Lieutenant Briggs: Suppose they panic and start shooting?
Harry Callahan: Nothing wrong with shooting if the right people get shot.
--Magnum Force
As noted in this morning's post, central banks got out the bazookas today in an attempt to blow away systemic deflationary forces that are driving Euro and US banks toward insolvency.
On the surface, the concerted central bank actions are clearly inflationary.
This post on zerohedge w/ Peter Schiff comments captures it well. The snippet at the end of the post REALLY captures it well:
"...this is merely the beginning as more and more inflationary actions have to be undertaken by central banks to save banks from being crushed by untenable debt loads. Whether they succeed in overturning the deflationary tsunami is unknown. What is certain is that they will bring fiat currencies to the [brink] of viability (and beyond) in trying."
As the snippet notes, the big question is whether this collective action will work. In late 2008, the Fed got out the fire hose of liquidity to stem the Lehman blowup. After a sharp relief rally on the news, however, markets resumed their downward path as the deflationary forces were not to be denied.
Hard not to wonder whether the same set up might not be in play here. Yes, the collective bazooka exceeds the power of the Fed's firehose. But the deflationary forces are more global in nature this time around.
Peter Schiff suggests that this is the time to load up on gold. That may turn out to be the case. Heck, gold popped 40 handles today.
But the other side of the trade is that the market forces pressing against the intervention are deflationary in nature.
And it's generally not nice to fool Mother Nature.
position in SPX, gold
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This is not a solution. All this can be is to help with temporary relief for liquidity problems, but those problems are a result of solvency issues.
~Mervyn King
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