As we prepare to kickoff trading in February, we are in a fatal global mega-bubble that will lead to the Great Reset.

Too Little, Too Late: Goldman Sachs & Bridgewater Talk-Tough?
January 31 (King World News) – Matthew Piepenburg at Matterhorn Asset Management (based in Switzerland):  Below, numerous animal and metaphors are employed to make sense of an otherwise senseless “barnyard” in which global markets (a balloon surrounded by debt needles) now find themselves.

More Nausea: From Virtue Signaling to Elite Tough-Talk
In recent years, we’ve seen some admittedly nauseating virtue signaling on everything from racial tensions to vaccine compliance—I’m thinking of everyone from Hollywood’s Wonder Woman et al singing John Lennon to Howard Stern or Arnold Schwarzenegger piously criminalizing the unvaccinated.

Indeed, seeing the subject-matter clueless pretending at wisdom would be almost comical if it wasn’t otherwise so tragic.

But for those of us tracking bloated risk assets, cornered central banks, fatal debt levels and incompetent sovereign leadership, the sudden rise in tough-guy talk from the skunks in our own global woodpile is becoming equally tragi-comical.

Hawkish Bankers, A Fed Playing Chicken with Markets & an Ignored Debt Elephant
As we’ve been warning for over a year, hawkish talk from the Fed regarding a “tapering” of its balance sheet and Treasury purchases combined with a well-telegraphed rate hike will hardly be good news for debt-saturated securities markets who survive exclusively off of low-rate/cheap borrowing costs.

In short: If low rates gave as this everything bubble, rising rates will end it.

But that hasn’t stopped the11th-hour experts from suddenly chiming in with some chest-puffing tough talk of their own.

Ah, the ironies, they do abound…


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Thanks For Nothing Goldman Sachs
In a moment of hawkish courage-signaling, Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. President, John Waldron, has been openly critical of Fed independence and rising inflation.

He recently wrote that “we might need to bring back Paul Volcker” to add some interest-rate-hiking containment and much-needed discipline to our over-heated markets.

Hmmm.

This Goldman superman (and mouthpiece of a bank notoriously linked to Fed/Government bailouts and grotesquely distorted/dangerous market bubbles) even went on to say that the Fed needs the kind of leadership that does what’s right and steady “without regard for what’s going on the markets.”

(Perhaps what was going on at Goldman with ABS and CDS markets back in 2006 has escaped his memory?)

In any case, such talk is pretty rich coming from a bank and banker who knows (and always knew) that the Fed’s covert yet primary mandate is the propping of an otherwise rigged-to-fail market, including banks like his that put us in this mess. 

Waldron knows, for example, that the parabolic rise in stocks post-March 2020 is directly correlated to the Fed’s doubling of its balance sheet to over $9T in just two years, a move copied by other central banks…

Amazingly, Waldron nevertheless openly criticizes the Fed’s growing lack of independence and credibility over the last 40 years, which is hardly a cutting-edge observation from anyone tracking the open-marriage between the Fed and an entirely Fed-dependent U.S. government.

As if suddenly waking from a four-decade nap, is Waldron just now saying the Fed needs to take drastic action to cut its balance sheet?

Too Little, Too Late
Well, like a soldier deliberately enlisting after the war is already over, Waldron’s signaled courage is a bit too late.

Yes, Mr. Waldron, the Fed’s balance sheet is an open embarrassment, but it has been for years.

And any significant tapering of Treasury purchases now will mean a significant drop in bond pricing and hence a significant increase in bond yields and hence interest rates.

And we all know (except, apparently for Mr. Waldron?) that rising rates are like approaching shark fins to a global market driven by the greatest debt pile in history—a pile you conveniently ignored in your public outcry.

Once that debt becomes too expensive to pay at the $85T+ sovereign, corporate and household level, the entire system implodes. Full stop. Period.

Mr. Waldron, why did you forget to mention that in your recent Bloomberg interview?

Thanks For Nothing Mr. Waldron
Needless to say, the bigger the bubble, the bigger the “pop” that follows, and Goldman, along with the Fed, has been an open party to the unprecedented inflation of the greatest risk asset bubble in modern capital markets. 

In short Mr. Waldron: Thanks for nothing.

From where I sit, Waldron’s recent ringing of the alarm bell looks a lot like an open (and frankly hypocritical) attempt to position himself (and his bank) for an “I told you so” moment and warning, but one coming way too late to make a difference, as the latest asset bubble that the Fed and commercial banks like Goldman have been inflating since 2008 has been growing fatally and openly larger for years.

Of course, despite all his brave taper-talk and Fed attacks, Waldron makes zero, and I mean zero mention, of the simply astronomical debt levels in the US and globally.

Folks like Waldron (and even geniuses like Jeremy Grantham) keep missing the (sovereign, fiscal and global) debt elephant in the room, for once that debt market collapses under its own weight (and taper-driven rate hikes), securities, currencies and hence economies around the world will spiral.

To stem the bleeding to come, more fiat money will likely be mouse-clicked en masse to save an otherwise un-savable and central-bank-created (as well as commercial bank complicit) debt monster. 

Such ongoing “emergency measures,” of course, will be fatal to currency purchasing power and likely trigger the not-so-secret “Bretton Woods 2.0 Re-Set” already well telegraphed by the IMF as early as 2020.

Bridgewater Chimes In—More Hawkish Virtue Signaling
Meanwhile, over at Bridgewater, similar tough-guy swings at the Fed continued from Greg Jensen, who now, after years of watching (and benefiting from) the embarrassingly grotesque, artificial and unprecedented climb of the S&P, DOW and NASDAQ, is suddenly confessing that a day of tough Fed policy and market reckoning is needed.

Again, that’s rich…and comes a little too late Mr. Jensen.

Look, for example, at the size of the bubble that banks like Goldman and funds like Bridgewater have openly enjoyed for well over a decade of extreme Fed profligacy:

Folks, if the above chart is evidence enough of a fatal mega-bubble, I really don’t know what is…

As figures as far back as David Hume to Ludwig von Mises (not to mention Thomas Jefferson or Andrew Jackson) have warned, and as history as shown from as far back as ancient Rome or the France of 1790 to the Bear Sterns of 2008 confirm: The bigger the debt-driven party, the more deadly the hangover.

As for Jensen, he predicts a stock hangover ahead of at least -20% should the Fed acquire its backbone and get/stay hawkish, as per his “advice.”

Frankly, Mr. Jensen, 20% is optimistic to the point of silly. 

A Brief Lesson in Mean Reversion
I remind Mr. Jensen over at Bridgewater of a simple little market force which I’m sure he and his Connecticut-based colleagues have discussed at the water-cooler, namely: Mean Reversion.

Mean reversion, in fact, is one of the most consistent and natural laws of even un-natural/artificial markets like our own.

That is, over-bought as well as over-sold securities inevitably and eventually “revert’ to their mean price levels.

That is, much like a rubber band stretched up or down from one’s knuckle, the band eventually recoils back with a sting.

In case you want to know the potential extent and size of that sting in the current market environment, take a look at the bubbles, graph and mean-reversion implications below…

In short, a 20% “reversion” or fall from these Fed-driven nosebleed levels is being optimistic to say the least. 

The resistance lines outlined above suggest that the pain (mean reversion) ahead for these bloated markets is far greater than a mere 20%–flirting far more dangerously close to at least a -53% to -68% loss.

Book Signaling?
Of course, banks and hedge funds like to talk their books in the open arena, and one almost wonders if Goldman and/or Bridgewater, in moves all-too-familiar to the ethics-challenged era of Elon Musk, are telegraphing their own short positions (or in Musk’s case, infamous 2018 “funding secured” short-squeeze).

Hard to say.

It’s Not Gonna Be Fun
But one thing is easier to say, namely: The hawkish Fed talk followed by an actual Fed taper will be no fun for stocks and bonds near you, all well overdue for some serious “sting.”

We all remember, of course, the late 2018 (as well as telegraphed) Fed attempt to tighten and raise rates into Christmas. 

Markets puked immediately on a 25 basis-point rate hike. Thereafter, a classic Fed pivot immediately followed into early 2019.

That is, the hawks became doves real fast.

As for Jensen, he says the Fed would not “blink” this time—but will need to remain disciplined and tough on these inflated markets. 

Current inflation dangers, he argues, make 2022 different than 2018. That is, emergency QE will not simply follow as per the prior years.

I’m not so sure.

Debt + Rising Rates Matter
Like Jensen, however, I do wonder just who will be buying Uncle Sam’s unloved IOU’s (i.e., Treasury bonds), if indeed the “tapering” Fed is no longer the “expanding” buyer of last resort?

Remember: Bond yields (and by extension, interest rates) move inversely to bond price. If Fed demand for bonds “tapers,” bond prices fall and rates (those deadly “shark fins”) rise.

Toward this end, the economists over at Bank of America are forecasting seven rate hikes in 2022 and a 2.75%-3% Fed Funds Rate.

Well, that’s fair math, but what BofA (like Waldron and Jensen) is failing to discuss is that such a rate hike would mean an increased 4% to 5% borrowing cost for Uncle Sam and his staggering $30T bar tab, which at those projected rates boils down to about $1.5T per year in just interest expense alone.

Think about that number and read that last line again.

Paying that bar tab would require 40% of US tax revenues being earmarked just for interest payments, which is an historical, neon-flashing sign of a nation and financial system on the cliff of an open and self-inflicted debt crisis.

Hawks, Chickens and Elephants
In short, it seems our banking and hedge fund Wunderkinder, all excited about hawkish tough talk, are missing the debt elephant in the room as a now hawkish Fed plays chicken with record-high and top-blowing stock and bond markets.

Believe it or not, Uncle Sam’s total debt obligations (i.e., pension debt, govt debt, Medicare, social security etc.) are 1000% of his GDP, which clearly means the US can’t ever pay its “elephant-sized” debts.

Meanwhile, the cost of floating that total debt is way beyond the incoming revenue from US tax receipts, which in a looming recession, will be going further down not up…

In short and in summary, the experts are once again not so expert. 

Looking (Realistically) Ahead
Although no one enjoys my hard, stubborn and depressing facts, it’s time we all speak bluntly, plainly and realistically about debt rather than just talk tough about an already guilty, discredited and corrupted Fed—thanks to Patient-Zero Greenspan and all who followed in his wake.

And although it may seem nice to see folks at Goldman or Bridgewater taking tough and public swings at this same Fed, as indicated above, it’s far too little and far too late.  

The warnings they are making today are the very same we’ve been making for years as GS and Bridgewater got fatter and fatter.

The debt damage, unleashed by well over a decade QE addiction and Fed drunk-driving, has already been done. 

Alas, a reckoning is no longer theoretical, but baked into the math (and history) of our own doing.

Looking ahead, and assuming the Fed tightens as demanded above by our tough-talking experts, please get your portfolios ready for massive volatility in 2022.

In the near-term, a tapering Fed will be a tailwind for just about nothing but the USD and the VIX.

Longer-term, and contrary to Bridgewater’s Jensen, it’s highly likely the Fed will once again pivot from hawk to dove when the coming taper leads to an unprecedented tantrum on the equity tapes. 

Such a dovish pivot will be a tailwind to precious metals, BTC, industrials and commodities in general.

And the Big Reset?
Of course, looming forever above this admittedly ominous, self-inflicted horizon of a cornered Fed and bloated “everything bubble,” is the equally inevitable moment of “uh-oh,” by which markets and currencies will have taken such a beating that the global experts will solemnly announce the need for an otherwise well-telegraphed (i.e., pre-packaged) global reset and Bretton Woods II.

This will mean more government controls, excuses and desperation the likes of which will surprise even me.

Add (Scape) Goat to the Animal List of Foxes, Skunks, Chickens, Hens, Hawks, Doves, Sharks and Elephants
When, not if, that Re-Set comes, the very foxes who guarded and then raided the global financial hen house which they alone destroyed, will bow their collective heads and innocently point the blame not at their deserving selves but at the COVID crisis, whose arrival will be the perfect (almost too convenient?) scapegoat for their own sins.

Until then, buckle up for a scary ride/taper…This will link you directly to more fantastic articles from Egon von Greyerz and Matthew Piepenburg CLICK HERE.

To listen to Dr. Stephen Leeb discuss what is next for the gold and silver markets and much more CLICK HERE OR ON THE IMAGE BELOW.

To listen to Alasdair Macleod discuss what is next for the gold and silver markets CLICK HERE OR ON THE IMAGE BELOW.

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