Posted on 08/27/2019 7:00:12 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Over $17 trillion dollars worth of global debt is now earning an interest rate below 0%. Negative interest rates are infecting developed countries such as Germany, Switzerland and Japan. I read an article recently that said there are negative interest rate mortgages available in Denmark. Just trying to think about negative interest rates makes ones head explode.
From a practical perspective, the mechanics of negative interest rates are clear enough. The borrower guarantees to pay, say, $1000 in a year. The lender then agrees to give the borrower $1020 (for a negative 2% yield) for the guaranteed payment. Voila, negative interest! You might point out that the lender would be better off just holding onto the cash, but thats another story. A negative interest rate mortgage is even more cool. Each payment the borrower makes on the mortgage reduces the principal balance by more than the amount of the mortgage payment. How cool is that?
What has happened to interest rates that they are so low for so long? What does it mean for the economy in the United States and elsewhere? I certainly do not know, nor does anyone else. Interest rates are a price signal in the economy; the price of postponing consumption to a later period. Persistently low interest rates are a puzzle to economists and policymakers. Standard economic theory would expect that interest rates should be high enough to convince consumers to save something and not spend it all today and low enough that businesses can borrow and invest and still make a profit. In any case, economic theory does not expect negative interest rates.
Who determines what the level of interest rates should be? In a reasonably free economy with properly functioning financial markets, we do. That is, the interest rate is determined by the interaction of borrowers and lenders trying to do business together. If there are more borrowers seeking funds than lenders (i.e., savers) willing to lend them funds, then interest rates will increase. Borrowers compete for the scarce funds by offering to pay higher interest on the loans. This attracts more lenders and discourages some potential borrowers until the interest rate finally clears the market (i.e., demand for funds from borrowers is equal to the supply of funds from lenders). The reverse situation occurs when there are more lenders than there are borrowers.
In that case, lenders compete to attract the scarce borrowers by lowering the rate they require to make the loan. Falling rates attract more borrowers and deter potential lenders, until the interest rate clears the market (demand equals supply). Simple, right?
Well, not so much. You see, since the end of the gold-is-money era in 1971, central banks have played an increasingly active role in the manipulation of money and interest rates. The central bank for the United States is the Federal Reserve Bank. There are similar central banks in other countries. Here is how it works in central-bank-controlled financial markets:
"If the Fed (i.e., the central bank) wants to increase economic activity, it injects money into the economy. (How the central bank injects money is not our focus today, but it does matter.) Easy money lowers interest rates and attracts more borrowers and demand for loans thereby creating more economic activity. If the central bank wants to dampen economic activity, it drains money out of the economy (again, how is not our focus today). Tight money raises interest rates and reduces demand for loans thereby reducing economic activity."
Since the era of central bank control over money began for earnest in 1971, the level of interest rates has become increasingly separated from the wisdom of economic markets and increasingly controlled by the wisdom of a handful of technicians, experts in the ways of central banking. Fortunately, these technicians are immune from political pressures so they are free to act according to their economic models, not according to political wishes. (In case you missed it, the last sentence is firmly tongue in cheek.)
At least in the short run, low interest rates are a boon to debt-burdened governments and other debtors in that low rates keep the cost of debt down. (That is one reason President Trump has made no secret of the fact that he is a low interest rate guy.) If interest rates ever return to a normal level, watch out! Government budgets will be whacked hard to pay for the higher cost of interest on the government debt.
The interventions of central banks (especially the Fed, The European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan) have become very active since the financial crash of 2008 and there is no end in sight. The Fed, under Chairman Powell, made a good faith effort over the last two years to get out of the business of suppressing interest rates. But the global efforts of the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan were in the opposite direction, further suppressing interest rates, and putting the Fed in an untenable situation. Last month the Fed responded by cutting interest rates and signaling that more cuts might be coming. Despite eleven years of economic growth, we are back to a world of low interest rates in the United States and negative interest rates in much of the developed world.
Where do we go from here? No one really knows. The hyperactivity of central banks has had some long-term damaging influences. Government debt has ballooned out of control, without the discipline of realistic interest rates to temper political ambitions. Corporate debt has also climbed to new heights, as low interest rates encourage companies to borrow cheap funds and buyback their own stocks. The world has learned how to manipulate fiat money for short term advantages. With the quantitative-easing cat out of the bag, populist politicians like Bernie Sanders can credibly call for government to just print money to finance pie-in-the-sky Socialist dreams. If America chooses the Socialist path, despite a century of misery for people under socialism, central bank induced low interest rates will be partly to blame.
It will be a long and difficult road back to the inevitable reality that the world is not flat, and that true purchasing power represented by money is earned and not just printed or created out of thin air. In the meantime, it might not be a bad idea to buy a little gold.
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Dr. Gordon Boronow is a professor at Nyack College.
Im no economist but it seems to me once they pass a certain threshold of volume on negative interest rates a Depression is pretty much inevitable.
There is no safe harbor in the coming storm............
If you go the bank with cash and have to pay them to hold it for you, you may thus infer certain truths about just how much said cash is really worth. :)
RE: There is no safe harbor in the coming storm............
Have a look at this ETF symbol: IAU
You deposit $100 and a year later, you may take it out as cash, but they withhold the amount as “handling fees”, which amounts to “negative interest”, and you net only $98.
I have come up against this sort of thing before, when banks do not want to deal with small accounts.
Now they are just doing it with larger and larger accounts.
That old mattress is looking pretty darned good now.
They take money from your account per the negative rate.
One lesson from 2008, I believe, is that there really is no "precipice" over which the financial system will fall and if there is or was, there is almost no way to bet on it where the counterparty with whom you place your bet will be around so that you can collect on it.
The second lesson from 2008 is that the most powerful forces in the world will do everything they can to stave off any such precipice. It's not like they will freeze like deer in headlights. They have no conception that you or I might have as to the synthetic nature nor unreality of whatever they will create in their attempts to prevent an imagined or feared financial apocalypse.
Which is why I have lessened the degree to which I worry about it. True, I have no kids, so there is no future I have to fear. If I did, I don't know if I would be qable to be cavalier.
If I could get even a 5% return on my money, very doable historically, I could retire tomorrow. Its a struggle to squeeze out a 2% percent return....
Neither the article nor the posts so far don’t say why you shouldn’t just hold the money. Is it because if you hold it yourself it might be stolen? Then why not put it into your safe deposit box?
Buying gold is the only worthwhile thing this guy said. What he should have said is:
1. The entire objective of the Federal Reserve bank is to redistribute wealth from the people of the United States to banks and corporations.
2. The reason for $25 trillion in debt is the fact that we let a private bank create our currency out of thin air and then loan it to us at interest. Our debt is not repayable because to repay it we borrow more dollars at interest. Its a vicious circle. Trying to pay debt with debt does not work.
3. The US Treasury department should be issuing our debt/currency at zero percent. Cutting the Fed out of the loop. Then we would be paying back debt with equity.
I thought gold would hit 1600 but I thought some time in mid 2020.
Heck, it was over 1550 for a while the past week!
I have personally known people who have had substantial amounts confiscated from their safe deposit boxes by government agents with guns.
It sure looked to me like the only crime was "a little person with too much money."
They would have been far better off with the money somewhere else.
“NAV Total Return as of Aug 26, 2019 YTD: 17.10% YTD (year to date) is a period, starting from the beginning of the current calendar year, and continuing up to the present day. “
“If I could get 5% return on my money”
Tax free municipal bonds pay 5%-6%. Tax free. Always have.
Negative interest rates? How does that work?
Banks steal from you. Same in the positive interest rates too : )
Negative interest rates are why they want to outlaw cash.
It makes stealing your money easier.
Serious question: in the event of a catastrophic economic meltdown, what good would gold be? How would you spend or otherwise use it? Seems to me alcohol, smokes, and ammunition would be better currency.
Where? In Cyprus?
Regards,
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