Four words: financialization, debtocracy, diminishing returns.
About a month ago I asked What If Stocks, Bonds and Housing All Go Down Together? (May 24, 2013). Why would such an outrageous thought even occur to me?
Four words: financialization, debtocracy, diminishing returns. The
entire global economy, developed and developing nations alike, is now
dependent on cheap, abundant credit for everything: for “growth,” for
asset inflation, and ultimately for central state deficit spending,
which props up all the cartels, rentier arrangements, fiefdoms and
armies of toadies, lackeys, apparatchiks and embezzlers that suck off
the Status Quo.
I have long endeavored to explain the harsh reality of neofeudal, neocolonial financialization: Neofeudalism and the Neocolonial-Financialization Model (May 24, 2012) and the neofeudal debtocracy that depends on low yields (interest rates) to enable enormous deficit spending: Why Krugman and the Keynesians Are Lackeys for the Neofeudal Debtocracy (April 24, 2013).
The wheels fall off the entire financialized debtocracy wagon once yields rise.There’s nothing mysterious about this:
1. As interest rates/yields rise, all the existing bonds paying next to nothing plummet in market value
2. As mortgage rates rise, there’s nobody left who can afford Housing Bubble 2.0 prices, so home prices fall off a cliff
3. Once you can get 5+% yield on cash again, few people are willing
to risk capital in the equities markets in the hopes that they can earn
more than 5% yield before the next crash wipes out 40% of their equity
4. As asset classes decline, lenders are wary of loaning money
against these assets; if the collateral for the loan (real estate,
bonds, stocks, etc.) are in a waterfall decline, no sane lender will
risk capital on a bet that the collateral will be sufficient to cover
losses should the borrower default.
Let’s take a look at four charts about housing and household net worth. For the middle class, the home remains the key asset, so housing and household net worth are correlated.
Here is a chart of mortgage rates since 1970. Rates were
pushed to 17+% to snuff inflation in the early 1980s, and they’ve
dropped over the past 30 years to historic lows: the rate for a
fixed-rate 30-year conventional mortgage was about 3.5% a few weeks ago.
It has now risen above 4%.
In the golden age of growth from 1991 to 2002, mortgages rates bounced between about 7% and 9%. The band from 1970 to 1979 was about 7.5% to 10%.
In other words, in eras of strong growth and low inflation, mortgage rates have been around 7% to 9%. So
what happens to the monthly payments when the mortgage rate doubles
from 4% to 8%? The payments double, too. And what happens to the price
of houses when rates double? They fall to the point that households
borrowing money at 7.5% – 8% can afford to buy a house, i.e. a price
much lower than today’s Housing Bubble 2.0 prices.
Here’s mortgage debt. If mortgage debt had expanded at the previous rate, total debt would be closer to $5 trillion instead of $10 trillion.
You see what happens when debt becomes cheap and abundant: debt rises faster than wages or assets.
But hasn’t household wealth increased mightily in the past decades? Here is a chart that plots the relationship of household net worth and total credit owed, i.e. debt:
Household wealth may be rising, but what this chart reveals is debt
is rising even faster–that’s why the line is declining. Put another
way, every dollar of new debt is generating less and less wealth.
You might think that The Federal Reserve’s policy of making
credit cheap and abundant would goose people to consume and invest more
money. Alas, the velocity of money is hitting historic lows: the Fed
may be creating credit but people and enterprises aren’t putting that
money into circulation.
It’s called diminishing returns: every dollar of debt creates interest payments, but it’s no longer doing households or enterprises any good. The Fatal Disease of the Status Quo: Diminishing Returns (May 1, 2013).
That’s why all asset classes that depend on cheap, abundant credit
are doomed: once yields/rates rise, the valuations of those assets
implode. And once valuations implode, there’s not enough collateral left
to support the loans used buy all those cheap-credit-inflated assets.
So the financial system also implodes.
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