vincecate wrote:Part of the usual hyperinflation situation is that people stop rolling over bonds and get their cash as the bonds come due, and the central bank ramps up cash production. So I have been expecting this. Plenty of people like Pettis and Mish have claimed that the world has to keep buying Treasuries, but I don't think that is true at all. If the world stops buying, then the Fed will buy more Treasuries with newly made money. The more the Fed makes money the less people will want to hold US debt.
I agree, but with a different viewpoint. As people stop buying treasuries and go to cash, the USD will increase in value (demand), the supply (even with all the QEs) will be far short
of demand, forcing up again the value
of the USD. As the USD raises in value, it will again be seen as the safe haven "no risk" it is, causing a large correction in gold and silver and people rush into the USD (yet) again.
Even before all this, much more money has been lost worldwide than created. (4.3T in stocks lost this year plus 3T in US housing for example).
Thus, you have classic deflation, a very valuable USD and low stock market/PM trade.