Fed to buy up to $300B long-term Treasury bonds

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Lifer
Jun 3, 2002
10,518
271
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Originally posted by: BansheeX

They're not worried about a formal default, they're worried about us inflating away our debt obligations to them now and in the future. Seeing as how 0% of the trillions we are asking them for are going towards reducing our trade deficit with exportable production, there is every reason to be worried about continued and expanded purchase of our treasuries.

Huh? I can't tell if you're this misinformed or not; billions of the dollars we borrow from the Chinese in the form of issuing bonds (whichever T-bills they happen to be) are used for exporting America goods in the form of computer equipment, machinery and all sorts of specialized goods and services that require high quality. I'm not sure what planet you're living on, but the U.S. has experiencing tremendous exporting growth up until the end of last year when the dollar started to strengthen. The borrowed dollars from the Chinese go toward industries other than financial and other than for creating jobs. They go to energy and they go to education services, which the U.S. can indeed export. Besides, who says we have to export a maximal amount of "products" if we can export services as well?

Irrelevant? Irrelevant? That's the whole fucking point of trade. An unbacked dollar is an IOU, it is a supposed placeholder for a future product.

Currency can be exchanged for goods and services, it is not an IOU whether it is backed by a commodity or not. Go to school you fucking layman. :roll:

If we are showing no signs of ever creating an exportable product, of what value to the Chinese worker is continuing to accumulate them? Trillions of paper promises that stay promises does a Chinese laborer no good at all. They'd be far better off consuming their own production or loaning it to a country that produces something they lack.

The U.S. by itself has nearly single handily created a burgeoning middle class in the China (by their standards) by a combination of U.S. companies exporting labor creation in China in addition to the U.S.' strong desire for Chinese products, brought in via imports, all of which has contributed to raising Chinese wages and standards of living. Their U.S. T-bills aren't worthless whatsoever, they make money off them, it's a fundamental principle of finance, you have to pay interest on money you borrow and the U.S. has been doing that. All these bailouts have included billions in stimulus for companies that do billions in trade with China. I don't know what planet you live on, but please stay there.

Deficits is not a black/white thing, there is a huge disparity between what we did then and now with the borrowed money. Historically, we always borrowed to PRODUCE, now we borrow mostly to CONSUME, and our "growth" has become a function of how much debt we can increasingly incur to consume.

Enough, stop pretending you have the first idea about what's going on here, this is literally a Peter Schiff quote verbatim. What is wrong with borrowing money to consume? Be aware that I did not ask what is wrong with consuming 100% of what you borrow, that is a big and obvious difference. Remember, if the U.S. holds the most educated and richest service population in the world, services acts as production and can be exported just as well as physical goods can. This is a reality Austrian economists have not come to accept, and despite a deep recession they continue to get dead wrong.

If everyone borrowed to consume, there would eventually be mass poverty, we can't all ride in the cart, someone has to push it. You are so unbelievably brainwashed, you don't even understand that money's purpose is to better facilitate the exchange of goods. Goods. Goods. Goods. Beat it through your head, that's what ultimately makes money important, ease of exchanging goods. To the extent that money facilitates that, that's what makes money important. Gold is better than paper because it can't be conjured into existence by an issuer, all gold is guaranteed to be backed by the labor and materials required to obtain it, just like the products whose trade it is facilitating.

Oy, lmao. Services can be a type of good and they are intimately intertwined, they facilitate the same end result and that's a demand for something. The Internet you're communicating over is not a good, it's a service, a service which requires 100's of billions/trillion of dollars worth of goods to operate (equipment down to the CPU/mobo, routers, switches, etc.). The infrastructure is massive, and the U.S. doesn't just export the equipment for that tech, they export their tech services to other countries, mostly in the form of consultation. Much as Israeli's El Al exported their airline security expertise to Los Angeles' LAX airport. That's a service, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with becoming a service economy the way the U.S. has. The fact that we borrow more to do it means nothing if we're not over-leveraging ourselves. But that isn't exactly a new phenomenon, sometimes people over-extend themselves and businesses did so FAR worse in the 1920's despite the dollar being firmly fixed to gold exchange rate.

What is that supposed to mean? No one in international trade can substitute promises for products in perpetuity when money is based on a product? Wow, what a horrible, terrible thing.

Please explain in detail why the Chinese should not trust the solvency of U.S. dollars when this country takes in, in tax revenues, triple what we currently owe the Chinese (China holds $1.2T in U.S. dollars, U.S. takes in nearly $3T in revenue). And since China, like American, will always hold a certain amount of debt from other countries, they're not going to pay all that $1.2T back just as the Chinese aren't going to pay back all the yuan they owe us. Get used to the idea that every country uses debt financing to stay afloat, it's an old idea that you don't seem to understand. Which makes sense, you weren't formally educated and don't have real world experience so of course you don't understand how formally educated people with experience think.

The 1921 bust was caused by an inflationary bubble that preceded it due to WWI. Many countries went off gold to finance the war, which wouldn't have gone on so long if international players had accepted the debt currency in place of it. Subsequently, there was mass repudiation of debt obligations as countries began devaluing and leaving the standard completely. The great inflation of 1921-1930 by Fed Chairman Strong was an idiotic decision to prop up the devalued Pound, leading to a large bubble whose bust was not allowed to play out like the 1921 bust, or else it would have lasted a mere 2 years as well. Prior to the Great Depression, there was little government interference and they were not allowed to draw out the misery by thinking it could help, the market always delivered the shortest correction possible.

Except the markets collapsed, as they did in 1907 and 1921, including wages, jobs and productivity destroyed, to the point where it took YEARS just to get back to prior wage and productivity levels. Much as Peter Schiff's investors lost 70% of their portfolio value last year, requiring them to earn 300% on their current returns just to get back to even par. Again, basic mathematics you do not understand, mostly because you read about Strong and the 21 recession on some bunk mises or Austrian web page.

The natural consequence of inflation that preceded it. Recurring theme: when gold "fails" countries are printing way more notes than they have gold to back them.

See above.

Fractional Reserve banking sucks and creates runs, it's just fraud on the private level. When you create redeemable notes for which no metal exists and loan it out at interest, you are no longer solvent, and that insolvency can be exposed through runs. I agree with you, it definitely creates disasters to allow this practice in the banking industry and it should have been stopped instead of backstopped.

Why don't you see 1907-style runs on banks over the last 100 years despite the continued use of fractional reserve banking then? Because fractional reserve banking didn't inherently cause runs on banks in the first place, the lack of a central bank in 1907 led to chaos and panic because there was no one there to come and guarantee deposits, raise capital or liquidity, or frankly do anything worth a damn. The runs on banks happened because there was no one there (like, say, the FDIC) to assuage people's fears.

This has nothing to do with anything. Confidence is a bad thing when it is put into the incorrect activity. Madoff's victims were supremely confident and it was stable for 20 years. It's a meaningless attribute, what matters is how prosperous we are and whether or not we are sacrificing future prosperity in order to achieve it.

No, you're just wrong, per usual. Confidence and trust have always been a huge part of investing and saving, and that is precisely why much smarter people than you continue to run hugely successful economies around the world without being pegged to gold. There is and always will be fraud, it occurred rampantly before the Fed and before fractional reserve banking. It will always occur, exceptions to the rule like Madoff do not invalidate a basic economic law like confidence. You do not understand the fundamentals of money and exchange of goods if you cannot honestly understand the concepts of confidence and trust.

I know what compound interest is and it takes effect on the current principal, not on the principal at the beginning. If you pick the wrong stocks or the wrong buy and sell time in these inflationist bubbles of ours, compound interest won't fucking matter because the principal will get wiped out. It's incredibly easy for you to pick an interval in hindsight. And as the world's largest debtor nation, compound interest works against us, we service those debts through future taxes and inflation. To the extent that people have no additional money from wage debasement to even invest because of this should concern you, but it doesn't.

No actually, you didn't understand compound interest because you claimed just a week or two ago that gold had yielded superior returns than equity over the long run. Want me to link you to the thread, layman?
 

BansheeX

Senior member
Sep 10, 2007
348
0
0
Originally posted by: Evan
Huh? I can't tell if you're this misinformed or not; billions of the dollars we borrow from the Chinese in the form of issuing bonds (whichever T-bills they happen to be) are used for exporting America goods in the form of computer equipment, machinery and all sorts of specialized goods and services that require high quality.

Huh? What does citing what we export have to do with the fact that we import far, far more than we export?

I'm not sure what planet you're living on, but the U.S. has experiencing tremendous exporting growth up until the end of last year when the dollar started to strengthen.

And yet we were increasing imports at a greater pace, thereby increasing the trade deficit.

"Doctor, I was exercising 50% more, I swear."
"It doesn't matter because you ate 60% more, losing weight is an offsetting mechanism."

Besides, who says we have to export a maximal amount of "products" if we can export services as well?

The trade deficit numbers INCLUDE services.

Currency can be exchanged for goods and services, it is not an IOU whether it is backed by a commodity or not. Go to school you fucking layman. :roll:

Excellent, we can all quit our jobs and just issue currency. We don't have to produce anything, because, according to you, currency can be exchanged for goods and services, so why would we need to make anything else?

The U.S. by itself has nearly single handily created a burgeoning middle class in the China (by their standards) by a combination of U.S. companies exporting labor creation in China in addition to the U.S.' strong desire for Chinese products, brought in via imports, all of which has contributed to raising Chinese wages and standards of living.

Woooooow, arrogance city. China has certainly benefited from free trade and greater economic freedom, Hong Kong was making them look ridiculous for years. But to say that American consumption was responsible for that? Any idiot can consume. We all want things, desire to have more things is not exclusive to humans in certain land masses. The trouble is the toil of producing it. But you certainly don't toil for the sake of having toil, you toil for the benefit of having products, and by and large we benefit disproportionately from global production. "Labor creation" is meaningless, slaves had a job, big fucking deal.

Their U.S. T-bills aren't worthless whatsoever, they make money off them, it's a fundamental principle of finance, you have to pay interest on money you borrow and the U.S. has been doing that. All these bailouts have included billions in stimulus for companies that do billions in trade with China. I don't know what planet you live on, but please stay there.

So, by never spending the IOUs on products or investment, but recycling them back into our treasury market, they get more IOUs. You may as well be earning mud for interest, interest is only meaningful to the extent that it gets you products. Money serves no purpose by itself, I'm trying to explain this to you but your head is made of oatmeal.

What is wrong with borrowing money to consume?

It diverts finite capital away from production, which is the means by which we are capable of consuming. It's the difference between a man with a tractor and a man with a shovel, one can feed a lot more people than the other as a result of having capital to get a tractor that otherwise might have gone to someone consuming what he produced with a shovel.

Be aware that I did not ask what is wrong with consuming 100% of what you borrow, that is a big and obvious difference.

Which is effectively what we are doing for all money that we borrow for imports in excess of what we are matching with exports?

Here's what you can do. You can consume 100% of what you produce. Or you can underconsume what you produce and have real savings, which can then be loaned to someone else at interest who needs it (directly or to trade) to make their production more efficient. Such a transaction can benefit the lender, the borrower, and society as a whole, because it makes that which we want faster and easier to make.

Remember, if the U.S. holds the most educated and richest service population in the world, services acts as production and can be exported just as well as physical goods can. This is a reality Austrian economists have not come to accept, and despite a deep recession they continue to get dead wrong.

According to the trade deficit, we import more goods and services than we export and borrow the difference in perpetuity, acting like a massive and growing drain on world capital.

Oy, lmao. Services can be a type of good and they are intimately intertwined, they facilitate the same end result and that's a demand for something.

Inferred, I just didn't say it. Goods and services, yes. Although a smaller percentage of services are exportable. You can't really export haircuts, kindergarten teachers, plumbers, tanning salons, carryout, and fitness trainers, can you?

Please explain in detail why the Chinese should not trust the solvency of U.S. dollars when this country takes in, in tax revenues, triple what we currently owe the Chinese (China holds $1.2T in U.S. dollars, U.S. takes in nearly $3T in revenue).

Uh, because it does them no good to continuously relinquish products for paper? Even if they don't sell, just not continuing to buy would be enough to collapse the value of the dollars they already hold, because the value was a function of them buying our debt with recycled interest instead of it being directly monetized by the Fed's magic checkbook.

Except the markets collapsed, as they did in 1907 and 1921, including wages, jobs and productivity destroyed, to the point where it took YEARS just to get back to prior wage and productivity levels.

Wages dropped, but products dropped more. That's not a losing proposition, it's a central fallacy behind the "evils" of deflation. The recovery times were also very brief, much briefer than that of the depression.

Much as Peter Schiff's investors lost 70% of their portfolio value last year, requiring them to earn 300% on their current returns just to get back to even par. Again, basic mathematics you do not understand, mostly because you read about Strong and the 21 recession on some bunk mises or Austrian web page.

I only know one person who invested with Schiff, and I heard 40%, which has since come off that low. I listened to his advice in 2000 and prevented losing 70% of dollar purchasing power on gold bullion trades, I regret not shorting subprime when he recommended that. You are also incorrectly using the term "lost", lost is a term you use when you sell. To whom are you referring that sold their foreign stocks to buy dollars at its high and why did they do so given what is about to happen?

Why don't you see 1907-style runs on banks over the last 100 years despite the continued use of fractional reserve banking then?

Because you backstopped the fraud and introduced a much larger problem in place of the previous one?

Because fractional reserve banking didn't inherently cause runs on banks in the first place, the lack of a central bank in 1907 led to chaos and panic because there was no one there to come and guarantee deposits, raise capital or liquidity, or frankly do anything worth a damn. The runs on banks happened because there was no one there (like, say, the FDIC) to assuage people's fears.

That's like saying the only thing wrong with ponzi schemes is that the government doesn't guarantee them, otherwise the fear of not receiving one's money causes the scheme to be exposed when it otherwise wouldn't. The run is not the problem, it's the result of the problem. There's nothing irrational about losing confidence in a banking system that is involved in this kind of activity.

No, you're just wrong, per usual. Confidence and trust have always been a huge part of investing and saving, and that is precisely why much smarter people than you continue to run hugely successful economies around the world without being pegged to gold.

You're dead wrong, I nailed you on this. Confidence can be misplaced, it does you absolutely no good to place your confidence in a scam even when it feels good during the time in which you were confident in it. Confidence is good when the investment is SOUND. Once again, you draw no fucking disparity between the two when it should be obvious.

There is and always will be fraud, it occurred rampantly before the Fed and before fractional reserve banking. It will always occur, exceptions to the rule like Madoff do not invalidate a basic economic law like confidence. You do not understand the fundamentals o f money and exchange of goods if you cannot honestly understand the concepts of confidence and trust.

Trust and confidence are EARNED, and the problem is people have gotten BURNED investing in shit that, in retrospect, made no sense. That's what you want people to aspire to? Guess the irrational bubble top lottery funtime like Mark Cuban? The stock market in the last two decades has been anything but what you espouse, people were preying off the dreams of others. People were convinced that dot-coms with no earnings were going to the moon, people were convinced that depreciating assets like homes laid golden goose eggs. You want confidence and trust? Stop inflating the currency like its going out of style, it's confusing the shit out of industry and the people investing in it.

No actually, you didn't understand compound interest because you claimed just a week or two ago that gold had yielded superior returns than equity over the long run. Want me to link you to the thread, layman?

Get bent inflationist, that comparison was the value of the DOW relative to gold, there was a 50 year period that the DOW could not maintain its buy value above gold. That is fucking pathetic regardless of compound interest. The compounding interest today is more than negated by the compounding interest we pay for our government's debt, so it's an absurd argument for NEVER investing in gold. So long as we're digging up old arguments to try and discredit each other (I don't argue this way, but you love it), how about the retarded comment you made about "not adjusting for inflation" a comparison of two dollar-denominated items?
 

First

Lifer
Jun 3, 2002
10,518
271
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Originally posted by: BansheeX

Excellent, we can all quit our jobs and just issue currency. We don't have to produce anything, because, according to you, currency can be exchanged for goods and services, so why would we need to make anything else?

We provide goods and services, more than any other country in the world and more than any other time in our history. The fact that we also import more than export doesn't mean a thing. And as I said before, currency is not an IOU whether it is backed by a commodity or not. You're out of your league in this discussion kiddo.

Woooooow, arrogance city. China has certainly benefited from free trade and greater economic freedom, Hong Kong was making them look ridiculous for years. But to say that American consumption was responsible for that? Any idiot can consume. We all want things, desire to have more things is not exclusive to humans in certain land masses. The trouble is the toil of producing it. But you certainly don't toil for the sake of having toil, you toil for the benefit of having products, and by and large we benefit disproportionately from global production. "Labor creation" is meaningless, slaves had a job, big fucking deal.

It's sad to see how much you believe in what you post. Labor creation is not meaningless, the Chinese had nothing during Mao's reign and since the 70's their far more open and free trade with the U.S. has been a major, major reason for their revival; their middle class and wages have skyrocketed, they are far more dependent on the U.S. than we are of them (but we certainly are dependent on them in many ways). To ignore this indisputable reality by likening job creation to slaves tells anyone intelligent you are not well informed. Your crap about unpegged dollars=IOU, patently false and absurd, just shows you don't understand what's going on.

So, by never spending the IOUs on products or investment,

The money is spent on product and investments. Again, you are just wrong and I can't help that you literally are making shit up.

but recycling them back into our treasury market, they get more IOUs. You may as well be earning mud for interest, interest is only meaningful to the extent that it gets you products. Money serves no purpose by itself, I'm trying to explain this to you but your head is made of oatmeal.

Money serves no purpose by itself? Yeah, again, you just don't know what's going on. Money is essentially the stock of assets that can be immediately used to make transactions, so it serves a direct and useful purpose when people trust it. Clearly, as the most used currency in the world by far, people trust and use the dollar for good reason. The fact that you do not understand fundamental economics is not surprising, though. The idea that money can be exchanged for goods and services is the bedrock of finance dating back hundreds of years in modern history and thousands if you start from the Greeks. What you're trying to say would make sense to a layman that hasn't put much thought into what money actually is, but to those of us that have spent considerable time reading and studying money, it indeed holds quite a bit more than "no purpose" in isolation. :laugh:

It diverts finite capital away from production, which is the means by which we are capable of consuming. It's the difference between a man with a tractor and a man with a shovel, one can feed a lot more people than the other as a result of having capital that otherwise might have gone to someone consuming what he produced with a shovel.

Which is effectively what we are doing for all money that we borrow for imports in excess of what we are matching with exports?

When someone consumes, they are consuming products, a type of investment. Not all consumption is the meaningless shit you keep pretending that it is. So while people may borrow to consume, their consumption also then has a net benefit to someone in the U.S. selling that product. So again, I'm not sure what aspect of this reality you don't understand about imports vs. exports; if domestic investment exceeds domestic saving, the extra investment must be financed by borrowing from abroad, with those foreign loans enabling us to import more goods/services than we export. Is this inherently bad? No, because not everyone is buying a flat screen TV as you ignorantly stated. It's just not happening to the degree you think it is. So I guess it makes sense you're so confused, you don't know the difference between residential fixed investment, business fixed investment, and inventory investment and think everyone is buying meaningless consumer products.

Here's what you can do. You can consume 100% of what you produce. Or you can underconsume what you produce and have real savings, which can then be loaned to someone else at interest who needs it (directly or to trade) to make their production more efficient. Such a transaction can benefit the lender, the borrower, and society as a whole, because it makes that which we want faster and easier to make.

Except with a trade deficit you're suddenly unable to add to your stock of capital at anywhere near the same rate. If saving and then loaning out that money at interest were so successful a strategy, why is Britain, Europe, China, Netherlands and every other Western and/or growing economy in the world running trade deficits? Take hint; much smarter people have decided that it makes more sense to increase their capital stock of goods by reasonably borrowing; no, Americans over-borrowing did not cause the current crisis, banks over-leveraging those securities and spreading the risk to other financial firms caused the current $6T meltdown.

Uh, because it does them no good to continuously relinquish products for paper?

Uh, the paper they continually take in return from the U.S. is actually worth a ton when they add the interest they've earned on it? You're so confused you don't even realize that you're arguing against yourself; one moment you're saying we should save enough to loan out to other countries, and the next you're saying that China has no reason to continue to save and loan out to other countries, like the U.S. That's a cognitive dissonance if I've ever seen one.

Even if they don't sell, just not continuing to buy would be enough to collapse the value of the dollars they already hold, because the value was a function of them buying our debt with recycled interest instead of it being directly monetized by the Fed's magic checkbook.

Except the dollar continues to maintain substantial value against world currencies including the Euro and Pound. The Chinese will continue to sell off U.S. T-bills and do so at a profit.

Wages dropped, but products dropped more. That's not a losing proposition, it's a central fallacy behind the "evils" of deflation. The recovery times were also very brief, much briefer than that of the depression.

The recovery period is only the period where GDP started to increase again, it stays nothing about how long it took to get back to 1921 levels of production and wages, which in fact took many years because economic research was poor and mismanaged before people understood the crippling dangers of deflation and extreme free market dogma.

I only know one person who invested with Schiff, and I heard 40%, which has since come off that low. I listened to his advice in 2000 and prevented losing 70% of dollar purchasing power on gold bullion trades, I regret not shorting subprime when he recommended that. You are also incorrectly using the term "lost", lost is a term you use when you sell. To whom are you referring that sold their foreign stocks to buy dollars at its high and why did they do so given what is about to happen?

I am correctly using the term lost, "lost" does not only refer to the selling of stock. Lost clearly implies that, for the Jan-Dec 2008 period, someone with $1000 invested with Schiff lost between 40%-70% of that value, or $400-$700. That's because he bet big on hyperinflation and decoupling, was promptly laughed at, and now has quite clearly been monstrously wrong in just a 6 month time frame.

Because you backstopped the fraud and introduced a much larger problem in place of the previous one?

You do realize that what you're saying is that the 20th century, which experienced the largest period of growth and investment in U.S. history, was able to "backstop fraud and introduce a much larger problem" successfully for 100 years, correct? This should be the point where you start asking yourself, "Hum, maybe something that's wrong but works for 100 years isn't, well, 'wrong' ".

That's like saying the only thing wrong with ponzi schemes is that the government doesn't guarantee them,

No, ponzi schemes hide assets by not investing them, not returning them when asked for, and falsifying earnings data. I cannot help that you are too daft to see the difference.

otherwise the fear of not receiving one's money causes the scheme to be exposed when it otherwise wouldn't. The run is not the problem, it's the result of the problem. There's nothing irrational about losing confidence in a banking system that is involved in this kind of activity.

It is very irrational when fractional reserve banking is in fact used all over the world and has worked for centuries. Get with the times kiddo, it is used because it worked. No country is forced to employ fractional reserve banking, yet it is continually instituted by free societies. Brazil didn't have to, but they did, and now they finally have a well respected bank with a well respected monetary policy on inflation (and hopefully it stays that way for their sake).

You're dead wrong, I nailed you on this. Confidence can be misplaced, it does you absolutely no good to place your confidence in a scam even when it feels good during the time in which you were confident in it. Confidence is good when the investment is SOUND. Once again, you draw no fucking disparity between the two when it should be obvious.

Haha, wow. Confidence can be misplaced like anything else, much like confidence in, say, your ancient and widely debunked gold standard. Problem is that without confidence, you're much worse off because you can't possibly go forward if you lack confidence mostly or entirely. Confidence in the financial system as a first principle to structure a sound, stable marketplace is necessary for people to want to invest, and in that regard Americans have NOT misplaced their confidence in FDIC insured deposits up to the delineated dollar amount. So again, you fail and fail miserably, so badly it's just sad at this point.

Trust and confidence are EARNED, and the problem is people have gotten BURNED investing in shit that, in retrospect, made no sense. That's what you want people to aspire to? Guess the irrational bubble top lottery funtime like Mark Cuban? The stock market in the last two decades has been anything but what you espouse, people were preying off the dreams of others. People were convinced that dot-coms with no earnings were going to the moon, people were convinced that depreciating assets like homes laid golden goose eggs. You want confidence and trust? Stop inflating the currency like its going out of style, it's confusing the shit out of people.

Wow, this just keeps getting better. Trust and confidence has been earned buddy, where have you been? U.S. equity has returned 6.5%+ compounded annually since 1802. You talk about the .com bubble as if most people held a significant portion of their portfolio in tech stocks. Deal with the statistical realities before making bogus, batshit crazy claims about the U.S. not earning the trust and confidence of Americans and citizens worldwide. You may not realize it, but intelligent people laugh at you when you say garbage like that.

Get bent inflationist, that comparison was the value of the DOW relative to gold, there was a 50 year period that the DOW could not maintain its buy value above gold. That is fucking pathetic regardless of compound interest.

Regardless of compound interest? Compound interest and reinvestment of dividends is the whole point of long-term investing you dullard. I mean really now, I can't even believe you'd post that with a straight face. :laugh:

The compounding interest today is more than negated by the compounding interest we pay for our government's debt, so it's an absurd argument for NEVER investing in gold. So long as we're digging up old arguments to try and discredit each other (I don't argue this way, but you love it), how about the retarded comment you made about "not adjusting for inflation" a comparison of two dollar-denominated items?

rofl, two "dollar-denominated items". Jesus you're clueless. As another poster accurately stated in that thread, an index of funds has to be adjusted for inflation differently than a commodity like gold. They aren't two "goods", equity price level equations are adjusted differently, idiot. But really, you lost all credibility with your above compound interest quip. Shows you just don't have the first clue about investing, I guess it's no wonder you invest heavily in gold.

edit: Quote tags fixed.
 

First

Lifer
Jun 3, 2002
10,518
271
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Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: Evan
Depends what you mean by "significant". If inflation can be kept at 2-4% during a recovery/boom within a year from now, the Fed can raise interest rates to dampen inflation and cool off excessive borrowing. If we're transferring our debt financing to other countries, this can work in the long run as we collect more taxes, raise taxes marginally, and then legalize the 12M illegals currently working within U.S. borders. Assuming substantial population growth (barring a pandemic, pretty much guaranteed), we should see a significant reduction in national debt within 5-10 years. We'll always be leveraged in the trillions though, but that was never the issue, the issue was over-leveraging relative to GDP. At the current rate, we'll be leveraged at 100% of GDP with 12-18 months.

Highlighted for importance. For whatever reason people think that having national debt is a bad thing (especially the ron paul crowd). Leverage increases ROE, which is why all G8 nations carry debt.

Basically, and which is why debt financing is and will continue to be important. There's no reason to be averse to debt, you just have to know your limitations.
 

The-Noid

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2005
3,117
4
76
Originally posted by: Evan
Originally posted by: halik
Originally posted by: Evan
Depends what you mean by "significant". If inflation can be kept at 2-4% during a recovery/boom within a year from now, the Fed can raise interest rates to dampen inflation and cool off excessive borrowing. If we're transferring our debt financing to other countries, this can work in the long run as we collect more taxes, raise taxes marginally, and then legalize the 12M illegals currently working within U.S. borders. Assuming substantial population growth (barring a pandemic, pretty much guaranteed), we should see a significant reduction in national debt within 5-10 years. We'll always be leveraged in the trillions though, but that was never the issue, the issue was over-leveraging relative to GDP. At the current rate, we'll be leveraged at 100% of GDP with 12-18 months.

Highlighted for importance. For whatever reason people think that having national debt is a bad thing (especially the ron paul crowd). Leverage increases ROE, which is why all G8 nations carry debt.

Basically, and which is why debt financing is and will continue to be important. There's no reason to be averse to debt, you just have to know your limitations.

This is the best post in the thread.

As for leverage increasing ROE. You can't measure ROE the same on a macro scale with the du-pont method for an economy as you do on a company scale in analysis.

The way governments raise revenue is different from raising revenue on a company basis so your first input (profit margin, gross margin, net margin) is misleading. You would either have a 0 ROE or infinite ROE based on du-pont of an economy.

The only way to get an accurate ROE of an economy is to add all projects and subtract projects that are based on free-loaders or public use items, even though every economy needs these social benefit items.

 

BansheeX

Senior member
Sep 10, 2007
348
0
0
Originally posted by: EvanWe provide goods and services, more than any other country in the world and more than any other time in our history. The fact that we also import more than export doesn't mean a thing. And as I said before, currency is not an IOU whether it is backed by a commodity or not. You're out of your league in this discussion kiddo.

If it doesn't mean a thing that we import more than we export, then let's spend even less time producing exports and issue more currency and bonds. There is either a breaking point or none at all.

It's sad to see how much you believe in what you post. Labor creation is not meaningless,

Whatever hours the Chinese work to underconsume so that we can consume their products with their savings is a meaningless endeavor. They'd be better off laying on the beach than expending that particular labor, at least leisure feels good.

the Chinese had nothing during Mao's reign and since the 70's their far more open and free trade with the U.S. has been a major, major reason for their revival

Free trade and a total lack of entitlement costs has been a major reason for the revival, their pro-capitalist environment attracted a lot of private capital and investment. They grow in spite of the leech we represent to them, without the leech they'd have a lot more products and prosperity.

their middle class and wages have skyrocketed, they are far more dependent on the U.S. than we are of them. To ignore this indisputable reality by likening job creation to slaves tells anyone intelligent you are not well informed.

It's not the reality that's disputable, it's your cause. The cause is something much more internal and fundamental, and the assertion that treasury purchases are increasing product ownership in China is laughable, that action is a hindrance. It's like someone who has been shackled for a long time gets unshackled. He gets a job and loans some of his earnings each week to his spendthrift brother who never pays him back in real terms. He's doing better for himself despite those loans, but his brother convinces him that the main reason is because of his loans, not his unshackling.

The money is spent on product and investments. Again, you are just wrong and I can't help that you literally are making shit up.

Some of it, most of those "investments" are not investments, it's recycling it back into our treasury market to get more, otherwise the stash would have never grown to the size it has now gotten.

Money serves no purpose by itself? Yeah, again, you just don't know what's going on. Money is essentially the stock of assets that can be immediately used to make transactions, so it serves a direct and useful purpose when people trust it.

You just contradicted yourself. Transactions of what? Goods and services. Without the goods and services, there are no transactions, therefore money has no use by itself, because its function is to facilitate the trade/transaction of goods and services by acting as a commonly accepted placeholder.

The idea that money can be exchanged for goods and services is the bedrock of finance dating back hundreds of years in modern history and thousands if you start from the Greeks. What you're trying to say would make sense to a layman that hasn't put much thought into what money actually is, but to those of us that have spent considerable time reading and studying money, it indeed holds quite a bit more than "no purpose" in isolation. :laugh:

No, the idea that goods and services can be exchanged for goods and services is the bedrock of successful trade and finance dating back thousands of years. Money was only created to defeat the inefficiency of barter, it was to act like a placeholder for any product. It makes no sense to have a money that, unlike the things it is representing, can be counterfeited by its issuer at no labor or material cost. That ultimately distorts and confounds trade and value when the issuer invariably counterfeits more and more to make excess loans at interest against a smaller and smaller reserve of real deposits. That people individually cannot legally counterfeit like the issuer proves that even the issuers of the currency understand this. It is a supreme contradiction.

When someone consumes, they are consuming products, a type of investment. Not all consumption is the meaningless shit you keep pretending that it is. So while people may borrow to consume, their consumption also then has a net benefit to someone in the U.S. selling that product.

I never said consumption was meaningless, I said it was meaningless for someone to underconsume and then loan the resultant savings to someone who... CONSUMES WITH IT. That makes no sense, if immediate consumption was the usage, the earner would simply consume with it himself, not effectively pass the privilege off to someone else in order to receive an endless stream of paper IOU interest.

Except with a trade deficit you're suddenly unable to add to your stock of capital at anywhere near the same rate. If saving and then loaning out that money at interest were so successful a strategy, why is Britain, Europe, China, Netherlands and every other Western and/or growing economy in the world running trade deficits? Take hint; much smarter people have decided that it makes more sense to increase their capital stock of goods by reasonably borrowing; no, Americans over-borrowing did not cause the current crisis, banks over-leveraging those securities and spreading the risk to other financial firms caused the current $6T meltdown.

LOL? Britain and the United States are growing? How? Our productive capacity has declined for decades, we hocked it all to consume the production of someone else's growth and pay ourselves infinite entitlement benefits. Our "growth" is a function of perpetual loans from productive countries who have none of that overhead, a trend that CANNOT BE SUSTAINED.

Uh, the paper they continually take in return from the U.S. is actually worth a ton when they add the interest they've earned on it?

No, you don't get it. The money they loaned to American consumers gave (a) American consumers their products and (b) deprived capital from far more efficient producers. A kindergartener could have understood the shovel analogy. Such productive increases would have increased the attainability of goods for everyone on Earth, which is what any sane person would consider the road to global prosperity.

Except the dollar continues to maintain substantial value against world currencies including the Euro and Pound. The Chinese will continue to sell off U.S. T-bills and do so at a profit.

They'll certainly sell off their t-bills, but they would have gotten more products and productive efficiency from not buying them in the first place. It was a complete diversion of capital that deprived their own countrymen of products and investment.

The recovery period is only the period where GDP started to increase again, it stays nothing about how long it took to get back to 1921 levels of production and wages, which in fact took many years because economic research was poor and mismanaged before people understood the crippling dangers of deflation and extreme free market dogma.

Falling prices of goods and services is not a bad thing unless wages are falling faster. When more goods can be produced at a lower cost in a shorter time, prices are supposed to fall relative to wages. It happens with computers in spite of inflation and everyone loves it, there's nothing debilitating about things becoming more affordable for everyone. Shelter and food should be getting more affordable relative to wages, too, but the opposite has been happening. Junk economists like yourself used to bring up home appreciation and rising stocks as forms of wealth to offset that, but were pointing to illusions, one of which couldn't even be tapped into during most of the person's life.

I am correctly using the term lost, "lost"

No, losing happens when you sell. That gold was temporarily selling for 30% less last year means nothing to me because I never sold.

You do realize that what you're saying is that the 20th century, which experienced the largest period of growth and investment in U.S. history, was able to "backstop fraud and introduce a much larger problem" successfully for 100 years, correct? This should be the point where you start asking yourself, "Hum, maybe something that's wrong but works for 100 years isn't, well, 'wrong' ".

You need to include the depression, the bank runs, the inflation crises, and the hyperinflationary collapse we're about to have, and then weigh that against a century that had none of them.

No, ponzi schemes hide assets by not investing them, not returning them when asked for, and falsifying earnings data. I cannot help that you are too daft to see the difference.

Ponzi schemes do generate falsified returns, the return is a function of finding new investments, which are used to pay off old investors. Once you can't find any more new investors to oblige old investors, the scheme is exposed. The biggest difference is that we have a printing press, Madoff never counterfeited returns like the Fed does. International bond markets don't have a risk of not being paid, it has a risk of being paid in depreciated currency. If inflation risks outweigh the yield on the bond, we would have to raise the rate to keep them buying. That's why we are going to have to default with hyperinflation, we refuse to face the music and thrust the economy into a correction. It's like choosing cancer over surgery because surgery is the more immediate pain.

It is very irrational when fractional reserve banking is in fact used all over the world and has worked for centuries.

It doesn't "work" any more than Social Security has "worked". Ponzi schemes always create more costs than benefits in the long run and benefit disproportionately the operator.

Confidence in the financial system as a first principle to structure a sound, stable marketplace is necessary for people to want to invest, and in that regard Americans have NOT misplaced their confidence in FDIC insured deposits up to the delineated dollar amount. So again, you fail and fail miserably, so badly it's just sad at this point.

Confidence in the FDIC is false confidence. People believe they guarantee deposits. They DON'T. They only guarantee nominal amounts, which are meaningless. They do not guarantee the value of the dollars relative to goods. It exacerbates the problem by failing to deter people from depositing with imprudent institutions, and debasing the wage values of the extremely poor who have no deposits to be guaranteed.

Wow, this just keeps getting better. Trust and confidence has been earned buddy, where have you been? U.S. equity has returned 6.5%+ compounded annually since 1802.

And 6.5% compounded returns today is just as good as 6.5% on stocks in 1950? What about the fact that our cost of living has skyrocketed? Have you seen where shelter prices were going? Health Care? Tuition? Energy? You're not weighing the return against the cost of living, the return has gotten worse while the cost of living has gotten so high that we need employ our pregnant wives and borrow huge amounts at interest for things we never used to. The interest and taxes we pay directly or indirectly are going to outweigh returns on domestic stocks if they haven't already. Fuck, I pay 16% a paycheck for SS/Medicare that will collapse well before I collect on it. Someone in 1956 was at 4% and they actually got something out of it, adjusted at pre-Boskin inflation calculations no less. But you have the nerve to sit here and claim that stock market returns are a cure all?

We are not the same country that were 40 or even 200 years ago and the people's trust in this bubble mentality is being lost. Companies like GE and GM used to make money on selling products, now they lose money on products and try to make it up on financing schemes. Most of our blue chippers are hedge funds masquerading as companies. Trusting this economy is like trusting a convicted rapist to babysit your child because he had a clean record for the first 40 years of his life. This is garbage logic you are pushing.

Regardless of compound interest? Compound interest and reinvestment of dividends is the whole point of long-term investing you dullard. I mean really now, I can't even believe you'd post that with a straight face. :laugh:

Gold is not an investment, you are changing the argument after the fact to one of investing, that is not what the original argument was about. People were trying to point out to you that a person's retirement horizon is not 200 years, and that past economies were fundamentally different in nature from the ponzi scheme we developed past 1970. This unwinding of it and currency crisis is going to destroy anyone with a retirement horizon within the next 30 years, so for you do suggest staying in domestic stocks based on past performance and fundamentals is foolish. Gold outperformed your stocks the last 10 years and will continue to do so, have fun accumulating a compound interest on collapsed principal right before you retire.

rofl, two "dollar-denominated items". Jesus you're clueless. As another poster accurately stated in that thread, an index of funds has to be adjusted for inflation differently than a commodity like gold. They aren't two "goods", equity price level equations are adjusted differently, idiot.

No, they don't, it doesn't matter that they aren't both in the same asset class, they're both priced in dollars and the buy price needs no adjusting either way. I'm done arguing with your oatmeal brain, it's a waste of time.
 

First

Lifer
Jun 3, 2002
10,518
271
136
Originally posted by: BansheeX

If it doesn't mean a thing that we import more than we export, then let's spend even less time producing exports and issue more currency and bonds. There is either a breaking point or none at all.

There is a breaking point, and that?s the point at which the U.S. gov?t is not financially capable of paying back their debt to countries like China. Is the U.S. gov?t capable of paying back those loans? Yes, quite clearly they are capable of doing so and have continued to do so for many decades (far better than they were doing in the 19th century), especially since they take in nearly $3T in tax revenue and owe China $1.2T.

Whatever hours the Chinese work to underconsume so that we can consume their products with their savings is a meaningless endeavor. They'd be better off laying on the beach than expending that particular labor, at least leisure feels good.

Again, this is why you aren?t taken seriously by anyone that is well educated; if the Chinese would be better off jobless laying on the beach, then why the hell do they (and other nations) continue to trade and make loans with the U.S.? Because they make money on the interest and benefit hugely from our direct foreign investment in their infrastructure, which is a huge reason why their standards of living, wages, and middle class have all boomed since the 1970?s. You can deny that reality all you want, but intelligent people will simply laugh at you for suggesting the Chinese have not benefited greatly from U.S. trade and loans.

It's not the reality that's disputable, it's your cause. The cause is something much more internal and fundamental, and the assertion that treasury purchases are increasing product ownership in China is laughable, that action is a hindrance. It's like someone who has been shackled for a long time gets unshackled. He gets a job and loans some of his earnings each week to his spendthrift brother who never pays him back in real terms. He's doing better for himself despite those loans, but his brother convinces him that the main reason is because of his loans, not his unshackling.

What?s sad is that you don?t even realize you?re contradicting yourself. Tell me exactly why this above paragraph cannot be applied verbatim to the U.S. 50 years ago when we saved more, were on the gold standard, and were a creditor nation (loaning out more than we borrowed)? You can?t explain this contradiction because you don?t understand what you?re saying.

Some of it, most of those "investments" are not investments, it's recycling it back into our treasury market to get more, otherwise the stash would have never grown to the size it has now gotten.

Now, they?re investments, they?re direct foreign investments, inventory investment, business fixed investments, ABS investments, etc. I am sorry you don?t understand any of them.

You just contradicted yourself. Transactions of what? Goods and services. Without the goods and services, there are no transactions, therefore money has no use by itself, because its function is to facilitate the trade/transaction of goods and services by acting as a commonly accepted placeholder.

No, the idea that goods and services can be exchanged for goods and services is the bedrock of successful trade and finance dating back thousands of years. Money was only created to defeat the inefficiency of barter, it was to act like a placeholder for any product. It makes no sense to have a money that, unlike the things it is representing, can be counterfeited by its issuer at no labor or material cost. That ultimately distorts and confounds trade and value when the issuer invariably counterfeits more and more to make excess loans at interest against a smaller and smaller reserve of real deposits. That people individually cannot legally counterfeit like the issuer proves that even the issuers of the currency understand this. It is a supreme contradiction.

Money places a numerical value on goods and services, without them you cannot barter with someone else because you cannot quantitatively describe in detail how much said product is worth. We know a computer is worth more than a bottle of water, but why? Because the market place set a numerical value for it, without which it would become impossible to quantify and no one would have any incentive to build said machines if they were dependent on the extremely high time/energy costs of finding someone willing to randomly barter something they spuriously deemed worth as much as a computer. That?s why the barter system was supplanted by currency and eventually by paper and floating exchange fiat.

Again, if a material cost was needed to make money worthwhile then we?d see more independent countries fixed their currency exchange rate to commodities like gold. Yet we never see such occurrences or they?re inordinately rare. Why is that? What have you figured out that someone with a similar education (high school) in some other nation hasn?t already figured out? Exactly, you can?t explain why fixed exchanges rates aren?t being adopted, you can?t explain why they?re literally going extinct, and you can?t explain why floating fiat, fractional reserve banking, et al have worked for so long because you fundamentally cannot wrap your head around the idea that the combination of a free market place with central banks can help maintain a stable, functional economy capable of raising standards of living based more on borrowing than on loaning. You don?t understand inflation and cannot explain why fixed exchange rates inherently limit your ability to control disasters like the Depression because you don?t know how they came to be in the first place. And you certainly can?t quantify any of it, since you don?t have the prerequisite math skills to do so.

I never said consumption was meaningless, I said it was meaningless for someone to underconsume and then loan the resultant savings to someone who... CONSUMES WITH IT. That makes no sense, if immediate consumption was the usage, the earner would simply consume with it himself, not effectively pass the privilege off to someone else in order to receive an endless stream of paper IOU interest.

And again, tell me how this is any different from what the U.S. was doing 50 years ago (a creditor nation, i.e. loaning more than borrowing, and saving more), a period of time you wish we would get back to?

LOL? Britain and the United States are growing? How?

rofl, the U.S. and Britain have been growing for decades reject, look it up. Enjoy the temporary recession reject, and go ahead and avoid the fact that the Netherlands, China, India, etc. all continue to grow despite the current recession, and despite fundamentally using fractional reserve banking and fiat money. Yeah, woops, you lose your argument either way.

Our productive capacity has declined for decades, we hocked it all to consume the production of someone else's growth and pay ourselves infinite entitlement benefits. Our "growth" is a function of perpetual loans from productive countries who have none of that overhead, a trend that CANNOT BE SUSTAINED.

If it cannot be sustained then how have we been capable of sustaining it? And please describe in detail when it will stop working. I find it funny that you believe any of this yet have not been able to become inordinately rich shorting the market. I guess that?s what makes you a layman.

No, you don't get it. The money they loaned to American consumers gave (a) American consumers their products and (b) deprived capital from far more efficient producers. A kindergartener could have understood the shovel analogy. Such productive increases would have increased the attainability of goods for everyone on Earth, which is what any sane person would consider the road to global prosperity.

Then please explain in detail why countries, China among them, continue to loan us money and trade with us if its not in their best interest. Has every nation in the world not been able to come to the same high school level conclusions you have? I find that unbelievable! :laugh:

They'll certainly sell off their t-bills, but they would have gotten more products and productive efficiency from not buying them in the first place.

You should write a paper on it and submit your statistical findings to the NBER. I?m sure it would be interesting. You and I both know you won?t, because you literally, physically can?t, you?re not capable of proving so.

It was a complete diversion of capital that deprived their own countrymen of products and investment.

The same way the U.S. used to loan out huge amounts of dollars 50 years ago when they were a creditor nation? Woops.

Falling prices of goods and services is not a bad thing unless wages are falling faster. When more goods can be produced at a lower cost in a shorter time, prices are supposed to fall relative to wages. It happens with computers in spite of inflation and everyone loves it, there's nothing debilitating about things becoming more affordable for everyone. Shelter and food should be getting more affordable relative to wages, too, but the opposite has been happening. Junk economists like yourself used to bring up home appreciation and rising stocks as forms of wealth to offset that, but were pointing to illusions, one of which couldn't even be tapped into during most of the person's life.

Except the average American made 6.5%+ on their equity investments over 30 years between 77 and 2007. Between 08 and 2038 we?ll likely see the same trend and you?ll, yet again, have to literally invent facts and numbers to make yourself feel better on the Internet.

No, losing happens when you sell. That gold was temporarily selling for 30% less last year means nothing to me because I never sold.

No, you lost 30% in a year, that is in fact accurate, I did not say it was permanently gone which is precisely why I also mentioned the statistical fact that Schiff?s investors could still make their money back but only if they returned 300% on their end-of-year totals in 2008. Go to school.

You need to include the depression, the bank runs, the inflation crises, and the hyperinflationary collapse we're about to have, and then weigh that against a century that had none of them.

Which century did not have bank runs, depressions, inflation, etc. Don?t say the 19th century kiddo, you?ll only get slapped around like a little kid with the numerous financial crisises that occurred in that century, precisely the reason no one invested in the 19th century for decades.

Ponzi schemes do generate falsified returns, the return is a function of finding new investments, which are used to pay off old investors. Once you can't find any more new investors to oblige old investors, the scheme is exposed. The biggest difference is that we have a printing press, Madoff never counterfeited returns like the Fed does. International bond markets don't have a risk of not being paid, it has a risk of being paid in depreciated currency. If inflation risks outweigh the yield on the bond, we would have to raise the rate to keep them buying. That's why we are going to have to default with hyperinflation, we refuse to face the music and thrust the economy into a correction. It's like choosing cancer over surgery because surgery is the more immediate pain.

rofl. And let me know when hyperinflation occurs. You and Schiff has been bitch slapped around so badly these past 6 months with regards to the dollar, gold, etc. it?s going to be fun to see you make excuses for the next 6 months, and the 6 after that, and after that.

It doesn't "work" any more than Social Security has "worked". Ponzi schemes always create more costs than benefits in the long run and benefit disproportionately the operator.

It has worked because people?s standards of living have risen. You can deny that statistical fact all you want, it?s reality. I know it?s hard for you to accept, but thems the breaks kiddo.

Confidence in the FDIC is false confidence. People believe they guarantee deposits. They DON'T. They only guarantee nominal amounts, which are meaningless. They do not guarantee the value of the dollars relative to goods. It exacerbates the problem by failing to deter people from depositing with imprudent institutions, and debasing the wage values of the extremely poor who have no deposits to be guaranteed.

Except the FDIC has successfully avoided 1907-style runs. The end result is that it worked, the facts support it, we haven?t had a run like that since and all else equal we never will. Again, results are results, and they show you?re outdated and poorly educated.

And 6.5% compounded returns today is just as good as 6.5% on stocks in 1950? What about the fact that our cost of living has skyrocketed? Have you seen where shelter prices were going? Health Care? Tuition? Energy? You're not weighing the return against the cost of living, the return has gotten worse while the cost of living has gotten so high that we need employ our pregnant wives and borrow huge amounts at interest for things we never used to. The interest and taxes we pay directly or indirectly are going to outweigh returns on domestic stocks if they haven't already. Fuck, I pay 16% a paycheck for SS/Medicare that will collapse well before I collect on it. Someone in 1956 was at 4% and they actually got something out of it, adjusted at pre-Boskin inflation calculations no less. But you have the nerve to sit here and claim that stock market returns are a cure all?

The cost of living has risen while the median income has risen even more, per capita income is the highest it has ever been in history adjusted for inflation, and consumer prices per quality good has risen. Get with the times.

Gold is not an investment, you are changing the argument after the fact to one of investing, that is not what the original argument was about. People were trying to point out to you that a person's retirement horizon is not 200 years, and that past economies were fundamentally different in nature from the ponzi scheme we developed past 1970.

Americans that started making investments in the 1970?s and didn?t touch it (let the dividends be reinvested automatically) made near 7% compounded annually until 2000. That?s a generation that has already been locked into the success of that period of time. Only a very poorly educated person would claim something to be a ponzi scheme where millions of Americans made a boatload of money during that period of time.

This unwinding of it and currency crisis is going to destroy anyone with a retirement horizon within the next 30 years, so for you do suggest staying in domestic stocks based on past performance and fundamentals is foolish. Gold outperformed your stocks the last 10 years and will continue to do so, have fun accumulating a compound interest on collapsed principal right before you retire.

rofl, so now you?re saying gold has outperformed equity since 10 years ago when last week it was gold had outperformed equity since 50 years ago? Your backpedaling in this thread is more predictable than gold?s current bubble or oil?s bubble last year, which of course you got wrong then.

No, they don't, it doesn't matter that they aren't both in the same asset class, they're both priced in dollars and the buy price needs no adjusting either way. I'm done arguing with your oatmeal brain, it's a waste of time.

Of course you?re done, you?re a fucking layman.
 

Jiggz

Diamond Member
Mar 10, 2001
4,329
0
76
When you post something like this,

"Currency can be exchanged for goods and services, it is not an IOU whether it is backed by a commodity or not. Go to school you fucking layman"

it's obvious you're an "oatmeal" brain kind of person and should shut up and let other people with real brains to do the talking! For even a K-12 graduate person who passed basic economics knows better

than to say such words!
 

The-Noid

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2005
3,117
4
76
1.) Gold is a levered trading vehicle the real value of gold in dollars/euros/yen/yuan is significantly less. The amount of margin someone has to put makes the market value of gold higher than it would actually be worth.
2.) There are more future/forwards/swaps written on gold than physicals actually exist, meaning that if we see hyperinflation in dollar terms gold will rise right along with it. To a point of where gold is worthless just like our currency which is tied to others. There will simply be a worldwide economic collapse in orders of magnitudes we have not seen.
3.) The Chinese are forced to buy our treasuries to keep the price of their goods low. If they stopped buying treasuries you would see an increase in the cost of their goods causing Americans to change their buying habits. This would affect China very negatively as they can not afford to buy their own products on a grand scale because of the cost of inputs in real terms. This would cause a downward shift in the demand curve for Chinese goods and negative shift in the supply curve causing a new significantly lower equilibrium that would bring about a great depression for China.
4.) You're an idiot.
 

The-Noid

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2005
3,117
4
76
Me? I made bad points? I thought I gave a relevant definition that gold-bugs hate to talk about. The China point Banshee is making is also completely off base.
 

Engineer

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
39,230
701
126
Originally posted by: Yoxxy
Me? I made bad points? I thought I gave a relevant definition that gold-bugs hate to talk about. The China point Banshee is making is also completely off base.

No, you spelled "you're" wrong when you called him an idiot! :p
 

Jiggz

Diamond Member
Mar 10, 2001
4,329
0
76
Originally posted by: Engineer
Originally posted by: Yoxxy

4.) Your an idiot.


Sorry, had to do it! :D

And he has the audacity to call somebody an idiot! When he cannot even spell things right! Geez. . . It must be another late night show!