Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
anthonyspenMember
When I said collapse to begin with, I was referring to the bank itself not the economy in general. To protect themselves, I meant they could buy a ton of gold right before the price sky-rocketed. Then it wouldn’t matter if they unleashed a torrent of dollars, they would be protected and be able to ride the storm without collapsing the institution.
anthonyspenMemberAwesome info, Thank you!
anthonyspenMember@Sterling…Haven’t there already been a number of countries that have shown quite a resilience to the US dollar? The Yen, Australian and NZ dollar have all gone up since 2008. The Swiss Franc was also very strong, yet these countries continue to debase their currencies as well. Why? Would we go to war with a country that deliberately kept their currency strong?
anthonyspenMember@Porphyrogentitus…Yeah, it’s probably not a coincidence the two mirror each other. I bet they have just enough in reserve to prevent a collapse in the event of hyperinflation, or will use the reserves to buy commodities right before the crash does happen (assuming they know exactly what’s going on at the Fed). Wouldn’t it be nice to have the inside track
anthonyspenMemberThank you for the reply, Mr. Herbener. If I am understanding this correctly, there is a demand for dollars world wide and this is allowing the Fed to create so much money without any real immediate consequences. Many countries around the world (especially European) are worse off than the US and are putting their money into dollars (treasury bonds mostly?) because they think its safer than their own currency? This begs the question though, how long can it continue? Won’t all those dollars come home to roost at some point after these countries get their act together, or is this a trend that can continue forever because the Fed has the ability to create something from nothing and other central banks do not? I was recently listening to the latest Lew Rockwell podcast with Bill Haynes, and both agreed we are in an economic environment that is unprecedented. Again, I am asking a lot of questions, mostly because I am rather scatter brained on the subject.
The article you referred me to is interesting, but I don’t see how people making their money more liquid (larger checking account deposits) is a demand for more dollars. Isn’t it just a transfer of dollars from one account to another?
Thank you for taking the time to answer.
-
AuthorPosts