James Rickards: La tormenta perfecta que viene. Crisis económica épica.

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En resumen, describe las anteriores crisis en el 98 y 2008, y da unas cifras que... :8: :8: no se si creer... 5 trillones de $ (americanos) de deuda sarama en energía desde el 2009 al 2014, y 9 trillones de $ (americanos) en deuda de países emergentes.

Dólar fortaleciéndose, caída del precio del petróleo. Derivados. Todos los ingredientes. En fin, no dice si será en Octubre, pero habla de meses.

The Perfect Storm for an Epic Economic Meltdown


Over the coming months, I believe we could see an economic meltdown at least six times the size of the 2007 subprime mortgage meltdown.

Circumstances lead me to believe it could play out like the meltdown I experienced in 1998 after Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) failed.

This time, however, there will be several crucial differences that will leave investors and regulators unprepared.

In fact, last week, I held a live intelligence briefing called The Perfect Storm: A 1998 Redux to alert Strategic Intelligence readers to the dangers.

But what I didn’t mention during the briefing were the two intelligence triggers I used to support my outlook.

I also didn’t share the investment idea that my top investment analyst and I have identified to help you profit from them. We’ve reserved that for the beta testers of one of my new elite services called Jim Rickards’ Intelligence Triggers.

I’ll explain how you can access those bi-weekly alerts in a moment, but first, let me share a little background about why I believe market intelligence confirms this threat…

To understand what market outcome is likely, we start with something we know and extrapolate from it.


In the national defense community, military commanders are known for fighting the last war. They study their prior failures in preparation for the next conflict. The problem is that each war inevitably involves new tactics for which they’re completely unprepared.

The most famous case was the backward-looking Maginot Line in the 1930s. In response to Germany’s rapid advances in WWI, France built a line of concrete and steel fortifications and obstacles on their border to buy time to mobilize if Germany tried to invade again.

Hitler made the Maginot Line irrelevant by outflanking it and invading France through neutral Belgium. The French were unprepared. A few weeks later, German forces occupied Paris.

The same mistake is made in financial circles. Financial regulators are no different than military commanders. They fight the last war. The last two global meltdowns, in 1998 and 2008, are cases in point.

In 1998, a financial panic almost destroyed global capital markets. It started in Thailand in June 1997 and then spread to Indonesia and Korea. By the summer of 1998, Russia had defaulted on its debt and its currency collapsed. The resulting liquidity crisis caused massive losses at hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management.

I know about the losses because I was there. As LTCM’s lead counsel, I was at every executive committee meeting during the height of the crisis that August and September. We were losing hundreds of millions of dollars per day. Total losses over the two-month span were almost $4 billion. But that wasn’t the most dangerous part.

Our losses were trivial compared with to the $1 trillion of derivatives trades we had on our books with the biggest Wall Street banks. If LTCM failed, those trillion dollars of trades would not have paid off and the Wall Street banks would have fallen like dominoes. Global markets would have completely collapsed.

I negotiated a bailout with the leaders of the 14 biggest banks including Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Citibank. Eventually, we got $4 billion of new capital from Wall Street, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates and the situation stabilized. But it was a close call, something no one ever wanted to repeat.

It was a valuable lesson for me, because soon after, regulators set out to make hedge fund lending safer. They ordered banks to monitor their hedge fund exposures more closely, improve their legal documentation and require more collateral to secure the performance on open trades.

Regulators believed this would prevent the next crisis. When the panic of 2008 hit, however, they were surprised that problems were not in hedge funds but in something new — subprime mortgages. The mortgage market collapse quickly spun out of control and once again brought global capital markets to the brink of collapse.

After the 2008 debacle, regulators again set out to fight the last war. This is the setup for the crisis I’m forecasting. They made mortgage lending much safer by requiring larger down payments, better documentation, proof of income, proof of employment and higher credit scores before a home loan could be made. But once again, regulators today are fixing the last problem and totally ignoring the next one.

The next financial collapse, already on our radar screen, will not come from hedge funds or home mortgages. It will come from junk bonds, especially energy-related and emerging-market corporate debt.

The Financial Times recently estimated that the total amount of energy-related corporate debt issued from 2009-2014 for exploration and development is over $5 trillion. Meanwhile, the Bank for International Settlements recently estimated that the total amount of emerging-market dollar-denominated corporate debt is over $9 trillion.

Energy-sector debt has been called into question because of the collapse of oil prices. And emerging markets debt has been called into question because of a global growth slowdown, global deflation, and the strong dollar.

The result is a $14 trillion pile of corporate debt that cannot possibly be repaid or rolled over under current economic conditions. Not all of this debt will default, but a lot of it will. Most of the energy related debt was issued in the expectation that oil would remain in the $80 to $130 dollar per barrel range. (I explained the dynamics in January 8th’s Daily Reckoning, right here.)

Most of the emerging markets debt was issued with the expectation that the dollar would remain at its weak 2011 levels. Instead oil is down, and the dollar is up, which capsizes these expectations. The moves have been swift and dramatic. Over the past six months, oil has crashed 52%, while the U.S. Dollar Index rose 15%.
REC_01-20-15_Triggers.png

Intelligence Triggers: USD Surges, Crude Crashes
If default rates are only 10% — a conservative assumption — this corporate debt fiasco will be six times larger than the subprime losses in 2007. The world is looking at a debt catastrophe much larger than LTCM in 1998 and the mortgage market in 2008. Regulators are completely unprepared for this because they have been busy fighting the last war.

The good news for investors is that this fiasco will not happen overnight. It will take a year or two to play out. The panic of September 1998 started a year earlier, in Thailand in June 1997. The panic of September 2008 also started a year earlier, in August 2007, when CNBC commentator Jim Cramer screamed, “They know nothing!!” on live television in reference to the Federal Reserve.

This new junk debt fiasco started in the summer of 2014 but will not reach its peak until 2016 or later. Even companies and countries with dim prospects often have enough cash on hand to make payments for a while before they actually default. In the meantime, you can profit.

The bond defaults have not happened yet, but our intelligence triggers are already visible in the form of lower oil prices and the strong dollar. In intelligence analysis, we don’t wait for disasters to happen. We look at today’s information, what we call “indications and warnings,” and use inferential techniques such as inverse probability to see the future.

The strong dollar is deflationary. This means oil prices will likely remain low. This means much of the energy-sector debt cannot be paid off and will default. The defaults have not happened yet, but you can see them coming. There is still an opportunity for you to profit from the coming collapse in junk bonds, but the time to act is now.

Regards,

James Rickards
for The Daily Reckoning
 
Rickards todavía me parece optimista, fíjate lo que te digo

Estoy convencido de que va a ser todavía peor de lo que dice
 
shishi, a estas horas podrías hacernos un resumen, que me dá pereza leer el tochaco, jorobar!!
 
Como dice SNB la deuda no se puede pagar, se hara una quita a nivel mundial y a empezar de cero.
 
Como dice SNB la deuda no se puede pagar, se hara una quita a nivel mundial y a empezar de cero.

Pero eso conviene o es mejor dejar que la Super Crisis se quede un rato y se lleve por delante unos cuantos millones de habitantes o se quede un rato largo y estallen varias decenas de conflictos belicos?
 
shishi, a estas horas podrías hacernos un resumen, que me dá pereza leer el tochaco, jorobar!!

Lo que viene será seis veces más fuerte que las subprime del 2007.

Describe, más o menos, la idea general de que los reguladores han ido poniendo soluciones a las crisis siempre a toro pasado.
Creian que las subprime habían sido resueltas con la nuevas regulaciones endureciendo las condiciones de los prestamos e hipotecas y que no se tenía por que cambiar más cosas del sistema.

Creian, por que ahora les esta viniendo los bonos sarama relacionados con la energía y la deuda de los mercados emergentes (dos burbujas por petar- si no han hecho ya- y sincronizadas :roto2:).

Factores clave, todo dios veia el petroleo entre 80 a 130 dolares y todos pensaban que el dolar se iba a mantener débil cuando se expidió la deuda de los paises emergentes. El escenario esta completamente invertido.
 
Nos beneficia que peten las emergentes+dolar en Europa?
 
Interesante artículo.

Si al final va a haber que comprar pisitos para no perder todos los moneys del banco.
 
Otro gurú diciendo que la deuda nos va a dar de baja de la suscripción de la vida sin buscar el origen de la deuda.
¿Quienes son los acreedores de una deuda planetaria?
Toda deuda tiene un acreedor.

Hay que saber quienes son los acreedores y cual es su intención para saber por donde va a tirar esto.
 
Me suena a artículo asustaviejas, pero suponiendo que lo que dice se cumpla:

Si las empresas de exploración petrolífera se han empufado en exceso y ahora sus expectativas de ingresos ( salvo que el petróleo vuelva a subir que también es posible ) han disminuido, lo lógico es que las más débiles se vayan al guano.

Las empresas de exploración suelen ser empresas cotizadas en bolsa, así que el orden lógico de las cosas sería ( que no significa que vaya a pasar así):

1)Quiebra de algunas de estas empresas
2)Rescate de aquellas que puedan hacer más pupa?

De momento se ha creado mucho dinero que ha ido a parar principalmente a los mercados financieros, pero no ha llegado a la economía "real".

La consecuencia de otra ronda más de rescates y de darle a la impresora sería una erosión del capital existente, ya que se crean nuevamente incentivos perversos para 2 cosas:

1)Hacer inversiones sin pensar mucho en los riesgos ya que siempre viene papá rescate a salvarte
2)Estar posicionado en los mercados financieros ya que es donde se dan las mayores rentabilidades por la volatilidad propiciada por las inyecciones monetarias, lo cual es un desperdicio de capital humano y de capital generado en el pasado.

En otras palabras, no habría incentivo para invertir en la economía "real" por sus bajas rentabilidades, lo que nos llevaría a un estancamiento real y a burbujas bursátiles.

El mayor peligro sería si todo este dinero consiguiera entrar en la economía del día a día de alguna manera de forma descontrolada, pero me parece más probable que lo que ocurra es una quiebra de los Estados.

Pero esta situación puede ir para muuuuuuy largo me parece a mi.
 
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