The Financial System Is Breaking Down At An Unimaginable Pace

Submitted by Simon Black via SovereignMan.com,

Now it’s $13 trillion.

That’s the total amount of government bonds in the world that have negative yields, according to calculations published last week by Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Given that there were almost zero negative-yielding bonds just two years ago, the rise to $13 trillion is incredible.

In February 2015, the total amount of negative-yielding debt in the world was ‘only’ $3.6 trillion.

A year later in February 2016 it had nearly doubled to $7 trillion.

Now, just five months later, it has nearly doubled again to $13 trillion, up from $11.7 trillion just over two weeks ago.

Think about that: the total sum of negative-yielding debt in the world has increased in the last sixteen days alone by an amount that’s larger than the entire GDP of Russia.

Just like subprime mortgage bonds from ten years ago, these bonds are also toxic securities, since many of are issued by bankrupt governments (like Japan).

Instead of paying subprime home buyers to borrow money, investors are now paying subprime governments.

And just like the build-up to the 2008 subprime crisis, investors are snapping up today’s subprime bonds with frightening enthusiasm.

We’ll probably see $15 trillion, then $20 trillion, worth of negative-yielding subprime government debt within the next few months.

So this trend will continue to grow for now, until, just like in 2008, the bubble bursts in cataclysmic fashion.

It took several years for the first subprime bubble to pop. This one may take even longer. But even still, we can already see the consequences today.

A few months ago I told you about the remarkable $3.4 trillion funding gap in the US pension system.

Remember, we’re not talking about Social Security– that has its own $40+ trillion shortfall.

I’m talking about private companies’ retirement pensions, or public service worker pensions at the city and state level.

(By the way, this is NOT strictly a US phenomenon. Europe suffers its own $2 trillion pension shortfall.)

There’s zero mathematical probability that these pensions will be able to meet their obligations.

They’re already underfunded. And the problem is getting worse, thanks in part to this plague of low and negative interest rates.

You see, most pension funds must achieve a low-risk investment return of roughly 8% in order to stay solvent and pay their beneficiaries.

And making an 8% return used to be a reasonable assumption.

25-years ago, government bonds often yielded more than 8%.

So unsurprisingly, the average return for pension funds over the last 25-years has been around 8% according to the National Association of State Retirement Administrators.

But that’s no longer the case.

With such a huge portion of the bond market now with negative yields, it’s virtually impossible for pension funds to keep their promises.

Even Warren Buffett has written that “[pension] funding is woefully inadequate,” and, “In a world where people are living longer and inflation is certain, those promises will be anything but easy to keep.”

Bottom line: anyone who is ever considering retirement must heavily discount the future promises of unfunded pensions and Social Security.

The younger you are, the less likely you are to receive benefits they’ve promised.

But this also gives you time to prepare and take matters into your own hands…

 

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9 Comments
kokoda
kokoda
July 19, 2016 2:39 pm

The Day the Bonds Blew Up (the Movie)

I think it should be called Negative Day; that way future generations can install it as a national holiday. We will know the specific day, as that will be when they clean out our Banking and Brokerage Accounts.

JIMSKI
JIMSKI
July 19, 2016 2:57 pm

Can I get a CDO on these bonds?

David
David
  JIMSKI
July 20, 2016 8:09 am

CDS?

John Angelo
John Angelo
July 19, 2016 3:31 pm

“Up and down the city road
In and out of the eagle
That’s the way the money goes
Pop goes the weasel”

If our economy were a jack-in-the-box and the handle was being turned to play the tune, I’d say we’re just finishing the line which says “that’s the way the money goes…”

rhs jr
rhs jr
July 19, 2016 4:01 pm

Investors sure have a negative view of money if they think (say) paying a million for a bond today is worth getting back half a million in 10 years…buying guns or even peanuts should do a lot better. I’m gonna just sit here on this sack of gold…

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
July 19, 2016 4:43 pm

You cannot have a strong financial system without a strong thriving industrial base . The world finance system , pensions , banking personal and commercial are in the CTD mode (circiling the drain) because for the past 50 years all the productive nations of the world especially the Unitied States has off shored nearly all production and rewarded a small group of financial groups and government insiders to profit from while spewing out one lie after another to cover the trail . Now all over the world insiders are scurrying about like cats covering shit but the pile and stench is to much now . Any attempt to save any part of this will be too little too late ! I have a personal acquaintance who happens to be a high 6 figure federal employee his office publishes the CPI for cost of living adjustments to everything from federal pensions to social security payments . His comment to me “Everything we do is a bunch of lies and half truths but basicly all bull shit . He is a nice guy but what the fuck am I being taxed to help cover his salary for ???

Rise Up
Rise Up
  Boat Guy
July 20, 2016 10:59 am

“High 6 figure”? You mean like $500k plus or did you mean in the high $100s?

You can see exactly what he makes here if you know his full name:

http://www.fedsdatacenter.com/federal-pay-rates/

jamesthewanderer
jamesthewanderer
July 19, 2016 6:36 pm

Congratulations, Boat Guy; you actually found a (limitedly) honest government employee? Why are we taxed, indeed, when the Federal Reserve can print unlimited money? It boils down to CONTROL, I believe.
If you are taxed and cannot accumulate wealth (let’s talk about money and currency another day) then you cannot finance real attempts to change overlords. Let’s say you think Ron Paul should abandon the idiot Republican party and run for President as an independent. If all Ron Paul supporters are taxed so much they can hardly make rent, how will they contribute to his campaign? How could he finance such a campaign when the whole country is being paid in electronic dollars that aren’t worth the paper they’re not printed on (h/t Gerald Celente) ?
Power and control, propaganda and repression: this is what the USGov has come to in these last decaying days. The Crunch will be spectacular, and the elites will have nowhere to run, nowhere to hide from the inferno. But then, the Inferno is where many belong anyway, so at least they’ll feel at home!

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
July 19, 2016 11:51 pm

Been saying it for years……. pension plans cannot survive below 8% returns.
Corporations should not be allowed to off shore their expenses (free trade) at the behest of the middle class.

Either way it’s too late to fix it…….