These guys have a good handle on history and understanding history helps to understand where we are going.
When They Raid Your Retirement Funds
More Pension Plundering
Here is a little excerpt from Simon Black’s recent newsletter.
…while the government is busy stoking irrational fear, the real dangers go completely unnoticed by the public.
Namely, the new US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) is now weighing how they might ‘help’ manage the $19.4 trillion in US retirement savings.
The math is quite simple. The US government is $16.4 trillion in debt, and will be running $1+ trillion deficits for five years in a row. And the pool of retirement savings is irresistible.
We’ve talked about this for years; at some point, they’ll launch new regulations funneling a substantial portion of US retirement savings to ‘the safety and security of government bonds.’
The idea has been bandied about before in Washington, though this is the first time that a sitting agency chief has publicly announced the intention. According to CFPB director Richard Cordray, “[Overseeing retirement accounts] is one of the things we’ve been exploring and are interested in in terms of whether and what authority we have.”
From Argentina to Ireland, seizing pension and retirement accounts has been a popular tactic of insolvent governments since the start of the financial crisis. Why should the world’s largest debtor be any different?
Yes, there are evil men in the world who will occasionally prey on helpless, defenseless people. Yet aside from slipping in the shower, the far more prevalent danger is the consistent threat that an insolvent government poses to our opportunities, our liberties, and our savings.
Until tomorrow,
Simon Black
Senior Editor, SovereignMan.com
Government Pension Debt: $3 Trillion and Counting
This is a ticking time bomb about to go off.
How Governments Plunder Pension Plans
Notes from the Field
Date: February 21, 2012
Reporting From: London, England
[Editor's note: Professional money manager Tim Price is filling in for Simon today from London. His thoughts below on gold, bonds, and the false pretext of investing in equities is delightfully insightful.]
“No government has ever commanded the resources at the disposal of our ungodly Leviathan, which consumes about 25% of the product of the world’s richest country. It is driven by a voracious alliance of government’s own employees, and those who receive benefits from the state. At least 90 million Americans either depend directly on government handouts or jobs, and each private worker must support not only himself and his family, but also carry a government worker on his shoulders.”
-Tom Bethel, “Freedom and its Enemies,” June 1999.
Financial markets don’t really do the long term anymore, but if they did, they might spend less time drooling at the prospect of more monetary crack, and more time wondering who will be funding all the government debt that now towers above everyone further than the eye can see. CLSA’s Russell Napier (hat tip to Macro Advisors’ Filip Ruszkowski) recently pointed to an ominous development from the summer of 2011:
“..a terrible burden fell upon the people of the USA. For the first time in 15 years, those who had money (savers) began to fund their government, rather than the printers of money (central banks). This shift has already hurt private-sector growth and asset prices, and as federal debt to GDP reaches 100%, it will squeeze out private-sector activity. Structural moves to coerce markets into funding government have begun in Europe and will come to the USA too..”
The chart above confirms that US corporate profits have now reached record levels as a
percentage of GDP. They are unlikely to stay there. Napier suggests, perfectly logically, that when the government needs money to fund itself, it will target those constituents that actually have some. That is, in other words, wealthy individuals and corporations.
What will be awkward about this financial repression of the moneyed classes, if it comes (which it surely will), is the timing. Well, not just the timing, but the yields on offer consistent with that timing. With the benefit of hindsight it would have been no bad thing to be coerced into buying US Treasuries when they yielded, say, 16% (the chart below shows generic 10 year yields going back to 1979; source: Bloomberg). But now that they yield 2% or so (a negative real yield of 1% or so using official inflation data), well, who wants that? Answer: not foreign central banks, many of whom have stopped buying this yieldless junk.
But somebody will have to buy it. As bank-robbers and their public sector rivals, governments, know, if you need money, go where the money is. Napier points out that previous peaks in the corporate profit-to-GDP ratio were 1966, 1997 and 2006. Subsequent long-term returns from equities were uniformly poor. As he makes clear, there is a difference between central banks and the private sector when it comes to buying government debt.
Central banks can print money to finance their purchases, which makes them more or less wholly price-insensitive. But the private sector cannot print money – it will be forced to sell other assets to pay for the government debt it will soon be coerced into buying.
Perhaps some of those other assets will be stocks. Stocks will get smashed in any case, because the private sector will also have to get used to paying more tax. (The government will get its money one way or another.) More tax = lower net profits,
obviously. Tax paid by corporations is close to its average level of the past 30 years. More awkwardly, the federal debt to GDP ratio over the same period, Napier observes, has risen from 32% to 100%.
The UK faces a similar problem, which makes the current euphoria in FTSE-land just as difficult to rationalise. Absent QE, and given the potential for a rather messy bang emanating from Greece over the coming months, and accepting an economy facing dollops of austerity well into the future, should UK stock markets really be as euphoric as they currently are?
UK government bonds are comparably unattractive to their American cousins. The chart below (source: Bloomberg) shows generic 10 year Gilt yields over the past 20 years. Being forced to buy them at 10% might not have been so bad. Being bludgeoned into buying them at 2% will be a little more painful.
So how precisely will governments go about stealing savers’ money? The Dutch pensions regulator gave an indication of one possible wheeze back in February 2011 when it ordered the Stichting Pensioenfonds Vereenigde Glasfabrieken (bless you!) pension fund to sell its gold holdings (13% of the fund) on the premise that it was too risky.
In an NBER paper last year, Carmen Reinhart and M. Belen Sbrancia pointed the way. As their abstract states,
“Historically, periods of high indebtedness have been associated with a rising incidence of default or restructuring of public and private debts. A subtle type of debt restructuring takes the form of “financial repression”. Financial repression includes directed lending to government by captive domestic audiences (such as pension funds), explicit or implicit caps on interest rates, regulation of cross-border capital movements, and (generally) a tighter connection between governments and banks..
Low nominal interest rates help reduce debt servicing costs while a high incidence of
negative real interest rates liquidates or erodes the real value of government debt. Thus, financial repression is most successful in liquidating debts when accompanied by a steady dose of inflation.”
The UK government has already achieved partial control of directed lending given that it owns half of our banking system. (Not that it seems to know how to control its remuneration. But then it is practically a binding characteristic of governments to be half-assed about virtually everything.) Both of the Anglo-Saxon economies have also achieved saver theft status by the manipulation of interest rates. Next on the list will be a creeping abuse of those captive domestic audiences and, perhaps, regulation on capital controls.
Very few of these will actually be novelties. The US previously had Regulation Q, for example, which put a government-sanctioned limit on the interest rates available for savings deposits.
Indeed Reinhart and Sbrancia point out that the widespread use of such policies between 1945 and 1980 has been “collectively forgotten”. We have had half a century of increasingly free markets. In the official governmental version of reality, those markets became too free, and now require the firm hand of the state. Governments are unlikely to acknowledge the extent to which their own untenable borrowings laid the groundwork for the financial crisis.
Highly paid shills for the status quo on Wall Street have recently been wheeled out to observe the fundamental ugliness of western government bonds. They are correct. This is an asset class that has managed to defy the laws of economics in becoming ever more expensive even as its supply swells.
Their response has been to recommend piling into stocks instead. The logic here is not so
pristine. If Napier’s thesis is correct, the West faces a period of outright deflation, which will be deeply traumatic for exactly the sort of speculative stocks that have lately done so well.
Admittedly, the picture is confused, and prone to all sorts of political horseplay, as observers of the long-running euro zone farce can attest. Nevertheless, when faced with a) huge underlying uncertainties; b) structurally unsound banking and government finances; and c) central banks determinedly priming the monetary pumps, we conclude that the last free lunch in investment markets remains diversification.
G7 government bond markets are a waste of time (though you may end up being cattle-prodded into them regardless). But there are still investment grade sovereign markets offering positive real yields. Stock markets are partying like 1999. Which, in
many cases, it probably is. We would normally advise to enjoy the party but dance near the door.
This time round, we weren’t invited to the party – and we don’t mind in the slightest.
Tim Price
Director of Investment
PFP Wealth Management
The Pensions Dilemma
Here is a little history about how pension plans came into being and why this system is in trouble, deep trouble.
U.S. Treasury Raids Federal Employee Pension Funds to Cover Debts
There is a saying, “Desperate times call for desperate measures.” Roughly, it’s an expression that’s meant to be reassuring, conjuring up an image of a true statesman-like leader who is preparing to do whatever is necessary to lead the masses out of danger.
Of course, the expression doesn’t have the same connotation when applied to the Obama administration in its futile struggle to balance the nation’s books. Left to fend for itself by a hapless Congress that couldn’t agree on the color of red bricks, let alone pass a budget that actually curbed spending and lowered the national debt, the administration has taken to theft as a way to pay the country’s bills. Specifically,the Treasury Department is stealing cash from federal employees pension fundsso the government can obtain more credit to pay its debts.
Learn more:http://www.naturalnews.com/034762_treasury_federal_employees_pension_funds.html#ixzz1kiVSSdRh
We Have Made Promises We Cannot Keep
Baby Boomers Facing Retirement Crisis. By 2035 the social security system will be dead. You need your own plan, the ‘Alternative Pension Plan’.
10 Reasons Why Even Democrats, Liberals and Progressives are Choosing Ron Paul over Obama
10 reasons why even democrats, liberals and progressives are choosing Ron Paul over Obama. You will find some reasons very surprising and also learn why Ron Paul, the long shot, is gaining ground in the US Republican campaign. However, expect the media to play this down and push Ron Paul out of the lime light. If Ron Paul is not the chosen one, expect a possible third party candidacy as the Ron Paul Revolution revs up.
Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/034630_Ron_Paul_democrats_liberals.html#ixzz1k3UfH2gM
Companies Leaving Workers Without a Retirement
Mitt Romney RAIDED Pension Plans Of Companies and Left Workers WITHOUT Retirement! So, you cannot rely on company pensions either. You need an ‘Alternative Pension Plan’.
A World of Debt
Global governments are carrying more debt than ever and raising the question as to whether or not a second — and perhaps even more dangerous credit crisis — is inevitable. The clock is ticking and every second, the world takes on more debt. In 2001, global government debt totaled $18.2 trillion. Fast-forward a decade, and the figure now totals nearly $44 trillion, an increase of 140 percent (more than 9.0% a year).
CLICK HERE to read the whole story.