first majestic silver

Stories for Children: The US Economic Fairytale

June 12, 2023

When Humpty Dumpty fell off the wall and took a big fall, “all the king’s horses and all the king’s men could not put Humpty-Dumpty together again.”

I see a similar fate for the US debt egg, whose cracks are just about, well… everywhere.

Cracks in the Debt Egg

The first obvious (but media ignored) signs of this breaking egg emerged in September of 2019, when the TBTF banks no longer trusted each other’s collateral and the repo markets spiked overnight, prompting Uncle Fed to be the lender of last resort to its spoiled little banking nephews.

This required hundreds and hundreds of billions in mouse-clicked liquidity.

But then again, what does a billion or trillion even mean anymore to a mouse-clicker and $31+T (and growing) Public debt?

Numbers, like debts, have effectively become abstractions in what I previously described as a “banalization of debt.”

Since the repo crisis, as Uncle Sam’s twin deficits expanded at a fairytale pace alongside rising rate policies which neutered the price of sovereign bonds and hence the balance sheets and the life-cycles of regional banks, the Humpty-Dumpty US arrived at yet another climatic debt-ceiling reality-check.

Can-Kicking the Breaking Egg

As predicted, this “crisis” was “solved” by a predictable can-kicking of its debt responsibilities (and reality-checks) into a post-election-cycle.

How politically convenient.

In fact, political convenience at the expense of economic common sense or fiscal accountability is the very hallmark of our math-blind yet power-smug “representatives” in DC.

For those paying attention, however, the US not only voted past it’s $31.4T debt ceiling, it removed/suspended that ceiling all together.

This effectively allows the children in DC to borrow and spend without limit until 2025.

In short: The Humpty-Dumpty debt egg is getting fatter and fatter, and wobbling on the wall.

How a Dollar-Thirsty Humpty-Dumpty Wobbles

Having artificially “solved” (postponed) an otherwise very real/toxic debt crisis, the post-debt ceiling policy makers will now have to decide where the much-needed liquidity will come from to keep Humpty Dumpty alive, as debt (paid for with synthetic liquidity) is the only thing keeping him from a fall.

Re-Filling an Empty Treasury—Complex Games, with No Winners

Toward this end, the question is now about how much the US Treasury is willing to “liquify” (refill) a very thirsty Treasury General Account (TGA), which has been the invisible source of funding to offset the Fed’s mid-2022 policy of so-called balance sheet “tightening”?

Whenever Powell grabs headlines for “tightening” liquidity, the TGA quietly provides more of the same behind a TGA curtain of complexity.

But now that TGA needs a re-fill of USDs to continue this charade of musical-dollar-chairs.

Stated simply, there is a great big “sucking sound” coming from the TGA, which is thirsty, very thirsty for USDs.

Where Will the “Money” Come From?

Should the US Treasury make a generous liquidity injection into the TGA from bank reserves, this will dry up other corners of a breaking US system equally thirsty for similar injections of USDs.

In short: This liquidity option is dangerous and unlikely.

Alternatively, however, the Fed’s Reverse Repo liquidity water-cannon could spray the TGA with the necessary liquidity (USDs) to buy more of Uncle Sam’s IOUs and thus buy the TGA’s borrow-and-spend system more time rather than solutions.

In the past, the banks were buyers of these IOUs, but we all know how well that worked for them in 2023…

So, once again, and amidst all this deliberate DC confusion, the simple question remains: Who will buy the IOUs (Treasury Bills) needed to keep Humpty Dumpty alive?

The US Treasury’s bank reserves? The Fed’s Reverse Repo Program? The UST-weary banks? The Money Market Funds?

Yes, The Bond Market Is Still the Thing

To see through this maze more clearly, one must always look at the bond market, however “boring.”

If the Fed keeps raising rates and tightening its balance sheet, those T-Bills needed to keep Humpty Dumpty on the wall will fall in price and hence rise in yields, becoming far more expensive for Uncle Sam to repay?

This is a problem.

Yellen In a Corner and Waking to Reality?

But perhaps far more important, and far less discussed or understood, is Yellen’s preference to issue IOUs to refill the TGA from the short end of the duration spectrum (i.e., short-term T-Bills) rather than longer-term UST bonds.

But would it not be cheaper for Uncle Sam to issue longer-term bonds at lower yields (interest expense) to continue his debt orgy of extend and pretend?

In short: What the heck is going on behind the scenes of Yellen’s Treasury Department?

Yellen, many argue, is still under the illusion that the UST market in general, and the US T-Bill market in particular, is the safest, most loved and hence most liquid IOU in the world.

But even Yellen can not have ignored the simple fact that a post-sanction world of weaponized dollars is dumping (rather than buying) those IOUs and stacking gold instead…

Perhaps Yellen is now desperately aware that to keep the debt Humpty Dumpty egg alive, she’ll now have to issue more and more “yield-sexy” (but harder-to-repay) T-Bills to buy time in a debt-soaked nation that is running out of time?

But far more ominously, perhaps Yellen is slowly coming to a sober conclusion which the markets and mathematical realists understood long before the fork-tongued policy makers, namely: Uncle Sam’s debt cancer is simply too fatal to cure with longer-duration bonds—or at some point, any bonds at all.

For now, a desperate Yellen has no choice but the last resort of issuing more of the sacred yet more expensive T-Bills to keep the yield-curve from inverting to levels so grotesque that the sound of Humpty Dumpty’s fall would echo through eternity.

Back to Basics: The Fed as Buyer/Lender/Spender of Last Resort

But the question still remains: Who will buy these T-Bills/IOUs at levels (trillion-dollar) necessary to cushion Humpty-Dumpty’s fall?

My opinion, and for now, it is only an opinion (one based on flow probabilities, the math of interest expense Realpolitik, the reality of UST-weary banks and the historical lessons of nations over their skis in debt) is that the ultimate buyer of Uncle Sam’s debt will be the Fed itself.

In short, and as warned since quantitative tightening began in earnest in 2022, I still see an unavoidable and inevitable pivot to either open QE or hidden repo/reverse repo QE once Powell’s “higher-for-longer” efforts to become Volcker-reborn are won at the expense of Humpty Dumpty’s demise.

Stated otherwise: Once the tightening and rate hiking breaks the national economy into a dis-inflationary or even deflationary spiral, the thirst for more mouse-clicked and inflationary trillions will be obvious.

Save the System or the Currency?

This thirst will force the system into a stagflationary “solution” of more fake, debased money in which the currency is sacrificed to save an otherwise unworthy, rigged and broken “system.”

I’ll say it again: In the end, the last bubble to “pop” is always the currency.

From Humpty Dumpty to Gold

It’s no secret that gold is insurance for currencies already dying.

Regardless of the USD’s relative (but ever-weakening) strength/hegemony, its (and other currencies’) inherent purchasing power when measured against gold has fallen by greater than 98% since Nixon closed the gold window in 1971.

Many can, will and do anxiously track and ask about the daily gold price, a price, which, is ironically measured in increasingly worthless fiat currencies.

This price fixation is especially true (and understandable) of speculators and traders.

But we are gold investors and wealth preservers. As such, our perspective, bias and convictions are comfortably patient and far-sighted.

We feel that measuring gold, as well as one’s own wealth, in such fiat fantasy is a dangerous and consensus-driven habit, and thus we measure wealth in ounces and grams not euros, dollars, pesos etc.

Gold, unlike the various US bonds discussed above, are of infinite duration and finite supply.

This so-called “pet rock” (of which central banks just bought over 1100 tons in 2022) serves as a constant as the USD races and scatters about the repo, Eurodollar and derivative markets in a complex, and often sexy madness which hides the fact that it is just a player in a familiar and losing game in which all fiat money reverts to its zero mean.

From Humpty Dumpty to the Big Bad Wolf

To the many who cannot conceive that tomorrow will be different than yesterday, or that the USA and its USD are not immortal, such statements are castigated as “sensational.”

If, however, one steps back and objectively observes the slow but steady history of the Greenback, it becomes undeniable that gold never really rises, currencies just fall.

Like the fable of the Three Little Piggies, there will always be those who prefer building their homes of straw and mud to have more time to enjoy the seductive call of rising asset bubbles and pet rock jokes.

After all, who can deny the high-times (and record-breaking wealth inequality) handed to us by years of an asset-inflating yet price-discovery-destroying and capitalism-killing central bank whose decades of fake liquidity and unprecedented debt have created an artificial sense of endless pleasure.

I mean, this was pretty fun, no?

But that Big Bad Wolf of rising debt levels and disingenuous policy makers is lurking beyond the tree line and occasionally smiling at the happy little piggies playing (or politicking) in the distance.

Soon, the debt wolf will stand, stretch and roll his mighty neck.

Then he will slowly trot, then cantor and finally gallop toward the straw and mud huts, and “he will huff, and he will puff and then blow those houses (and Humpty Dumpty) down.”

We feel, however, that the little piggy who built his financial house of bricks rather than straw is very much like those few nations, enterprises and individuals (the 0.5%) who have been quietly purchasing physical gold.

When the debt wolf comes, only the strongest houses will thrive—and it’s not always in the “houses” you’d expect.

*********

Matt began his finance career as a transactional attorney before launching his first hedge fund during the NASDAQ bubble of 1999-2001

Thereafter, he began investing his own and other HNW family funds into alternative investment vehicles while operating as a General Counsel, CIO and later Managing Director of a single and multi-family office. Matthew worked closely as well with Morgan Stanley’s hedge fund platform in building a multi-strat/multi-manager fund to better manage risk in a market backdrop of extreme central bank intervention/support. The conviction that precious metals provides the most reliable and longer-term protection against potential systemic risk led Matt to join VON GREYERZ.

The author of the Amazon No#1 Release, Rigged to Fail, Matt is fluent in French, German and English; he is a graduate of Brown (BA), Harvard (MA) and the University of Michigan (JD). His widely respected reports on macro conditions and the changing behaviour of risk assets are published regularly at SignalsMatter.com.


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