The Coming LIQUIDITY Crisis

Guest Post by Martin Armstrong

What distinguished that ’98 Liquidity Crisis was that the “Club” of bankers and hedge fund guys were all on the same trade as they always did. The capital flows began to sift in 1994 as SE Asia peaked. The bear market that unfolded went largely unnoticed until the Asian Currency Crisis where the “club” then attacked the currency pegs. But the capital had begun to move back in anticipation of the coming Euro.

The 99.9% of fund managers lost their shirts on that capital shift because they were too busy bribing politicians and people in the IMF to look at the markets. They completely misjudged the world economy thinking like Marx and Keynes that they could control it. The shift in capital and attacking the SE Asian currencies led to the idea that all emerging markets were risky. With the Euro coming, the herd of little investors shifts their capital away from the funds heavily trading emerging markets. They were not “traders” but people who were engaged in trying to rig the game.

What they failed to understand was that the world economy is a financial sea of capital. When there is a high tide and capital is flowing in, they expect it will never end. The tide changes and you then move to low tide and the capital retreats outward. This was the first part of the liquidity crisis that would look at Russia as they did SE Asia emerging markets.

Consequently, when it is low tide, capital is retreating on a global level and that is when the liquidity crisis emerges. Thus, were the serious investors and pension funds behind to lose money in SE Asia, and they began unloading emerging markets elsewhere as well. Because all the hedge funds and bankers who try to rig the markets because they are not traders because they were all on the same trade of Russian debt when they tried to sell, there was NO BID. They began selling every position elsewhere which included the Japanese yen. It was a LIQUIDITY CRISIS so they needed to raise money to cover their losses and if Russian bonds were unsalable, all they could do was sell everything else. Thus, a LIQUIDITY crisis defies fundamentals because they are selling this ONLY because they need the money elsewhere. So the fundamental analysis provides no security for everything is connected in the global see of capital.

Edmon Safra of Republic National Bank put on a fancy dinner for the IMF. I was invited and it was all about trying to convince me that they had the IMF in their pocket and that would rescue the day. The pitch was Russia had all these nukes so no way would the IMF allow Russia to just collapse. This created a serious yet difficult situation for the Russian government. What was going on was that Russia had been running a huge budget deficit to pay for public services. They had borrowed $40 billion by issuing three-month ruble Treasury bills. This is what the “club” was bought for they were paying 30% interest to attract buyers. Bribing the IMF to prevent a default, they were all on this trade expecting free money. I refused to join and warned them that my computer projected this was going to collapse. They did not want to hear that. They were CONVINCED paying bribes would create that GUARANTEED TRADE.

The liquidity crisis this time is COMPLICATED. This time we do not have the traditional speculative boom which has produced inflation. This time we have shortages and there is NO WAY a central bank can prevent this type of inflation by raising interest rates. If anything, it will only propel the shortages so we have the ironic situation that economic decline is unfolding into 2023, but the shortages will get worse causing even higher inflation ahead.

Hence, capital is retreating out of confusion creating a period of low tide. But the standard impact is DEFLATION but that means demand is declining relative to supply. Now we have a decline in supply because of the regulations and war. Consequently, prices will rise even in a recession because it is a shortage of supply, not a decline in demand. It is this lack of understanding that is creating the liquity crisis.

As far as people taking my explanations, it is impossible to reach such conclusions unless you lived there and participated in those events.

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22 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
May 18, 2022 6:50 am

I am pondering if the supply driven inflation is deliberate to offset debt driven deflation. I don’t see where monetary inflation has significant vectors into the real economy, but just adds to the confusion.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
May 18, 2022 8:07 am

Referring to price fluctuations based on supply and demand as “inflation” adds to confusion.

Rob
Rob
  Anonymous
May 18, 2022 9:55 am

It is the digital ID that the central banks want so that only those who are within their system get to buy and sell within their system that even Iran is playing into:

The last 8 years commenced on 10/31/21:

The Rapture of the Church is after the Tribulation

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
May 18, 2022 6:50 pm

it really shouldnt. if available money supply remains unchanged, demand remains unchanged, but supply contracts… price will go up. hold your variables constant and adjust one at a time to reveal the outcome. when you are sure of the outcome, try adjusting two and attempt to assess the reaction to the dynamics. if you get beyond 3 variables, it is probably too difficult to mentally visualize what happens, but next time someone speaks on the subject, this method will help.

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 18, 2022 7:27 am

I wish he were more specific as to which asset class the big money will be moving from.

I’m assuming emerging markets that can’t service debt due to a rising dollar.

The Dollar will rise at the same time while prices will soar due to less supply. And yet foreigners need the dollars to service their dollar denominated loans. Not to mention buy oil and food.

m
m
  Anonymous
May 18, 2022 2:08 pm

Foreigners have the option to default [on their dollar denominated loans.]
And the economic cost to them, after a potential default, is getting smaller by the week.

I now see the wanton destruction of the European economy [through sanctions demanded by the US] as the first sign of the true and final end game of the US Dollar:
Let the morons flee into the “safety” of the dollar – one last time!

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
May 18, 2022 7:29 am

Blah, blah blah…what is going to happen to the stock market, jobs, housing and BITCOIN?

m
m
  Glock-N-Load
May 18, 2022 2:09 pm

They will all hit new highs, if denominated in dollars!

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 18, 2022 7:37 am

Sounds like the inevitable 401(k)O is at the doorstep, and not even multiple ‘Plunge Protection Teams’ will be able to put Humpty Dumpty together again.

daddy Joe
daddy Joe
  Anonymous
May 18, 2022 1:42 pm

Anon, Yes it’s like this: 1995, 401-K; 1998, 201-K; 2008, 101-K, 2023, 01-K. That’s what repeated liquidity crises do. Take some money out now or kiss it goodbye.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 18, 2022 7:41 am

It would be unreasonable to think that the outright siezure of 401K’s and other retirement accounts isn’t in the offing- for the greater good.

Ghost
Ghost
  hardscrabble farmer
May 18, 2022 8:44 am

My husband is a retired federal contractor with an IAM Pension for which he took “early” retirement at 15 years post USAF career.

He gets letters twice a year updating him on the critical status the pension funds face if more federal contracts move into non-union (right-to-work) states.

This year the letter informed him early retirements were no longer available to union members… they must work until they are 65 to collect, I think. Anyway, we both believe the IAM and any other union pensions promised on Collective Bargaining Agreements negotiated on Federal Contracts will be bailed out by the federal government as part of the game of “pass-through” the unions play with federal money.

At some point, they will steal the money in my husband’s 401K in order to pay his military retirement and union pension.

I withdrew all my cash in 2011, paid a big penalty and bought a little piece of ground in the middle of podunk.

GNL
GNL
  Ghost
May 18, 2022 9:08 am

I couldn’t care less about any funding problems related to pensions funded by the taxpayers. All government paid individuals, including politicians, have to face the same issues the general population faces. It’s a very large part of getting back to equality. I know that’s a dirty word but, seriously, the problem is privilege backstopped by the tax donkeys.

GNL
GNL
  Ghost
May 18, 2022 9:12 am

If my 401k is taken, I sure as shit want all pensions taken as well.

Joe Blow
Joe Blow
  GNL
May 18, 2022 11:58 am

If my 401K is taken, there’ll be hell to pay.

Ghost
Ghost
  Joe Blow
May 18, 2022 12:03 pm

Well, it is the demons in hell that want your money anyway, so pay them they will!

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Joe Blow
May 18, 2022 2:37 pm

probably won’t be able to afford paying for it.

Ghost
Ghost
  GNL
May 18, 2022 12:03 pm

I bet the union pension funds will be the last ones to stop. Just a side bet, but the Union hold on the Bureau of Labor is tight.

bug
bug
  Ghost
May 18, 2022 5:46 pm

Your “401K” is simply a privilege of the tax code. Same as 403B’s, IRA’s, etc. Social Security is also a privilege (gift). There is no ownership right in SS.

You can be damn sure that they will sweep everything into a gov’t fund (filled with IOU’s) in order to save SS, public sector pensions, union pensions, and everything else.

They will tell you that it is not fair that the “Fortunate Few” can retire, while those who relied on gov’t, union, and corporate promises get screwed.

Only non-pension assets will be safe…you know…the kind that rich people have…

m
m
  hardscrabble farmer
May 18, 2022 2:12 pm

17% real consumer inflation thinks that’s pointless.

Perfect Stranger
Perfect Stranger
May 18, 2022 7:58 am

Where there’s smoke there’s fire.

Martin Armstrong appears to be a slime bag.

Thus it may be prudent to take anything he writes with a grain of salt.

m
m
  Perfect Stranger
May 18, 2022 2:13 pm

Feel free to point us to someone who gives better advice.