THIS IS YOUR ECONOMIC RECOVERY
WITH AND WITHOUT DRUGS
By: James_Quinn
Aug 19, 2014.
“If the
American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their
currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks…will deprive the
people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent
their fathers conquered…. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and
restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs.” Thomas Jefferson
1- Does this chart portray an economic recovery in any
way? Wages have been stagnant since the START of the supposed recovery in 2010.
Real median household income, even using the highly understated CPI, is on a
glide path to oblivion. You just need to observe with your own two eyes the
number of Space Available signs in front of office buildings, strip centers and
malls across America to realize we have further to fall. Low paying, part-time
burger flipping jobs aren’t going to revive this debt saturated economic
system. But at least the .1% are enjoying their Federal Reserve created high.
Fiat is a powerful drug when administered in large doses to addicts on Wall
Street. See graph Average hourly earning of all employees: Total – Private vs. Real media household income in the US
(right) http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/images/2014/Aug/rmincavh.png
2- The S&P 500 has risen from 666 in March of 2009 to
1,972 today. That is a 196% increase in a little over five years. During this
same time, real household income has fallen by 7%. There have been a few
million jobs added, while 11 million people have left the labor market.
According to Robert Shiller’s CAPE ratio, the stock market valuation has only
been higher, three times in history – 1929, 1999, and 2007. He seems
flabbergasted by why valuations are so high. Sometimes really smart people can
act really dumb.
The Federal Reserve balance sheet was $900 billion before
the 2008 financial crisis. Today it stands at $4.4 trillion. The Fed has
increased their balance sheet by 220% since the March 2009 market lows. Do you
think there is any correlation between the Fed puppets printing $2.4 trillion
and handing it to their Wall Street puppeteers, who used their high frequency
trading supercomputers and ability to rig the markets so they never lose, and
the third stock bubble in the last 13 years? It’s so self evident that only an
Ivy League economist or CNBC anchor wouldn’t be able to see it. See image: S&P 500 (5,042,832) vs. All
Federal Reserve Banks –Total Assets, Elimination from Consolidation (right:
4,393, 856)) Image Location: http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/images/2014/Aug/sp500fedbal.png
3- Let’s look at the amazing stock market recovery
without Federal Reserve heroine pumped into the veins of Wall Street banker
addicts. If you divide the S&P 500 Index by the size of the Federal reserve
balance sheet, you see the true purpose of QE1, QE2, and QE3. It wasn’t to save
Main Street. It was to save Wall Street. Without the Federal Reserve funneling
fiat to the .1% banking cabal and creating inflation in energy, food, and other
basic necessities for the 99.9%, there is no stock market recovery. The
recovery has occurred in Manhattan and the Hamptons. It’s been non-existent for
the vast majority of people in this country. The wealth effect and trickle down
theory have been disproved in spades. The only thing trickling down on the
former middle class from the Fed is warm and yellow. See Image S&P500/Al
Federal Reserve Banks. Total Assets, Elimination from Consolidation*1000. Image
location: http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/images/2014/Aug/sp500fedbalratio.png
Shaded areas indicates two US recessions: 2005-2010 and 2010-2014 By www.research.stlouisfed.org
4- The entire stock market advance has been created on record low trading volumes and record high levels of monetary manipulation. Even though the Federal Reserve has driven senior citizens further into poverty with 0% interest rates, those with common sense have refused to be lured back into the lion’s den. They have parked record levels of fiat in no interest bank and money market accounts. They are tired of being muppets led to slaughter.
Quantitative easing was supposed to force little old ladies into the stock market and consumers to spend their debased dollars before they lost more value. The spending would revive the dormant economy just as the Keynesian text books promised. It didn’t happen. The peasants haven’t cooperated. Quantitative easing and ZIRP sapped the life from the middle class as their wages have stagnated and their living expenses have skyrocketed. Mission Accomplished by the Fed. Of course, the CNBC bimbos and shills would declare this $10.8 trillion to be money on the sidelines ready to boost the stock market ever higher. I love that storyline. It never grows old.See image: S10.8 Trillion in Deposits. Cash, Bank Accounts, and Money -Market Funds. Image location: http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/images/2014/Aug/MW-CQ769_nuttin_20140815123933_ZH.jpg
5- The MSM, government and Wall Street continue to flog
the story about a housing recovery. It’s been nothing but a confidence game
based upon the Fed’s easy money and the Wall Street scheme to buy up foreclosed
properties with the Fed’s money. The scheme was to artificially boost home
prices by restricting home supply through foreclosure manipulation, in order to
allow the insolvent Wall Street banks to get out from under their billions in
toxic mortgage loans.
Shockingly, the Case Shiller home price index has soared
by 25% since 2012 despite first time home buyers being virtually non-existent
and mortgage applications plunging to 14 year lows. How could that be? Don’t
people need mortgages to buy houses? Isn’t real demand necessary to drive
prices higher? Not when Uncle Ben and Madam Yellen are in charge of the
printing press. Housing bubble 2.0 has arrived. I wonder if the Federal Reserve
balance sheet increase of 50% since 2012 has anything to do with the new
housing bubble. See image S&P Case-Shiller 20-City Home Price vs. All
Federal Reserve Banks. Total Assets, Elimination from Consolidatrion (right).
Image Location: http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/images/2014/Aug/cs20fedbal.png
6- It seems a similar result is obtained when dividing
the Case Shiller Index by the size of the Fed’s balance sheet. The real housing
market for real people is worse than it was in 2009. The national home price
increase has been centered in the usual speculative markets, aided and abetted
by the Fed’s easy money, managed by the Wall Street hedge funds, and
exacerbated by the late arriving flippers who will be left holding the bag
again. The Fed/ Wall Street scheme has priced young people out of the market
and has failed to ignite the desired Keynesian impact. Investors/flippers
account for 34% of all home sales. Foreigners with no knowledge of value
metrics account for 30% of all home sales. The lesson of history is that most
people don’t learn the lessons of history. The 2nd housing bubble in seven
years is seeking a pin. See image location at http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/images/2014/Aug/cs20fedbalratio.png
7- If ever you needed proof of the confidence game in its
full glory, the chart below from Zero Hedge says it all. Mortgage rates have
been falling for the past year, home builders have been reporting soaring
confidence about the future, and the National Association of Realtors keeps
predicting a surge in home buying any minute now. One small problem. Mortgage
applications are in free fall, new home sales are at 1991 levels, and existing
home sales are falling. Home prices have peaked and are beginning to roll over.
The Wall Street hedgies are all looking to exit stage left. Young people are
saddled with over a trillion of government issued student loan debt and
millions of older subprime borrowers have been lured into more auto loan debt.
Home sales will be stagnant for the next decade. Image location: http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/images/2014/Aug/20140818_NAHB1_0.jpg
We had a choice. We could have bitten the bullet in 2008 and accepted the consequences of decades of decadence, frivolity, materialism, delusion and debt accumulation. A steep sharp depression which would have purged the system of debt and punishment of those who created the disaster would have ensued. The masses would have suffered, but the rich and powerful bankers would have suffered the most. Today, the economy would be revived, saving and investing would be generating needed capital for expansion, and banks would be doing what they are supposed to do – lending money to businesses and individuals. Instead, the Wall Street bankers won the battle and continue to pillage and loot the national wealth while impoverishing the masses.
The arrogance, hubris and contempt for morality displayed by the ruling class is breathtaking to behold. They think they are untouchable and impervious to norms followed by the rest of society. They may have won the opening battle, but will lose the war. Discontent among the masses grows by the day. The critical thinking citizens are growing restless and angry. They are beginning to grasp the true enemy. The system has been captured by a few malevolent men. When the stock, bond and housing bubbles all implode simultaneously, all hell will break loose in this country. It will make Ferguson, Missouri look like a walk in the park. I wonder if the occupants of the Eccles building in Washington DC will get out alive.
“It is well enough that people of the nation do not
understand our banking and money system, for if they did, I believe there would
be a revolution before tomorrow morning.” –
Henry Ford
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Charts provided by Confounded Interest
Join James Quinn at www.TheBurningPlatform.com to discuss truth and the future of our country.
By James Quinn : quinnadvisors@comcast.net
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Related article:
Recovery? The S&P 500 and Case-Shiller House Price
Indices WITHOUT Fed Intervention (Bad News!)
Confounded Interest By Anthony B. Sanders 08.17.14
http://confoundedinterest.wordpress.com/2014/08/17/recovery-the-sp-500-and-case-shiller-house-price-indices-without-fed-intervention-bad-news/
The Federal Reserve began their extraordinary bond and
mortgage market intervention in 2008. Although bond and agency mortgage-backed
securities have been slowing (aka, tapering), The Fed is still manipulating
interest rates and propping up asset prices (like the S&P 500 Index and
house prices).
Here the charts of the S&P 500 stock market index
against The Fed’s balance sheet expansion.
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