Is It Time To Face Music Over Inadvertent Debt/Inflation Trap?

 | Jul 29, 2021 10:51AM ET

What happens to a global economy after 10+ years of global central bank efforts to support a recovery attempt after a massive credit/debt collapse originates from a prior credit/debt housing bubble? What happens to global economies when they become addicted to easy money policies and central bank activities that support greater and greater risk-taking? What is the end result of these actions after more than 10+ years of excess and central bank support for the markets?

Let's play this out a bit to think about how the current market environment may be similar to what happened in the mid/late 1990s and see if we can come to any real conclusions. Remember, we are using our research and technical analysis skills to play a “what if” scenario in this research article. Our current trading systems have not warned us of any major bearish price trends of price collapses that may take place. Our systems are still trading the U.S. markets based on current market trends. This research is completely speculative in the sense that we are trying to identify “what if” scenarios based on events in the recent past.

One thing that our research team has been discussing over the past 8+ months, since shortly after the U.S. elections in November 2020, is the idea that the new President/US Federal Reserve may engage in policies that are initially perceived as supportive of the global markets in a post-COVID world – yet may engage in very dangerous end results. An example of this is the continued stimulus efforts for a world that has somewhat moved beyond the initial COVID shock and has transitioned into a new form of economic activity. Another example would be the Fed continuing to act in a manner to support the equities market while inflation and consumer activity have recently shown extreme pricing/buying activities.

One idea that my research team suggested is this activity may be similar to President Ronald Reagan's Star-Wars project in how Reagan was able to prompt a spending excess between the U.S. and Russia, which eventually broke the Russian economy. The process between that event and what is happening right now are strangely similar.

The Strange Outcome Of Global Central Bank Policies: The U.S. Is The Clear Winner

The U.S. and many foreign central banks have pushed the envelope of easy money policies over the past 8+ years by continuing to run programs to support a stronger economic outcome. The focus has been on creating an inflationary target to start a more traditional shift away from the ongoing easy money policies. Inadvertently, these global central banks may have created and supported one of the biggest asset shifts/bubbles in the past 50+ years.

The COVID-19 virus event may have actually pushed the U.S. Federal Reserve and foreign global central banks into an inadvertent process of creating a massive inflation trap at a time when the global economy and corporate world was banking on much more mild inflationary trends. The reflation trade that came after June 2020 is likely to have pushed assets, commodities, credit and debt cycles beyond any conceivable scope of reason, while putting unimaginable pressure on foreign central banks in Asia, South America, Africa and most of the emerging markets. The incredible rally in commodities, asset values (homes, stocks, U.S. equities and others) prompted capital to shift towards the strongest and most capable outcomes on the planet. This created a liquidity trap in many foreign markets where traders moved assets into U.S. equities, cryptos, U.S. ETFs and other assets, while shunning less dynamic and secure global assets.

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