Tag Archive: Basic Reports
Directive 10-289, Report 25 Aug
Everyone must ask himself the question. Do you want the world to move to an honest money system, or do you just want gold to go up (we italicize discussion of apparent moves in gold, because it’s the dollar that’s moving down—not gold going up—but we sometimes frame it in mainstream terms).
Read More »
Read More »
Deflation Is Everywhere—If You Know Where to Look, Report 18 Aug
At a shopping mall recently, we observed an interesting deal at Sketchers. If you buy two pairs of shoes, the second is 30% off. Sketchers has long offered deals like this (sometimes 50% off). This is a sign of deflation. Regular readers know to wait for the punchline. Manufacturer Gives Away Its Margins
Read More »
Read More »
The Economic Singularity, Report 11 Aug
We have recently written several essays about the fallacious concept of Gross Domestic Product. Among GDP’s several fatal flaws, it goes up when capital is converted to consumer goods, when seed corn is served at the feast. So we proposed—and originally dismissed—the idea of a national balance sheet.
Read More »
Read More »
I Know Usury When I See It, Report 4 Aug
“I know it, when I see it.” This phrase was first used by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, in a case of obscenity. Instead of defining it—we would think that this would be a requirement for a law, which is of course backed by threat of imprisonment—he resorted to what might be called Begging Common Sense. It’s just common sense, it’s easy-peasy, there’s no need to define the term…
Read More »
Read More »
Obvious Capital Consumption, Report 28 Jul
We have spilled many electrons on the topic of capital consumption. Still, this is a very abstract topic and we think many people still struggle to picture what it means. Thus, the inspiration for this week’s essay. Suppose a young man, Early Enterprise, inherits a car from his grandfather. Early decides to drive for Uber to earn a living. Being enterprising, he is up at dawn and drives all day.
Read More »
Read More »
The Fake Economy, Report 21 Jul
Folks in the liberty movement often say that the economy is fake. But this does not persuade anyone. It’s just preaching to the choir! We hope that this series on GDP provides more effective ammunition to argue with the Left-Right-Wall-Street-Main-Street-Capitalists-Socialists.
Read More »
Read More »
How to Fix GDP, Report 14 Jul
Last week, we looked at the idea of a national balance sheet, as a better way to measure the economy than GDP (which is production + destruction). The national balance sheet would take into account both assets and liabilities. If we take on another $1,000,000 debt to buy a $1,000,000 asset, then we have not added any equity.
Read More »
Read More »
More Squeeze, Less Juice, Report 7 Jul
We have been writing on the flaws in GDP: that it is no measure of the economy, because it looks only at cash and not the balance sheet, and that there are positive feedback loops.
“OK, Mr. Smarty Pants,” you’re thinking (yes, we know you’re thinking this), “if GDP is not a good measure of the economy, then what is?!”
Read More »
Read More »
GDP Begets More GDP (Positive Feedback), Report 30 June
Last week, we discussed the fundamental flaw in GDP. GDP is a perfect tool for central planning tools. But for measuring the economy, not so much. This is because it looks only at cash revenues. It does not look at the balance sheet. It does not take into account capital consumption or debt accumulation. Any Keynesian fool can add to GDP by borrowing to spend. But that is not economic growth.
Read More »
Read More »
What Gets Measures Gets Improved, Report 23 June
Let’s start with Frederic Bastiat’s 170-year old parable of the broken window. A shopkeeper has a broken window. The shopkeeper is, of course, upset at the loss of six francs (0.06oz gold, or about $75). Bastiat discusses a then-popular facile argument: the glass guy is making money (to which all we can say is, “plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose”).
Read More »
Read More »
The Elephant in the Gold Room, Report 16 June
We will start this off with a pet peeve. Too often, one is reading something about gold. It starts off well enough, discussing problems with the dollar or the bond market or a real estate bubble… and them bam! Buy gold because the dollar is gonna be worthless! That number again is 1-800-BUY-GOLD or we have another 1-800-GOT-GOLD in case the lines on the first number are busy!
Read More »
Read More »
Irredeemable Currency Is a Roach Motel, Report 9 June
In what has become a four-part series, we are looking at the monetary science of China’s potential strategy to nuke the Treasury bond market. In Part I, we gave a list of reasons why selling dollars would hurt China. In Part II we showed that interest rates, being that the dollar is irredeemable, are not subject to bond vigilantes.
Read More »
Read More »
Dollar Supply Creates Dollar Demand, Report 2 June
We have been discussing the impossibility of China nuking the Treasury bond market. We covered a list of challenges China would face. Then last week we showed that there cannot be such a thing as a bond vigilante in an irredeemable currency. Now we want to explore a different path to the same conclusion that China cannot nuke the Treasury bond market.
Read More »
Read More »
The Crime of ‘33, Report 27 May
Last week, we wrote about the impossibility of China nuking the Treasury bond market. Really, this is not about China but mostly about the nature of the dollar and the structure of the monetary system. We showed that there are a whole host of problems with the idea of selling a trillion dollars of Treasurys: Yuan holders are selling yuan to buy dollars, PBOC can’t squander its dollar reserves If it doesn’t buy another currency, it merely tightens...
Read More »
Read More »
China’s Nuclear Option to Sell US Treasurys, Report 19 May
There is a drumbeat pounding on a monetary issue, which is now rising into a crescendo. The issue is: China might sell its holdings of Treasury bonds—well over $1 trillion—and crash the Treasury bond market. Since the interest rate is inverse to the bond price, a crash of the price would be a skyrocket of the rate. The US government would face spiraling costs of servicing its debt, and quickly collapse into bankruptcy.
Read More »
Read More »
The Monetary Cause of Lower Prices, Report 12 May
We have deviated, these past several weeks, from matters monetary. We have written a lot about a nonmonetary driver of higher prices—mandatory useless ingredients. The government forces businesses to put ingredients into their products that consumers don’t know about, and don’t want. These useless ingredients, such as ADA-compliant bathrooms and supply chain tracking, add a lot to the price of every good.
Read More »
Read More »
Nonmonetary Cause of Lower Prices, Report 5 May
Over the past several weeks, we have debunked the idea that purchasing power—i.e. what a dollar can buy—is intrinsic to the currency itself. We have discussed a large non-monetary force that drives up prices. Governments at every level force producers to add useless ingredients, via regulation, taxation, labor law, environmentalism, etc.
Read More »
Read More »
Is Keith Weiner an Iconoclast? Report 28 Apr
We have a postscript to our ongoing discussion of inflation. A reader pointed out that Levis 501 jeans are $39.19 on Amazon (in Keith’s size—Amazon advertises prices as low as $16.31, which we assume is for either a very small size that uses less fabric, or an odd size that isn’t selling). Think of the enormity of this. The jeans were $50 in 1983. After 36 years of relentless inflation (or hot air about inflation), the price is down to $39.31. Down...
Read More »
Read More »
The Two Faces of Inflation, Report 22 Apr
We have a postscript to last week’s article. We said that rising prices today are not due to the dollar going down. It’s not that the dollar buys less. It’s that producers are forced to include more and more ingredients, which are not only useless to the consumer. But even invisible to the consumer. For example, dairy producers must provide ADA-compliant bathrooms to their employees.
Read More »
Read More »
New Inflation Indicator, Report 14 Apr
Last week, we wrote that regulations, taxes, environmental compliance, and fear of lawsuits forces companies to put useless ingredients into their products. We said: “For example, milk comes from the ingredients of: land, cows, ranch labor, dairy labor, dairy capital equipment, distribution labor, distribution capital, and consumable containers.”
Read More »
Read More »
Receive a Daily Mail from this Blog
Live Currency Cross Rates
On Swiss National Bank
-
USD/CHF Price Forecast: Reaches overbought levels
2 days ago -
SNB Sight Deposits: increased by 6.9 billion francs compared to the previous week
2 days ago -
EUR/CHF Price Forecast: Attempting a bearish breakout from a Triangle pattern
5 days ago -
USD/CHF edges higher above 0.8700 amid renewed US Dollar demand
9 days ago -
USD/CHF Price Prediction: Potential Bull Flag pattern forming
10 days ago
Main SNB Background Info
-
SNB Sight Deposits: increased by 6.9 billion francs compared to the previous week
2 days ago -
The Secret History Of The Banking Crisis
2017-08-14 -
SNB Balance Sheet Now Over 100 percent GDP
2016-08-29 -
The relationship between CHF and gold
2016-07-23 -
CHF Price Movements: Correlations between CHF and the German Economy
2016-07-22
Featured and recent
-
Ethereum: Analyst rechnet nach Trump-Sieg mit hohem Kursziel – Widerstandsmarke überwunden
-
Kryptowährungen-Umfrage: Händler-Akzeptanz gegenüber Bitcoin wird bis 2025 massiv zulegen
-
Depot Vergleich 2024: Wir haben 30 Online-Broker getestet! | Die besten Wertpapier- & Aktiendepots
-
Trump: Die Konsequenzen.
-
Bessere Rendite mit ELTIFs? Private Equity für Dein Depot
-
🤔 GENKAP reicht nicht für Rente?
-
Despite Its Oil Wealth, Nigeria Is an Economic Basket Case
-
Political Bias in Academia
-
Eklat auf Parteitag der Grünen!
-
Der clevere Trick fürs smarte Budgetieren
More from this category
- Gold Outlook 2024 Brief
12 Mar 2024
- Silver Fever, or Silver Fading?
16 Sep 2022
- Silver Update: Scarcity Gets More Extreme
5 Sep 2022
- The Silver Phoenix Market
2 Sep 2022
- Buy Gold, Because…
11 Aug 2022
- What the Heck Is Happening to Silver?!
20 Jul 2022
- Rare Gold-Silver Crystal Sighting
8 Jul 2022
- Will Interest Rate Hikes Fix Inflation?
19 Jun 2022
- The Silver Chart THEY Don’t Want You to See!
16 May 2022
- Forensic Analysis of Fed Action on Silver Price
9 May 2022
- Time for a Silver Trade?
4 May 2022
- Oil, the Ruble and Gold Walk into a Bar…Part III
12 Apr 2022
- Oil, the Ruble, and Gold Walk into a Bar…
5 Apr 2022
- Human Action in the Silver Market
29 Mar 2022
- This is Not The Silver Breakout You’re Looking For!
10 Mar 2022
- Inflation and Gold: What Gives?
21 Dec 2021
- What’s In Your Loan?
23 Nov 2021
- Perversity Thy Name is Dollar
16 Nov 2021
- Rising Fundamentals of Gold and Silver
10 Nov 2021
- Why a Yield on Gold Matters
3 Nov 2021