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How the Budget Deal Will Impact the Real Estate Market (It Won't Help)


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2013 Oct 17, 10:42am   12,583 views  114 comments

by smaulgld   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

http://smaulgld.com/what-the-budget-deal-means-for-the-economy-real-estate-gold-and-silver/

The real estate market and the economy will only really recover when prices are allowed to fall and a much needed deleveraging and restructuring are allowed to take place. Piling more debt upon the remnants of a debt fueled crisis won’t solve anything. The debt band aid needs to be ripped off so the healing can begin.

#housing

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10   hanera   2013 Oct 18, 4:38am  

Smaulgld,

Of similar sentiments. As ordinary citizens, doubt we have any influence, so just swim carefully amongst the sharks.

11   smaulgld   2013 Oct 18, 4:46am  

hanera says

Smaulgld,

Of similar sentiments. As ordinary citizens, doubt we have any influence, so just swim carefully amongst the sharks.

not much else we can do....

13   smaulgld   2013 Oct 18, 7:35am  

China held $1.28 trillion in U.S. Treasury securities at the end of July and Japan owned $1.14 trillion.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/10/18/us-usa-fiscal-china-japan-idUSBRE99H06220131018

14   HEY YOU   2013 Oct 18, 12:24pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCK is Comptroller says

Baby Beaver Having Lunch

http://youtu.be/AZO6ch_ocWg

Damn! Thought this was going to be porn.

15   smaulgld   2013 Oct 18, 7:35pm  

Here is a question that none of the "our debt to gdp level is fine" crowd can answer. How will the US pay its debt when interest rates rise and how will it oay its unfunded liabilities? http://kingworldnews.com/kingworldnews/KWN_DailyWeb/Entries/2013/10/18_Billionaire_Sprott_Asks_How_Will_People_Survive_Whats_Coming.html

16   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 1:32am  

smaulgld says

How will the US pay its debt when interest rates rise and how will it oay its
unfunded liabilities?

You never stop with the fear mongering and paranoia, do you? The government will pay it's debt the exact same way that it does now, or at any other time in the past.

Unfunded liabilities? That's the fear-mongering phrase that doom and gloomers use to imply that future payments/obligations aren't paid for, or budgeted for. Actually both are somewhat true because the budget for sometime in the future(5-20 years) and the revenue THEN hasn;t been recieved yet, along with the payment for the liabilities.

The "unfunded liabilities" nonsense is equal to saying that you missed your March 2018 house payment.

17   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 1:49am  

Hi upisdown and welcome back
Upisdown says:

I'm done with ya. Best of luck selling gold, I hope it works out for ya, and at least it's a legit way to make a living, even if the tactics are the predator-prey relationship type.

19   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 1:53am  

Upisdown says
The "unfunded liabilities" nonsense is equal to saying that you missed your March 2018 house payment.

Not really - i don't count on paying my 2018 house payment by counterfeiting money and borrowing from the chinese

20   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 1:55am  

smaulgld says

I guess the chinese are bluffing

So what, their ownership of t-bonds will fall just as soon as the dollar flows and stockpiles diminish from us buying their junk. What else are they going to do with all the excess dollars?

Are the t-bond dealers required to paticipate in the bond auctions? Those t-bonds will be absorbed by others that buy them.

21   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:00am  

smaulgld says

Not really - i don't count on paying my 2018 house payment by counterfeiting
money and borrowing from the chinese

Really, counterfeiting? I think that the dollar and federal reserve are both legally and congressionally mandated part of our monetary system. Our monetary system is credit-based(and private banks/market dominated)and the Chineses choose to save in our currency(like numerous other nations)with the same opportinities as anybody else.

You claim that they aren't legal? And why would you want to go back to the 'golden rule' type of monetary system, whereas the people with all the gold rule, or make all the rules?

22   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:07am  

Upisdown says:What else are they going to do with all the excess dollars?

What they have been doing- diversifying OUT of the dollar and into gold and other currencies like I wrote in the original blog post

"Last week China entered into a $60 billion swap agreement with the European Central Bank with the intent of internationalizing THEIR currency."

"The dysfunctional monetary and fiscal policies of the United States are making its foreign creditors less comfortable lending money to it. China has been making arrangements to diversify its reserve assets away from the dollar. China recently has stepped up its acquisition of gold as either a hedge against its U.S. dollar reserves and/or to ultimately back its own currency by gold."
http://smaulgld.com/what-the-budget-deal-means-for-the-economy-real-estate-gold-and-silver/

23   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:12am  

Upisdown says Really, counterfeiting? I think that the dollar and federal reserve are both legal

I didnt say what the Fed does is illegal
What I wrote was in response to your analogy re the US unfunded liaility worry being like about how one might pay a future obligation, like a mortgage.
The way the US plans on paying future liabilities is by printing and borrowing
As an individual to pay my mortgage I cant print money as it would be counterfeiting and I dont have a credit line with the Chinese

24   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:13am  

smaulgld says

How will the US pay its debt when interest rates rise and how will it oay its
unfunded liabilities?

How did the government do it in the 1980's?

1970 to 2020: Interest Rates on National Debt

25   mell   2013 Oct 19, 2:15am  

upisdown says

Really, counterfeiting? I think that the dollar and federal reserve are both legally and congressionally mandated part of our monetary system.

Why can't I have a printing press? I am legal as well and the credit I inject with my increased personal spending is only going to benefit the economy!

26   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:16am  

smaulgld says

What they have been doing- diversifying OUT of the dollar and into gold and
other currencies like I wrote in the original blog post

Again, so what. The Chinese are doing whatever is good for China, for whatever reason, of which nobody in the USA knows, but makes assumptions.

27   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:17am  

Nice chart
What happens to the cost of US interest payments when rates rise because the demand for treasuries drops and the fed had to print more money to buy what the chinese dont buy?

28   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:19am  

Upisdown says
Again, so what. The Chinese are doing whatever is good for China, for whatever reason, of which nobody in the USA knows, but makes assumptions.

Agree I wouldnt care except they fund 25 percent of all US spending
If they stop lending where do we get the money?

29   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:21am  

smaulgld says

The way the US plans on paying future liabilities is by printing and
borrowing
As an individual to pay my mortgage I cant print money as it would
be counterfeiting and I dont have a credit line with the Chinese

Yes, the Fed Res advances credit, and the government sells t-bonds to finace that credit, of which the private dealers get paid for their part of the transaction, and private parties get a VERY secure(at least until recently because of the teabag morons) albeit low rewarding(because of the very low risk)asset.

You just admitted that you can't run your personal finances like the federal government can, so why do you want the federal government to run their daily/monthly/yearly operations like you and be totally constrained by incoming revenue only????

30   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:22am  

smaulgld says

As an individual to pay my mortgage I cant print money as it would be
counterfeiting and I dont have a credit line with the Chinese

And you don't pay interest for that credit either, or would you? Not to mention the high risk for you versus the government.

31   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:24am  

smaulgld says

What happens to the cost of US interest payments when rates rise because the
demand for treasuries drops and the fed had to print more money to buy what the
chinese dont buy?

Again, what happened in the 1980's? The treasuries will succumb to market prices, and that whole mandatory participation thingy by member banks too.

32   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:25am  

Upisdown says "You just admitted that you can't run your personal finances like the federal government can, so why do you want the federal government to run their daily/monthly/yearly operations like you and be totally constrained by incoming revenue only????"

Because I dont believe in a fantasy world where a government can print and borrow as much as they wish without adverse consequences

33   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:26am  

smaulgld says

Agree I wouldnt care except they fund 25 percent of all US spending
If
they stop lending where so we get the money?

The last I saw was that the Chinese was the biggest foreign holder of treas., and it was about 11% of the total. Show me something more up to date if you have it, please.

Where did the money come from for the other 75% of the treas., Ronald McDonald?

34   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:30am  

Ill pull full chinese bond holdings later for you
Right now the chinese hold $1.3 trillion in US treasuries which is larger than the US annual budget

35   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:30am  

smaulgld says

Because I dont believe in a fantasy world where a government can print and
borrow as much as they wish without adverse consequences

Fantasy? You explain that to the MILLIONS of people and entities that buy TRILLIONS of dollars of treasuries daily/weekly/monthly.

They are ALL wrong and you, and only you, are right?

36   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:31am  

There is no way to down play the significance of china (and Japan) as creditors
Without their buying, holding and rolling over their US bonds the US faces much higher borrowing costs- most of which will go to pay off the exisiting chinese and Japanese bonds

37   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:32am  

smaulgld says

Ill pull full chinese bond holdings later for you
Right now the chinese
hold $1.3 trillion in US treasuries which is larger than the US annual
budget

Thanks, but the total dollar amount and proportion to the budget is immaterial, as to the total %age of all the treas.

38   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:33am  

Upisdown says "Fantasy? You explain that to the MILLIONS of people and entities that buy TRILLIONS of dollars of treasuries daily/weekly/monthly."

I take no comfort in the safety in numbers argument
Thousands got on the titanic believing the ship was unsinkable

39   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:35am  

smaulgld says

There is no way to down play the significance of china (and Japan) as
creditors
Without their buying, holding and rolling over their US bonds the
US faces much higher borrowing costs- most of which will go to pay off the
exisiting chinese and Japanese bonds

Are they truly the creditors, or are they buying an asset?

What do you call it if I or Goldman Sachs(or any hedge fund, pension fund, or 401ks) buys treas., is it still loaning money to the government?

40   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:43am  

Upisdown says
"Are they truly the creditors, or are they buying an asset?
What do you call it if I or Goldman Sachs(or any hedge fund, pension fund, or 401ks) buys treas.?"
Excellent question
Let's say the a creditor who lends money and gets a bond in return is both creditor and owner of an asset.

Owning an asset doesn't take his creditor status away
So lets say the bond is an asset. As an asset it must be valued.
If the par value of a bond is $1000 and it pays 1pct interest its easy to value the asset on one's balance sheet as being worth $1000+

If however the issuer becomes impaired and the repayment of interest in a timely fashion is called into question, or worse the repayment of principal, the value of the "asset" drops

When a credit asset becomes impaired the creditor/asset holder becomes far more of a creditor as he seeks to receive at least some portion of his money back

41   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 2:50am  

smaulgld says

Let's say the a creditor who lends money and gets a bond in return is both
creditor and owner of an asset.

But is the federal government really a creditor? The government is selling a marketable asset. Yes, in normal debt(asset) sales the issuer is a creditor, but does not have the ability to endlessly finance(sell treas) their operations because of the limited assets, but the government does.

42   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 2:58am  

Upisdown says
But is the federal government really a creditor? The government is selling a marketable asset. Yes, in normal debt(asset) sales the issuer is a creditor, but does not have the ability to endlessly finance(sell treas) their operations because of the limited assets, but the government does.

Yes they are a creditor and if you like they are selling an asset whose value is based on their ability to repay principal and interest

T-bonds unlike corporate bonds are not backed by anything other than the government's promise. If a corporation defaults you get a decent place in the bankruptcy line (unless you were a GM bond holder) to try and get some of your money back

If a government defaults you have no claim on its assets. You are 100 % out of luck. Just like the people who owned dollars and bonds issued by the confederacy- they lost 100pct

43   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 3:12am  

Treasury Nears End of Era, Redeems Highest Rate Bonds (Update2)
By Daniel Kruger and Vincent Del Giudice - January 15, 2009 16:04 EST

Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) -- The Treasury Department, with U.S. government bond yields near all-time lows, is close to lowering the curtain on an era when it paid the highest interest rates on record to borrow.

The Treasury is redeeming $4.5 billion of 13.25 percent bonds due May 15, 2014. That leaves only two issues from the series of callable bonds it sold beginning in the late 1970s, said Steven Meyerhardt, a spokesman at the Bureau of Public Debt in Washington. The early retirement of the 13.25 percent bond will save about $2 billion in interest.

The government began selling callable debt in response to yields that reached as high as 15.21 percent on the 30-year bond in October 1981, said William O’Donnell, U.S. government bond strategist at UBS Securities in Stamford, Connecticut, one of 17 primary dealers that trade with the Federal Reserve.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=alUfiz5tqqew

So other than a huge gift to Wall Street, why did the govenrnment even begin selling treas(which led to astronomical spending by Reagan shortly thereafter)?

44   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 3:15am  

smaulgld says

Just like the people who owned dollars and bonds issued by the confederacy-
they lost 100pct

At least that affected the benefactors of the slavery/free labor. Screw 'em, for not fighting in a war for that, like those who did and had to compete against the slavery/free labor.

45   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 3:31am  

Upisdown says

"At least that affected the benefactors of the slavery/free labor. Screw 'em, for not fighting in a war for that, like those who did and had to compete against the slavery/free labor."

Yes but the real point was that when sovereigns dont pay the bond holder has no recourse
The result would have been the same with Lincolns greenbacks and war bonds had the union dissolved - they would have become worthless

46   smaulgld   2013 Oct 19, 3:33am  

Upisdown says

"So other than a huge gift to Wall Street, why did the govenrnment even begin selling treas(which led to astronomical spending by Reagan shortly thereafter)?"

Deficit spending made possible by issuing bonds didnt start with the obama adminstration or the Reagan one.
Not sure what you are asking or if you are making a point that I might have missed
Please clarify

47   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 3:40am  

smaulgld says

Deficit spending made possible by issuing bonds didnt start with the obama
adminstration or the Reagan one.
Not sure what you are asking or if you are
making a point that I might have missed
Please clarify

From the article above that I linked to it started in 1977.Why? It has just led to excessive and stupid spending, and apparently wasn't needed to help fund the government prior to that point.

48   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 3:41am  

smaulgld says

Yes buy the real point was that when sovereigns dont pay the bond holder has
no recourse
The result would have been the same with Lincolns greenbacks and
war bonds had the union dissolved - they would have become worthless

True, but the greenbacks were the legal money of the time, and things were complicated by counterfeiting, lack of monetary/policy controls.

49   upisdown   2013 Oct 19, 3:46am  

These kind of blow the hyper-inflation argument out of the water, no?

Topic 6: Inflation and Interest Rates: Some Evidence

It is now time to take a look at the interest rate and inflation experience of a number of countries to see if the empirical evidence is consistent with the ideas developed in this lesson. Let us begin with the United States. Figure 1a plots the year-over-year rate of inflation (of the CPI), calculated on a monthly basis, and the corresponding annual yield or effective nominal interest rate on U.S. Government long-term bonds. Figure 1b plots the the realized real interest rate calculated by subtracting the actual inflation rate from the long-term bond yield.

http://www.economics.utoronto.ca/jfloyd/modules/evin.html

and:

Budget Deficits and Interest Rates: What Is the Link?

Two recent studies have measured the influence of budget deficits on interest rates. The first of these studies, by Thomas Laubach, finds a "statistically and economically significant" relationship between higher deficit projections and future long-term interest rates. According to Laubach's estimates, when the projected deficit to GDP ratio increases by one percentage point, long-term interest rates increase by roughly 25 basis points. A more recent working paper, by Eric Engen and R. Glenn Hubbard, found that when government debt increased by 1 percent of GDP, interest rates would increase by about two basis points.

The Laubach study implies that moving to a balanced budget would tend to reduce interest rates by about one percentage point; however, the Engen and Hubbard study suggests that interest rates would only fall by roughly a tenth of that amount. While recent research confirms there is a significant relationship between budget deficits and interest rates, just how much deficits affect interest rates is still being debated.

http://www.stlouisfed.org/publications/cb/articles/?id=874

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