[R-G] The Worst Case Scenario (Someone Has to Say It)]
peripatetic
barmy_basket at yahoo.es
Wed May 6 05:57:07 MDT 2009
This is also the most likely scenario in my view. Excerpt:
"...In the interests of providing you with an alternate vision ?something
outside the mainstream ?below are ten predictions for America through the
year 2012. This is not boilerplate doom-saying. Rather, I am laying out
in highly specific terms what will happen over the next three-odd years.
Others have thrown around the term ?Depression?, but I am going to tell
you precisely what it means for you, your investments, and your community.
When these predictions come true, I expect to be rewarded with a
seven-figure consulting gig, a book contract, or a high-level position
in whatever administration succeeds the doomed Obama team?that is, if
anyone succeeds it at all.
Prediction one. The twenty-five-year equities bubble pops in 2009. U.S.
and foreign equities markets will stop treading water and realign with
economic reality. Stock prices will cease to reflect the ?greater fool?
mentality and will return to being a function of dividend yields, which
have long been miserable. The S&P 500 will sink below 500. In a bid to
stem the panic, the government will enforce periodic ?stock market
holidays?, and will vastly expand the scope of its short-selling
prohibitions?eventually banning short-selling altogether.
Prediction two. With public pension systems and tens of millions of 401k
holders virtually wiped out?and with the Baby Boomers retiring en
masse?there will be tremendous pressure on the government to get into
the stock market in order to bid up prices.
Therefore, sometime in 2010, the Federal Reserve will create and loan
out hundreds of billions of fresh dollars to the usual well-connected
suspects, instructing them to buy up stocks on the public?s behalf. This
scheme will have a fancy but meaningless name?something like the
?Taxpayer Assurance Equities Facility?. It will have no effect other
than to serve as buyer of last resort for capitulating smart-money types
who want to get out of stocks entirely.
Prediction three. Millions of new retirees?including white-collar people
with high expectations for a Golden Retirement?will be left virtually
penniless. Thousands will starve or freeze to death in their own homes.
Hundreds of thousands will find themselves evicted and homeless, or will
have to move in with their less-than-enthusiastic children. Already
strained by the rising tide of the working-age unemployed, state and
local welfare services will be overwhelmed, and by 2012 will have
largely collapsed and ceased to function in many parts of the country.
Prediction four. ?Quantitative easing? will fail to restart previous
patterns of lending and consumption. As the government sends out
additional ?rebate? checks and takes ever-more drastic measures to force
banks to lend, hyperinflation could take hold. However, comprehensive
debt relief via a devaluation of the dollar is even more likely. This
would entail the government issuing one ?new? dollar for some greater
number of ?old? dollars?thus reducing both debts and savings
simultaneously. This would make for a clean slate a la Fight Club.
As there are many more debtors than savers in the U.S., the vast
majority would support devaluation. The Chinese and other foreign
holders of our bonds would be screaming mad, but unable to do anything.
Every country that has not found a way out of dollar-denominated reserve
assets by 2012 will see its reserves eliminated.
Prediction five. The government will stop pretending that it can finance
continuous multi-trillion-dollar deficits on the private market. By late
2010, the sole buyers of new U.S. Treasury and agency bonds will be the
Federal Reserve and a few derelict financial institutions under
government control. This may or may not lead to hyperinflation. (See
prediction four).
Prediction six. As the need for financial industry paper-pushers
declines and people have less money to spend on lawyers and Starbucks
(SBUX), unemployment will rise until the private sector has eliminated
all of its excess capacity and superfluous or socially needless jobs.
The government?s narrow unemployment figure (U3) will rise into the high
teens by late 2010. The government?s broader unemployment figure (U6)
will cease to be reported when it reaches 25 percent?it will simply be
too embarrassing. Ultimately, one in three work-eligible Americans will
be unemployed, underemployed, or never-employed (e.g. college grads
permanently unable to find suitable work).
Prediction seven. With their pension dreams squashed, and their salaries
frozen or cut, police and other local government workers will turn to
wholesale corruption in order to survive. America?s ideal of honest,
courteous, and impartial cops, teachers, and small-time local
functionaries will have come to an end.
Prediction eight. Commercial overcapacity will strike with a vengeance.
By 2012, thousands of enclosed malls, strip malls, unfinished
residential developments, motels, truck stops, distribution centers,
middle-of-nowhere resorts and casinos, and small-city airports across
America will turn into dilapidated, unwanted, and dangerous ghost towns.
With no economic incentive for their maintenance or repair, they will
crumble into overgrown, plywood-and-sheet-rock ruins.
Prediction nine. By the end of 2010, tens of millions of households will
have fallen behind on their mortgages or stopped paying altogether. Many
banks will be unable to process the massive volume of foreclosure
paperwork, much less actually seize and resell the homes.
Devaluation (as mentioned in prediction four) could ease the situation
for those mortgage holders still afloat, but it would also eliminate any
incentive for most banks to stay in the mortgage business. In any case,
the housing market in many parts of the country will lock up
completely?nothing bought or sold.
With virtually no loans being made, even the government will finally
acknowledge that most banks are fundamentally insolvent. A general bank
run will only be averted through a roughly one trillion-dollar
recapitalization of the FDIC, courtesy of new money from the Federal
Reserve.
Prediction ten. As an economy is never independent of the society within
which it functions, the next few paragraphs will focus on social and
political factors. These factors will have as much of an impact on
market and consumer confidence as any developments in the financial sector.
Whether rightly or not, President Obama, having come to power at the
dawn of this crisis, will be blamed for it by over 50 percent of the
population. He will be a one-term president. In response to his
perceived socialization of America, there will be a swarm of
secessionist and extremist activity, much of it violent. Militias and
armed sects will be more prominent than in the early 1990s. Stand-off
dramas, violent score-settlings, and going-out-with-a-bang attacks by
laid-off workers and bankrupted investors?already a national plague?will
become an everyday occurrence.
For both economic and social reasons, millions of immigrants and guest
workers will return to their home countries, taking their assets and
skills with them. The flow of skilled immigrants will slow to a trickle.
Birth rates will plummet as families struggle with uncertainty and
reduced (or no) income.
Property crime will explode as citizens bitter over their own shattered
dreams attempt to comfort themselves by taking what is not theirs.
Mutinies and desertions will proliferate in an increasingly demoralized,
over-stretched military, especially when states can no longer provide
the educational and other benefits promised to their National Guard troops.
There will be widespread tax collection issues, and a huge backlash
against Federal and state bureaucrats who demand three-percent annual
pay raises while private sector wages remain frozen or worse. In short,
the ?Tea Parties? of tomorrow will likely not be so restrained.
Finally, between now and 2012, we are likely to see another
earth-shaking national embarrassment on the scale of the 9/11 attacks or
Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath. This will demonstrate conclusively
to all Americans that their government, even under a savior-figure like
Obama, cannot, in fact, save them.
By 2012, there will be a general feeling that the nation is in immediate
danger of blowing up or coming apart at the seams. This fear will be
justified, given that the U.S. has always been held together by the
promise of a continuously rising material standard of living?the famous
?pursuit of happiness??rather than any ethnic or religious ties. If that
goes, so could everything else. We were lucky in the 1930s?we may not be
so lucky again."
Read all here
http://seekingalpha.com/article/134820-the-worst-case-scenario-someone-has-to-say-it
http://webabuser.blogspot.com/
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