The global Central Banks have declared War on Cash.
Historically, one of the safest things to do when the markets begin to
collapse is to move a significant portion of your holdings to cash. As the
old adage says, during times of deflation, “cash is king.”
The notion here is that cash is a safe haven. And while earning 1-2% in
interest doesn’t do much in terms of growing your wealth, it sure beats
losing 20%+ by holding on to stocks or bonds during their respective bear
markets
However, in today’s world of fiat-based Central Planning, cash represents
a REAL problem for the Central Banks.
The reason for this concerns the actual structure of the financial system.
As I’ve outlined previously, that structure is as follows:
1) The total currency (actual cash in the form of bills and
coins) in the US financial system is a little over $1.36 trillion.
2) When you include digital money sitting in short-term
accounts and long-term accounts then you’re talking about roughly $10
trillion in “money” in the financial system.
3) In contrast, the money in the US stock market (equity
shares in publicly traded companies) is over $20 trillion in size.
4) The US bond market (money that has been lent to
corporations, municipal Governments, State Governments, and the Federal
Government) is almost twice this at $38 trillion.
5) Total Credit Market Instruments (mortgages, collateralized
debt obligations, junk bonds, commercial paper and other digitally-based
“money” that is based on debt) is even larger $58.7 trillion.
6) Unregulated over the counter derivatives traded between the
big banks and corporations is north of $220 trillion.
When looking over these data points, the first thing that jumps out at the
viewer is that the vast bulk of “money” in the system is in the form of
digital loans or credit (non-physical debt).
Put another way, actual physical money or cash (as in bills or coins you
can hold in your hand) comprises less than 1% of the “money” in the financial
system.
Here is the financial system in picture form. I’m not including hard
assets such as gold, real estate, or the like. We’re only talking
about relatively liquid financial assets items that can be sold (turned into
cash) quickly.
 
Of course, Wall Street will argue that the derivatives market is notional
in value (meaning very little of this is actually “at risk”). However, even
if we remove derivatives from the mix, the system is still very clearly based
on credit, with only a small sliver of actual physical cash outstanding:
 
Put simply, the vast majority of wealth in the US is in fact digital
wealth that moves from bank to bank without ever being converted into actual
physical cash.
As far as the Central Banks are concerned, this is a good thing because if
investors/depositors were ever to try and convert even a small portion of
this “wealth” into actual physical bills, the system would implode
(there simply is not enough actual cash).
Remember, the current financial system is based on debt. The
benchmark for “risk free” money in this system is not actual cash but US
Treasuries.
In this scenario, when the 2008 Crisis hit, one of the biggest problems
for the Central Banks was to stop investors from fleeing digital wealth for
the comfort of physical cash. Indeed, the actual “thing” that almost caused
the financial system to collapse was when depositors attempted to pull $500
billion out of money market funds.
A money market fund takes investors’ cash and plunks it into short-term
highly liquid debt and credit securities. These funds are meant to offer
investors a return on their cash, while being extremely liquid (meaning
investors can pull their money at any time).
This works great in theory… but when $500 billion in money was being
pulled (roughly 24% of the entire market) in the span of four weeks, the
truth of the financial system was quickly laid bare: that digital
money is not in fact safe.
To use a metaphor, when the money market fund and commercial paper markets
collapsed, the oil that kept the financial system working dried up. Almost
immediately, the gears of the system began to grind to a halt.
When all of this happened, the global Central Banks realized that their
worst nightmare could in fact become a reality: that if a significant
percentage of investors/ depositors ever tried to convert their “wealth” into
cash (particularly physical cash) the whole system would implode.
As a result of this, virtually every monetary action taken by the Fed
since this time has been devoted to forcing investors away from cash and into
risk assets. The most obvious move was to cut interest rates to 0.25%,
rendering the return on cash to almost nothing.
However, in their own ways, the various QE programs and Operation Twist
have all had similar aims: to force investors away from cash,
particularly physical cash.
After all, if cash returns next to nothing, anyone who doesn’t want to
lose their purchasing power is forced to seek higher yields in bonds or
stocks.
The Fed’s economic models predicted that by doing this, the US economy
would come roaring back. The only problem is that it hasn’t. In fact, by most
metrics, the US economy has flat-lined for several years now, despite the Fed
having held ZIRP for 5-6 years and engaged in three rounds of QE.
Let me put this very bluntly. The Fed and other Central Banks
literally took the nuclear option in dealing with the 2008 bust. They have
done everything they can to trash cash and force investors/ depositors into
risk assets. But these polices have failed to generate growth.
Rather than admit they are completely wrong, Central Banks are reverting
to more and more extreme measures to destroy cash and force investors to move
into risk against their will.
Over 20% of global GDP is currently sporting NEGATIVE yields on their
bonds.
This is just the start of a much larger strategy of declaring War on Cash.
Indeed, we've uncovered a secret document outlining how the Fed plans to
incinerate savings to force investors away from cash and into riskier assets.
We’re talking cash bans, NIRP, even a carry tax on PHYSICAL CASH (meaning
the longer the bill is out of the system the less it is worth).
We detail this paper and outline three investment strategies you
can implement right now to protect your capital from the Fed's sinister
plan in our Special Report Survive the Fed's War on Cash.
We are making 100 copies available for FREE the general public.
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