– Diversify, rebalance investments and prepare for interest rate
rises
– UK launches inquiry into household finances as £200bn debt pile
looms
– Centuries of data forewarn of rapid reversal from ultra low
interest rates
– 700-year average real interest rate in last 700 years is
4.78% (must see chart)
– Massive global debt bubble – over $217 trillion (see table)
– Global debt levels are building up to
a gigantic tidal wave
– Move to safe haven higher ground from coming tidal wave
Editor: Mark O’Byrne
Source: Bloomberg
Last week, the Bank of England opted to increase interest rates for the
first time in a decade. Since then alerts have been coming thick and fast for
Britons warning them to prepare for some tough financial times ahead.
The UK government has launched an inquiry into household debt levels amid
concerns of the impact of the Bank of England’s decision to raise rates. The
tiny 0.25% rise means households on variable interest rate mortgages are
expected to face about £1.8bn in additional interest payments whilst £465m
more will be owed on the likes of credit cards, car loans and overdrafts.
The 0.25% rise is arguably not much given it comes against backdrop
of record low rates and will have virtually no impact on any other rate.
However it comes at a time of high domestic debt levels, no real wage growth
and a global debt level of over $217 trillion.
Combined with low productivity across the developed world, experts are
beginning to wonder how the financial system (and the individuals within)
will cope.
After a decade of seeing negative real rates of interest many investors
will be quietly celebrating that they may be about to see a turnaround for
their savings. Many hope they will start being rewarded for their financial
prudence as opposed to the punishing saving conditions of the last decade.
In reality this will not be the case, at least for some time. Savers and
investors alike need to begin to prepare their portfolios for interest rate
rises against a backdrop of crisis-triggering debt levels and unproductive
economies.
Economies are junkies addicted to credit
Unsurprisingly, credit levels are equal to the increase in private
debt every year. Credit is when people spend money that isn’t their own but
instead borrow from banks. The bigger private debt levels are compared
to a country’s GDP, the more the economy is dependent on credit.
Economic growth becomes addicted to credit. Therefore, the bigger the
accumulated debt is when compared to GDP, the more likely it is an economic
crisis will happen when credit levels are reduced.
An increase in interest rates means a decrease in credit levels.
Especially in countries such as the US and UK where there has been no
increase in real wage rates and there is a generation unprepared for an
increase in the price of debt.
Consider the UK. When Mark Carney announced a decade-first increase in
interest rates it was by a meagre 0.25%. Panic hit the newspapers; how
would people with variable mortgages manage?
No one thought to ask, what are people who cannot manage a tiny increase
in the cost of debt doing being allowed to borrow in the first place?
Currently debt-to-GDP ratios in the UK are not quite at pre-crisis or
Great Depression levels. However they are fast approaching and they are at
those levels globally. This combined with rising levels of interest rates
makes for a tricky future and one that places savers and investors capital at
risk.
700 year data forewarns of sudden interest rate turnaround
According to Bank of England guest blogger Paul Schmelzing as
reported by the 700-year average real rate (the benchmark interest
rates minus inflation) over the last 700 years (see chart at
top) has been 4.78% and the average for the last two hundred
years is 2.6%. Unsurprisingly he notes “the current environment remains
severely depressed”.
More worryingly Schmelzing believes we have been in a downward trend for
the last 500-years.
Upon closer inspection, it can be shown that trend real rates have
been following a downward path for close to five hundred years, on a variety
of measures. The development since the 1980s does not constitute a
fundamental break with these tendencies.
Why is this worrying? Because the bounce back is not only inevitable, but
will also be painful and sharp:
Most reversals to “real rate stagnation” periods have been rapid,
non-linear, and took place on average after 26 years. Within 24-months after
hitting their troughs in the rate depression cycle, rates gained on average
315 basis points, with two reversals showing real rate appreciations of more
than 600 basis points within 2 years.
How will we know if such a correction is headed our way? Aside from the
fact that central banks are beginning to increase rates of their own volition
there are other macro indicators, many of which resonate with the current
environment:
Most of the eight previous cyclical “real rate depressions” were eventually
disrupted by geopolitical events or catastrophes, with several – such as the
Black Death, the Thirty Years War, or World War Two – combining both
demographic, and geopolitical inflections…the infamous “Panic of 1873”
heralded the advent of two decades of low productivity
growth, deflationary price dynamics, and a rise in global populism and
protectionism.
Sound familiar?
$217 trillion global debt bubble set to pop
Currently the total global debt bubble is over $217 trillion, with little
sign of it slowing. We have built a so-called economic recovery on debt.
Spending has been encouraged on a pile of low interest rates and
easy-to-reach cheap lines of credit. It has not been encouraged with the
thought that one day interest rates will have to climb.
A sudden uptick in interest rates could not come at a more precarious time
for global finances. It is not just personal debt levels that are of concern,
especially when the Bank of International Settlements is aware of $13
trillion of ‘missing debt’.
In September this year the BIS said it was hard to assess the
risk this “missing” debt poses, but its main worry was a repeat of events in
the financial crisis: a liquidity crunch like the one that seized FX swap and
forwards markets.
It is safe to say that a decade on from the global financial crisis we now
have the makings of a new one.
Global debt woes are building up to a tidal wave
As Dambisa
Moyo explained in the FT in ‘Global debt woes are building up to a tidal
wave’:
In November last year, unsecured household debt in the UK passed
pre-financial crisis highs in 2008. In the UK, debt excluding student loans
crept up to £192bn, the highest figure since December 2008, and it continues
to rise this year. Meanwhile, in the eurozone, debt-to-GDP ratios in Greece,
Italy, Portugal and Belgium remain over 100 per cent. As of March there were
more than $10tn negative yielding bonds in Europe and Japan.
With or without moderate interest rate increases, debt on a global level
is becoming more expensive as markets price in further rate hikes. Add to
this the global imbalances we see across the globe it is becoming
increasingly questionable how so many countries will manage to service these
debts.
Clouded judgement of central bankers
When the Bank of England’s Mark Carney issued a statement following the
0.25% increase, he was clearly down about the future prospects for the UK. He
was so wary about encouraging any kind of positivity regarding Brexit and the
country’s productivity that he almost warned against sharp future rate rises.
The pound dropped unexpectedly in the wake his candidness.
What’s worrying to investors is that Carney (and other fellow bankers)
seem to feel interest rate rises are almost to be done at whim. In truth,
they are unlikely to have much more time before they are forced to hike rates
and then it will be far more dramatic than a gesture of 0.25%.
This is worrying because the economy is unlikely to be strong enough to
handle such a change. In turn this will impact economies, financial
markets and assets – especially risk assets.
Many economists argue that it is only growth that can pull us out of this
situation but we now live in a world where we only know how to create growth
from debt. We do not know how to grow a healthy economy without the dripping
syringe of the current debt based banking and monetary system.
This is the case both in people’s homes and in the highest government
offices. It is an epidemic of global proportions.
Investors need to protect themselves from the addictive nature of these
behaviours. We all know what happens to those who are unable to cut
themselves off. They find excuses and then they come knocking for help. This
is where you must ensure your finances are protected. and you are not forced
to “help” the reckless bankers and their dangerous monetary system.
Move to safe haven higher ground from coming debt tidal wave
As we have discussed previously, the global debt bubble is prompting the
wealthiest to diversify
into gold. Wealthy investors and some of the world’s largest institutions
in the world, including Lord
Rothchilds, Ray
Dalio and insurance company Munich Re, have all expressed their
desire to protect their portfolios from the next financial crisis.
The next financial crisis may well be preceded by something we did not
experience ten years ago but is now a very real scenario – bail-ins. As banks
struggle to retrieve payments from those unable to service debts they will
begin to falter. Governments will need to step-in. ‘Luckily’ for them they
had the foresight to agree that could happen.
This places your investments and especially your deposits at arguably
greater risk than before the first financial crisis. With this in mind,
follow the likes of Munich Re and prepare your portfolio against counterparty
risk, unforeseen consequences of interest rate climbs and the collapse of the
global debt bubble. Avoid ETF and digital gold and dependence on single
counter parties and have outright legal ownership of segregated, allocated
gold bullion coins and bars.
Related Content
Gold Protect From $217 Trillion Global Debt Bubble
Global Debt Bubble Sees Wealthy Diversify Into Gold
World Is Now $199 Trillion In Debt
News and Commentary
Gold Prices (LBMA AM)
09 Nov: USD 1,284.00, GBP 980.98 & EUR 1,106.29 per ounce
08 Nov: USD 1,282.25, GBP 976.82 & EUR 1,105.43 per ounce
07 Nov: USD 1,276.35, GBP 970.92 & EUR 1,103.28 per ounce
06 Nov: USD 1,271.60, GBP 969.72 & EUR 1,095.61 per ounce
03 Nov: USD 1,275.30, GBP 976.24 & EUR 1,094.59 per ounce
02 Nov: USD 1,276.40, GBP 965.09 & EUR 1,095.92 per ounce
01 Nov: USD 1,279.25, GBP 961.48 & EUR 1,099.52 per ounce
Silver Prices (LBMA)
09 Nov: USD 17.10, GBP 13.03 & EUR 14.69 per ounce
08 Nov: USD 17.00, GBP 12.96 & EUR 14.65 per ounce
07 Nov: USD 17.01, GBP 12.95 & EUR 14.70 per ounce
06 Nov: USD 16.92, GBP 12.90 & EUR 14.59 per ounce
03 Nov: USD 17.09, GBP 13.05 & EUR 14.67 per ounce
02 Nov: USD 17.08, GBP 12.98 & EUR 14.66 per ounce
01 Nov: USD 16.94, GBP 12.74 & EUR 14.55 per ounce