Age of Bubble Finance → Crackup Phase

Editor’s Note: We brought David Stockman — Ronald Reagan’s former budget director —  onboard our editorial team this past October. The timing could hardly have been better. David’s unique editorial space is covering the end of what he calls the “Bubble Finance era”. An era that began its exit on December 16th, when the Federal Reserve raised interest rates for the first time in a decade.

We have big plans to bring more of David’s insight to you in the New Year. In the meantime, we take time during the holiday lull to republish a foundational piece of David’s research. Read on…


 

Today, we have a rogue central bank. It’s destroyed honest price discovery in the money and capital markets.

I once said, “Invest in anything that Bernanke can’t destroy, including gold, canned beans, bottled water and flashlight batteries.”

You can say the same thing about Yellen today.

The Fed’s monetary injections, “puts” and safety nets under the price of risk assets now drive everything. Accordingly, investors ignore risk and mechanically “buy the dips.”

This irrationally inflates asset prices — that is, until the bubble becomes unsustainable and then splatters violently, as it has done twice already this century.

The vital core of capitalism is the capital markets. That’s where capital is supposed to be raised and allocated. It’s where future profits are rationally assessed and discounted. And it’s where entrepreneurs and business enterprises are honestly rewarded for their contributions to free market prosperity.

Now all of that has long disappeared. The Fed has turned the capital markets into casinos where speculators and gamblers are showered with ill-gotten gains. Financial operators strip-mine the Main Street economy.

I call this the “Age of Bubble Finance.” And I’ve been working with Agora Financial to produce a publication called Bubble Finance Trader that helps you make trades in this unique environment in transition. Right now we’re distributing it to only a select group of readers as a beta-test to get feedback.

But the timing could not be better…

It is not merely that the financial markets have drastically changed — even from where they stood in the mid-1980s when I was working in the Reagan White House. Washington’s crony capitalist bailouts and the massive flow of cheap money and artificial credit from the Fed have wholly corrupted them.

In this crazy Fed-distorted market, the first thing you should focus on is capital preservation. Rule No. 1 is don’t lose money. This is more important than capital gains when government and central banks have gone rogue and have chronically violated every known rule of fiscal rectitude and sound money.

That means getting out of harm’s way in all the financial markets — debt, equity, commodities and derivatives — because when the big correction comes, they will all experience a thundering collapse.

The second thing you should be aware of is that short-term liquid investments and cash are not as bad as their microscopic yields imply.

The 20-year worldwide central bank credit boom has generated vast overinvestment in mining, manufacturing, transportation and distribution capacity worldwide. But now that the credit inflation is reaching its outer limits, and we are entering what I described as the “crackup” phase. During this phase, the forces of global deflation will drive down the price of goods and many consumer services as well.

When the next crisis fully materializes, cash will be king. It will buy more everyday goods and services and will have command over drastically marked-down financial and real estate assets of every kind.

The third thing you should know is that the impending collapse of the global central bank credit bubble will generate unprecedented volatility and drastic movements in asset prices of all kinds.

So I have two specific recommendations…

On the wealth-building side, you should consider deploying your discretionary capital — money you can afford to lose — by shorting vastly overvalued stocks such as Tesla. This could reap huge rewards in the next crash. I’ve already shown Bubble Finance Trader beta-testers a specific way to do this. And when we release our research to the public, you’ll have the chance, too.

On the wealth preservation side, you should buy the one asset that will be left standing tall when the central bank money printers finally fail: gold.

As you employ these strategies, you’ll see the Fed-driven casino start to crumble. I describe four important forces driving this process right now, below. Read on for the results of two decades of bubble finance…

Regards,

David Stockman
for The Daily Reckoning

P.S. Be sure to sign up for The Daily Reckoning — a free and entertaining look at the world of finance and politics from every possible angle. The articles you find here on our website are only a snippet of what you receive in The Daily Reckoning email edition. Click here now to sign up for FREE to see what you’re missing.

The Daily Reckoning