss the primary factors driving the price of gold and smart strategies for investors looking to build or maintain their holdings of the metal.
Paul Tustain: Gold Is Sending a Signal That the Monetary System Is in Grave Danger
by Chris Martenson"When a country's public debt exceeds 90% of GDP, that is the magic number. You get to 90%, there is no way back, and that is the number that the U.S. is going through pretty much as we speak. It is also the number which the UK has gone through; all of the PIIGS are going through it, as well. They are all going past the 90% debt to GDP ratio. Obviously, Japan is miles past it already. It's up to 200%+. There does not appear, in the historical analysis, to be any great likelihood of getting back from that level of debt safely. There is this strong evidence that above 90% debt to GDP, you will experience either a cataclysmic default or some form of very serious inflation."
So observes Paul Tustain, gold market analyst and founder of BullionVault. In his view, gold serves as a beacon who's price is currently signaling the monetary system is in grave danger. He and Chris discuss the primary factors driving the price of gold and smart strategies for investors looking to build or maintain their holdings of the metal.