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firestarter Intermediate Crude


Joined: Mar 19, 2006 Posts: 961
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 8:40 am Post subject: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| Oil in a freefall. Gold trading @ $588, also freefalling. Housing prices stagnant or falling. Haven't heard much on the stagflation front lately. I remember reading at the Daily Reckoning a couple months ago about a deflationary scenario being a real possibility about now. Is this deflationary situation any better than a hyper-inflationary reaction? Isn't the Fed much more terrified of a deflationary economy? |
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Revi Fusion


Joined: Apr 25, 2005 Posts: 3072 Location: Maine
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 8:53 am Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| Things do seem to be cooling off really quickly. At least the price of basic commodities isn't skyrocketing out of people's ability to buy them. The price of oil has come down about 10 bucks, and the price of silver has come down off it's high of around $15 an ounce. The price of everything seems to be going down a bit. Real estate is all reduced, or has a "new price". It seems like everybody has cashed in or is waiting. It could be the beginning of a deflationary spiral. We'll see... |
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strider3700 Fission


Joined: Apr 17, 2005 Posts: 2663 Location: Vancouver Island
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 10:16 am Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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how many people are cashing in their investments to cover their mortgages or to keep that spending spree going? Savings rates can only be negative for so long before there's nothing left to spend. _________________ shame on us, doomed from the start
god have mercy on our dirty little hearts |
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Revi Fusion


Joined: Apr 25, 2005 Posts: 3072 Location: Maine
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 10:54 am Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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Sounds like oil is down for a while. It may go down to around $52 before it rebounds. Check out what Jack Chan has to say:
http://www.321energy.com/editorials/chan/chan091106.html
It seems like this is a little downturn in the energy bull market. Maybe there is some demand destruction going on. People can't afford to continue the lifestyle they have at high energy prices, so they are dipping them a bit to keep all the addicts hooked. (and voting for the pusher man in November) |
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Colorado-Valley Intermediate Crude


Joined: Aug 16, 2004 Posts: 728
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 11:16 am Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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Ben's helicopter got grounded for a few months.
Good time to buy gold, though ...  |
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FoxV Light Sweet Crude


Joined: Mar 02, 2005 Posts: 1337 Location: Canada
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 11:19 am Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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The commodities boom came from mass consumption sponsored by the housing bubble. As housing crashes, so to will commodities.
as for deflation/inflation debate my take is that the US will hyper inflate as the "exported inflation" of the last 10 years becomes imported. The rest of the world which has been feeding off of US dollars will suddenly find themselves very hungry, and will deflate.
Basically the great depression all over again except the US is the Weimer republic of the 21st Century.
As for Stagflation (price rise while incomes stay low) I think its just an unnatural state while the economy figures out what is happening next.
IMHO _________________ Angry yet? |
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nth Light Sweet Crude


Joined: Feb 24, 2005 Posts: 1973
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 11:25 am Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| FoxV wrote: |
Basically the great depression all over again except the US is the Weimer republic of the 21st Century.
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That is not really possible.
First, Germany owe lots of money to foreigners.
US may owe a lot, but US investors have more than enough money to cover all foreign-owned debt plus more. Another key difference is all US debt are in USD, so US investors do not have to buy foreign currency to buy these securities.
This is just the few key differences between the two. Not to mention that there are many rules, regulations, treaties, and other institutions designed to prevent this from happening. |
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nth Light Sweet Crude


Joined: Feb 24, 2005 Posts: 1973
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 11:26 am Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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Just want to clarify my previous post.
I am not saying depression or stagflation won't happen, but that US is not going to be another repeat of Germany after WW1. |
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Dezakin Light Sweet Crude


Joined: Feb 09, 2005 Posts: 1329
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 11:34 am Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| When commodities prices are driven by a growth in demand rather than a drop in supply, it implies there is growth happening and sort of is the opposite the definition of stagflation. |
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FoxV Light Sweet Crude


Joined: Mar 02, 2005 Posts: 1337 Location: Canada
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 12:29 pm Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| nth wrote: | | US may owe a lot, but US investors have more than enough money to cover all foreign-owned debt plus more. |
it'll be really interesting to see how the government would instigate that solution (Tax investors? Have you gone mad?)
However you are right, as much as I would bemoan US financial irresponsiblility, they do have a hell of a lot of money down there (although a good chuck of it in ficticious paper).
The big question would be then how would the governement get this money moving after a serious stock crash (DOW at 3000-5000) and a good round of bank and bond collapses after those ARMs show their true colours (risk)
After all this crap shakes itself out, investors will be gun shy for years to come _________________ Angry yet? |
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rwwff Fission


Joined: Apr 28, 2006 Posts: 2897 Location: East Texas
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 12:38 pm Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| FoxV wrote: | | The big question would be then how would the governement get this money moving after a serious stock crash (DOW at 3000-5000) and a good round of bank and bond collapses after those ARMs show their true colours (risk) |
Velocity is everything. When those ARM's keel over, there will be lots and lots of property auctions, and they will happen lightning fast. Its one thing to take a loss and grumble; its another thing to be on the hook for taxes and insurance on a property you can't figure out how to profitably rent.
Fed could slip a little liquidity genie into the mix just to make sure nothing stalls out to bad. _________________ abundance fleeting
men falling like hungry leaves
decay masters all |
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jaws Light Sweet Crude


Joined: Apr 24, 2005 Posts: 1257
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 1:25 pm Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| The capital goods market is crashing. |
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nth Light Sweet Crude


Joined: Feb 24, 2005 Posts: 1973
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 2:20 pm Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| FoxV wrote: |
it'll be really interesting to see how the government would instigate that solution (Tax investors? Have you gone mad?)
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Umm... I never said anything about US paying back their debt. I said US investors will buy the bonds from Foreign owners. Since the debt is USD, US investors will not need to buy foreign currencies. THAT is a huge plus and prevents the economy from collapsing when debts are called. Germany was not so lucky, so they had to pay by printing it in huge quantities.
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However you are right, as much as I would bemoan US financial irresponsiblility, they do have a hell of a lot of money down there (although a good chuck of it in ficticious paper).
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It is practically ALL in paper. The actual non paper assets are minuscule.
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The big question would be then how would the governement get this money moving after a serious stock crash (DOW at 3000-5000) and a good round of bank and bond collapses after those ARMs show their true colours (risk)
After all this crap shakes itself out, investors will be gun shy for years to come |
After 1929 stock crash, US has been pretty good at manageing stock crashes. Stock crash in itself is not that bad, but what it can lead is what is dangerous. Depending on what cause this future crash, US may or may not be able to handle it.
Mortgage collapse has been experienced before. US seems to survive those quite well. When you analyze these things, you will find that no one issue will cause economic collapse, but when several happen at once, then it becomes the perfect storm. |
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FoxV Light Sweet Crude


Joined: Mar 02, 2005 Posts: 1337 Location: Canada
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 3:09 pm Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| nth wrote: | | After 1929 stock crash, US has been pretty good at manageing stock crashes. Stock crash in itself is not that bad, but what it can lead is what is dangerous. Depending on what cause this future crash, US may or may not be able to handle it |
during the depression, the US had less debt (governement and private) and was not able to pull out of the depression.
How can it do so now with even more liabilities than the 1930's. I understand how investors can buy rapidly selling bonds to keep the dollar up. However this is akin to taking a punch in the face to keep everyone else from getting hurt. Not a big deal if its thousands of investors tak one punch each, but if only a few investors stand up to take the punches they're not going to look too pretty afterwards ("catching a falling knife" I believe is the term used these days).
As for a perfect storm, there's a lot of clouds out there. Ultimately I'm not trying to be critical. I am legitimately interested in learning how the US will manage to bail themselves out of this one.
I feel the next bail out will be the last boom we'll have this century so I'd like to get set up for it as much as possible (if it is possible to predict anything at this point) _________________ Angry yet? |
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firestarter Intermediate Crude


Joined: Mar 19, 2006 Posts: 961
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Posted: Mon Sep 11, 2006 3:26 pm Post subject: Re: Whatever happened to stagflation? |
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| nth wrote: |
Mortgage collapse has been experienced before. US seems to survive those quite well. |
I wouldn't be as sanguine this time around, however, in that the expansion (bubble) is quite a bit larger than the fundamentals would support, not to mention the weakness we encounter now internally (economic emasculation, especially in the manufacturing sector) vis a vis Asia, and globalization in general. |
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