Is The Long-Anticipated Crash Now Upon Us?

Authored by Chris Martenson via PeakProsperity.com,

Is this the market’s breaking point?

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/trader-stock-crash-242521138_3.jpg?itok=H54KFRRy

I admit: I’m a permabear.

This is no surprise to those who know and have followed me over the years. But I’m publicly proclaiming my ‘bearishness’ because doing so might open up a needed and long overdue dialog.

Here’s my fundamental position:  Infinite growth on a finite planet is impossible. 

Cutting to the chase, this is why I predict a major crash/collapse across stocks, bonds and real estate is on the way.

The recent market weakness seen over the past two weeks is nothing compared to what’s in store.  As we’ve been carefully chronicling, bubbles burst from ‘the outside in’, starting at the weaker places at the periphery before progressing to the center.

Emerging market equities are now down -26% from their January highs and -18% year-to-date.  China’s stocks market is down -32%, even with substantial intervention by the government to prop things up.

The periphery has been weakening all year, and the contagion has now spread worldwide.

Taken as a whole, global equities have shed some $13 trillion of market capitalization for a -15% decline:

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/2018-10-26_12-08-43_0.jpg?itok=2FdgSLaY

The rot has spread to the core with surprising speed. Now even the formerly bullet-proof US equity markets are stumbling.

US Stocks are now negative on the year:

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/2018-10-26_11-51-36_0.jpg?itok=u4wozQhq

It’s been obvious for a long time to those who have watched The Crash Course that endless growth is simply not possible. Not for a bacteria colony in a petrie dish, not for an economy, not for any species on the planet. Eventually, when finite resources are involved, limits matter.

But the vast majority of society pretends as if this isn’t true.

The US government is (and has been for decades) adding to its massive pile of debt at a rate far faster than it’s income (GDP) is growing. Pension managers have a horizon measued in decades, and yet they buy stocks and bonds that can only pay off if endless growth occurs (e.g., 100+ P/E ratios). Much of today’s buildings and public works will need to be rebuilt/replaced within the next 50 years, yet no one is certain whether we’ll have enough affordable energy to do so.

In regards to the financial markets specifically, history has given us clear lessons to heed. 1929, 1987, 2001 and 2008 each showed us that when the world gets so manic that investors must believe in perpetual perfection/endless growth to justify current asset prices, a painful correction ensues as the limits of reality re-assert themselves.

Bulls vs. Bears

My permabear-ishness is a by-product of peering into the future and not being able to align society’s hopes with what I see as the current trajectory of the world.

As a baby boomer, this sets me apart somewhat from my age cohort, many of whom have benefitted as our generation has lived beyond its means. But it’s not all unusual to find young adults, peering ahead into a diminished future, who share my views.

So when I look at today’s markets, I ask: What’s the purpose or point of investing in financial assets that, by definition, depend upon a logical fallacy (endless growth) being true? None at all.

Now, in the short term, if you believe yourself to be smarter and more nimble than the rest, maybe you can find advantage in speculating over the short term. (And good luck with that, by the way…)

But for the average person? Is parking money in a 401k in a general index fund(s), crossing one’s fingers and hoping that the next twenty years will behave like the last twenty a good bet? Not if sustained economic growth continues to remain elusive the way it has since the 2008 crisis.

The Bull Trap

By definition, stock market bulls believe in growth, specifically endless growth. They believe, over time, the markets will head ever upwards.

As I’ve said I don’t believe that endless growth is possible. But more than that, I think, were it possible, it would be harmful to humans and planetary life in general.

I used to believe in growth. In my early career as a consultant, I even helped companies chase it. But as I became more familiar with the scientific data and connected a few dots, I realized my views regarding growth were naive. And in some cases entirely backwards.

For instance: In my MBA courses, I was taught that at a high enough price, new supply will always emerge to meet the market demand.

But a tiny bit of inquiry quickly reveals that the economy doesn’t deliver resources, instead we have an economy because there are natural resources to use.  No resources, no economy. The economy is a subset of the natural world, not the other way around.

Most people get that intuitively, but it remains a mystery why so many stumble on the idea that ever moreeconomic growth requires ever more resources. They ignore the reality that, at some point, resource limits matter.

And within the resource story, energy is THE master resource. No energy and you can’t have anything else. No economy. Nothing.

Even more precisely, surplus energy (also called “net energy”) is what powers everything you and I hold dear about our amazing, just-in-time, global lifestyle. If a Cheetah expends more calories hunting than it actually catches, it dies.  Every organism only thrives if it has a surplus of chemical energy compared to what it expends.

Simply put, humans are using up hundreds of millions of years of stored ancient sunlight (via fossil fuels) in the equivalent of a geological microsecond. It’s been a one-time-only bonanza for our species. One that is fast approaching it’s end.

Hey, it’s been fun. And we’re doing some really cool things with all that surplus fossil energy, like space travel and smart phones. But one thing we haven’t done is invest for a future that will function when all that tasty surplus fossil energy is gone.

And as we’ve often written about, the ramifications are already beginning to be felt, and will only get worse over the coming decades.

A critical factor is that our system for running the world is becoming increasingly unstable. As surplus energy decreases, we are using more and more debt to pull tomorrow’s prosperity into today to keep the party going.

But that can’t last forever. And as 2008 showed us, when the debt stops growing, even briefly, the whole system shudders to a stop. Our current system of credit/money is either expanding or threatening to collapse. It no longer has a middle ground:

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/TCMDO-total-credit-debt-b-2018-9-13.jpg?itok=njU2RocI

The Social Fabric Is Starting To Rend

This idea of growth being dependent on surplus energy is not a very difficult train of logic to follow. But as I’ve learned the hard way when delivering this message over the years, data and logic rarely changes people’s behavoir.

People’s actions are governed by their beliefs, which are stubbornly housed in our brain’s emotional limbic system, not in the more rational cortex. When beliefs get challenged, emotions flare up. Data is irrelevant. Logic doesn’t matter. The backfire effect mushrooms and takes over.

We are now at the most important inflection point in all of human history, yet practically nobody knows about it. But try to raise people’s awareness and – wow – does it ever challenge their belief systems. Fear and anger are the first emotions to get triggered, and listeners quickly search for any reason to reject the information.

This is wack-job conspiracy theory! This is failed Malthusian claptrap! This is fear-mongering! You’re underestimating human ingenuity! If this were really true, I’d be reading about it in the media!

Over the years, I’ve heard thousands of these ‘reasons’ to reject looking critically at the data. It no longer bothers me, as I recognize it for what it truly is: an attempt to protect oneself from having to grapple with the possibility that the promise of endless growth, which our current prosperity is based on, just might not be real.

And I think many folks are nevertheless becoming aware of this on a subconcious level. It’s that feeling in our gut we get when we see the 1% live so much better than the rest of us 99%. When we hear how “great” the employment rate is or the stock market is, yet we see so many households struggling to get by as the middle class get squeezed harder and harder between stagnant wages and the rising cost of living. When we see those who run our country and its corporations live by a different, more preferential, set of rules than the public is held to.

I think this explains why tensions and tempers are so high right now, even though very few seem to understand why. It explains why the country is so divided and increasingly desperate. It explains the hyper-partisanship, the turn to opioids, the pipe bombs.

To my way of thinking, a lot of the emotional energy being expended right now is due to the fact that our entire way of being is busy collapsing all around us.  Our main narrative of “how life works” is breaking down. This is resuting in an epidemic of grief, depression, anger and sorrow.

(Personal note: If you’re near Turners Falls MA on November 6th, 2018 I and a number of other PP members will be attending Stephen Jenkinson’s Nights of Grief & Mystery Tour, which delves into coping strategies for dealing with these emotions head-on. If you want to join us, send an email here).

Is The Crash Upon Us?

So with the wipeout of all 2018’s market gains this week, is the next crash upon us? Is the financial system in the process of breaking down, as it did in 2008?

There are a number of indicators we watch closely here at Peak Prosperity. While many are showing signs of distress, we’re not yet seeing the kind of systemic arrest we’d expect to see preceding a market seisure.

For instance, even as equities have pulled back, the weakest credit element, here represented by the ETF “JNK” that tracks junk bonds, has barely even budged during the current sell-off:

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/JNK-2018-10-26.jpg?itok=JxPucRbM

What tipped me off as a pre-indicator of the 2008 crash was the movement in both the credit markets and the financial companies most dependent on them. Remember, “stocks are for show but bonds are for dough”. The serious money playing in the bond market typcially seeks safety before the more risk-loving players in the equity markets catch on.

Similarly, the prices for ‘safe haven’ US Treasury hasn’t rallied by all that much. If there were a panic brewing, we’d expect to see these spiking more violently, even with China beginning to sell their stash and the Fed pulling back:

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/TLT-2018-10-26.jpg?itok=NT68-ig7

That “bounce” doesn’t even bring US 20-year bonds back to even for the month of October, let alone return them to where they were in September.

Similarly, gold hasn’t rallied that much either in US dollar terms:

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/GLD-2018-10-26.jpg?itok=2N58uChS

(in euros and yuan is another matter):

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/2018-10-26_16-07-28_0.jpg?itok=nFxq9ukU

Add to the above that the US economy is not (yet) in recession, and a full-blown crash looks unlikely to unfold before us right now.

BUT, what we are seeing in the markets is exactly the kind of precursor activity we would expect to see in the final stage leading up to a crash.

In Part 2: How Close?, we lay out the indicators we’re watching most closely and what they’re currently forecasting about the timing of a major market breakdown, as well as reinforce the importance of prudently preparing yourself *now*.

This equity correction has my full attention. No, I don’t think it’s the big one (yet). But, yes, I think the big one is not far behind

In the immediate here and now, focus on getting yourself prepared as best as you can and remain above the emotional fray that’s tormenting so many people. It’s only going to get worse from here.

Click here to read Part 2 of this report (free executive summary, enrollment required for full access

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23 Comments
Annie
Annie
October 27, 2018 4:40 pm

Gold demand is up 42% YOY. Gold price is down YOY. This cannot happen in a free market. Gold price is being manipulated by TPTB. What else is being manipulated? As long as markets are being manipulated they can keep going up/down/sideways forever if that’s what TPTB want regardless of how many fancy charts you’ve got.

https://www.rt.com/business/442410-gold-demand-up-dollar/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

Grizzly Bare
Grizzly Bare
  Annie
October 27, 2018 8:40 pm

Gold and silver are manipulated through paper trading. When available physical metals run out it won’t matter what the price of paper gold is. People will not part with physical metal at that price. When that happens we’ll have the “official” spot price of paper traded metals, and the real “street” price that physical metals will demand, which will be the real spot price.

Steve
Steve
  Annie
October 27, 2018 8:59 pm

Annie, they will manipulate the price until they can’t. When they can’t deliver on either gold or silver the manipulation will be broken and the true value will be known by all. It’s on sale right now, buy all you can.

wdg
wdg
October 27, 2018 5:02 pm

The last ten years of growth based on an illusion that somehow we can create prosperity – which never existed anyway but was the product of rigged statistics – by printing useless fiat currencies by the billions and trillions are fast coming to an end. They only created massive bubbles in bonds, stocks and real estate as far as the eye can see that are now bursting for all to see. The times will be cruel.

starfcker
starfcker
  wdg
October 27, 2018 6:41 pm

“Emerging market equities are now down -26% from their January highs and -18% year-to-date. China’s stocks market is down -32%, even with substantial intervention by the government to prop things up.” I find it amazing that they’ve gotten as many people as they have to believe that the concepts of “third world” and “stock market” in the same sentence could ever end well. As long as we pump money into these places they will spend it. Kind of like Detroit. The minute you stop pumping money in, it’s a ghetto. Does there exist a self-sustaining non-white country anywhere on the planet?

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  starfcker
October 27, 2018 6:56 pm

Japan? China? How about India?

You must really keep busy tending to your white ego; we wuz kangs.

starfcker
starfcker
  EL Coyote
October 27, 2018 7:19 pm

China, Japan, India. Those would be number 1, 3, and 8 in the countries we run trade deficits to. In other words, pump money into. Mexico by the way, is number two. What happens to those countries if we stop losing so much money to them? Trust me, they will ghetto-ize quick. Any coincidence China’s stock market is down 32%? I don’t believe in coincidences. The theory behind globalization was if we shuffle the cards and dealt them fairly around the world, everyone would rise up. It didn’t work. I thought about using the word western instead of white above. Would it have changed anything? Doesn’t change the problem. Doesn’t provide a solution.

starfcker
starfcker
  starfcker
October 27, 2018 7:33 pm

And right on cue, here’s another dingbat from the frauds at the Mises Institute blathering on about how trade deficits don’t matter. Too stupid to realize that if we didn’t run trade deficits, we wouldn’t have debt. The United States is supporting the world. It’s time to let it shake out, and let countries live at the standard that they can afford. it’s certainly not worth destroying our own country over, to make sure the folks in the Congo have a stock market. .https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-10-27/why-public-debt-problem-and-trade-deficits-arent

EL Coyote - Bea's conspiracist buddy
EL Coyote - Bea's conspiracist buddy
  starfcker
October 27, 2018 7:44 pm

StarBaby, Europe – a white country – had the money they stole from the Americas long before the US did. They used this money to support scientific exploration and discoveries. What made America great after WWII? It was that we stole the riches of the Nazis; to wit, the Jewish scientists.

starfcker
starfcker
  EL Coyote - Bea's conspiracist buddy
October 27, 2018 7:57 pm

History is the story of one people’s conquering another, no question. And yes, the conquistadors were some nasty motherfuckers. But look at most of the problems in the world. We have over complicated most things to a point where there are not enough high intellects available to run things properly. That’s true here in the states as well as overseas. But putting ignoramuses through college just to give them a credential is not the same as teaching them the skills necessary to run a complex society. At some point we have to judge the results, we can’t just keep pouring money into a bottomless pit. We are only destroying our own country at this point. Was the whole exercise worthless? Probably not. But it’s time to regroup, and rethink the idea that the whole world can be equal. Because it does not appear possible.

starfcker
starfcker
  EL Coyote - Bea's conspiracist buddy
October 27, 2018 8:06 pm

None of the German aeronautical engineers that ourselves and the Russians coveted so much were Jewish. The Jewish scientists were purged when Hitler came to power. Jews don’t tend to be engineers anyway. Good old meat and potato Germans, those are your engineers. Still to this day. They don’t produce art. They can’t cook worth a shit. They don’t know how to make anything pretty. But they can engineer some stuff that works. Best in the world. It’s what they do.

Vodka
Vodka
  EL Coyote - Bea's conspiracist buddy
October 27, 2018 8:15 pm

The Jewish scientists helped, but it was the capacity of the factories and refineries, post-WWII, that propelled the U.S. to riches.

EC,
I stopped back on the Ol’ Remus thread and saw that you discovered my blunder of confusing Poncho Villa with Santa Ana. You didn’t rub my nose in it too harshly. You have a kind heart. I have no excuse for the error.

BL
BL
  EL Coyote - Bea's conspiracist buddy
October 27, 2018 9:08 pm

EC- as long as you are my conspiracist buddy, surely you know that Wernher von Braun was a bloodline actor and most often they are purely a shill. We stole some shit for sure which is partly what war is all about.

I’m expecting the uninitiated to down this comment rather than learn a truth .

Grizzly Bare
Grizzly Bare
  starfcker
October 27, 2018 8:52 pm

What you left out is the fact that the US dollar is the world reserve currency through the petro dollar arrangement we have with Saudi Arabia. Other countries pay us to use our currency. Due to the SWIFT banking system they can’t transact internationally without it. We buy goods from these countries with dollars created out of thin air. You can’t beat a deal like that. You say the US is supporting the rest of the world but it’s really the other way around. We will eventually lose the reserve currency status, because the rest of the world is sick and tired of being screwed. Russia and China to name two biggies are working diligently to get around the petro dollar. When that golden goose dies then we will learn all about what a sweet arrangement that it was.

The fellows at Mises probably know quite a bit more than you think.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  starfcker
October 27, 2018 9:16 pm

Star – that is absurd. Debt is far, far greater than the trade deficit. Debt is in the hundreds of trillions all up. The trade deficit is what, $500 billion a year.

starfcker
starfcker
  Llpoh
October 27, 2018 9:18 pm

On that basis we agree. I’m talking about the fact that when we run a deficit every year what are we doing letting the world rip us off for that amount of money? Time to live within our means, going to have to stop supporting the rest of the world

Grizzly Bare
Grizzly Bare
  starfcker
October 27, 2018 9:42 pm

When you go to the grocery store and buy food you exchange currency for goods. Is the grocery store ripping you off? We are buying stuff from other countries. Not only are we buying it we are using dollars created from thin air. I think you are confused about who is the ripper and who is the rippee.

EL Coyote - Bea's conspiracy buddy
EL Coyote - Bea's conspiracy buddy
  wdg
October 27, 2018 7:06 pm

Wedgie, has it occurred to you that the money printed was paid to China? Think about it, supposedly the QE money went to the banks. Why are they on the ropes once more then? Because the money went to China. At some point they were going to balk at being paid more fiat so they started buying up the gold. All those QE dollars must have been used to build up their infrastructure and ghost cities.

Trump must have been aware of this and decided to do something about the draining of America. Tariffs were a start. Slowing down the Chinese juggernaut had to be done someday and Trump was the dick chosen to do it.

I’m sure international politics is not this simple but the explanation works for me.

gm
gm
  EL Coyote - Bea's conspiracy buddy
October 27, 2018 10:57 pm

just a thought el dog but if privately owned central banks are in every country save 3 ? I think . um its kinda like global warming . lets look at EVERYTHING except the sun lol . So to wit , el mongrel , if Privately Owned Central Banks are there in every country maybe ,just maybe , we should look at what Privately Owned Central Banks want? Just a fucking thought bitch ! ya this is GM from way back !
Just a cook bro be well ))))) yes I live though was touch and go for many a moon sir

Raider99
Raider99
October 27, 2018 9:06 pm

The short answer, in my opinion, to the author’s question is yes. Winter is coming. Be prepared. If you have a 401k with a sizeable amount of money in it, get out of your birthday funds, or other bullshit mutual funds your employer provides and move to cash or money market Monday morning. Do it now. Any upticks in the market will be bear market rallies. The long term trend is down. This especially true if you’re 5-10 years away from retirement. I may sound like a permabear, but I’d rather be safe then sorry.

You may have to call your 401k provider to do this. The rep will try to talk you out of it. It’s their job. Respond by telling them it’s your fucking money, and you want it moved. Don’t be a victim.

John Galt
John Galt
October 28, 2018 8:06 am

Being a permabear is like knowing that human life will always end at some point so you simply never crawl out of bed and live life. WHile the author makes a valid point that the war in the end will result in a great depression because of all the reasons he states we must live our financial lives by the battles (bull mkts and bear mkts) and endure. ANd persevere these ups and downs to make assets grow. Unless you make $700k a year and pay $295k in taxes and save 200k annually you might be able to outpace your savings rate vs inflation so you can retire. The idea that you can simply save in a savings acct or gold (which is manipulated) just wont work for the avg person to be able to afford to retire. Maybe these permabears can offer a better solution to be able to afford retirement and point the avg person making 80k family income annually in what they should do or how to invest to afford retirement vs simply using fear of bulls/bears as it relates to battles vs the end game of the war. Sure prepping and having farmed food on ones land is good but you must be able to purchase the land etc. So tired of these fear mongers trying to be right every once per decade while people follow them and never growing assets and get ahead like the rich do. But hey they make their money espousing these fears by blog syndications and advertising gold on their sites etc. They seem to never tell us what or how they are growing their own assets. Just how we are not supposed to invest in bull/bear cycles to grow ours. They espouse pillow case or gold investing only and advise we wait for the “big one”. Bullshit. Hiwever the smartest thing right now to do is sit in cash as we are nearing the end of a bull cycle. And 9 months after the crash you must buy back into good nimble companies stocks and ride the next 5-10 year bull. Dont be greedy trying to ooze out the final 10% of this bull mkt. know when tomhold em know when to fold em. Fold em now!

overthecliff
overthecliff
October 28, 2018 8:45 am

I was wrong in August 2015 when the market corrected. This is beginning to look like the real thing. The more you prop it up the worse the collapse.

overthecliff
overthecliff
October 28, 2018 8:55 am

Last one holding those dollars(make believe money) is the loser. Buy real stuff with the money while you can. That is what the .01% are doing.