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War rooms and bailouts: How banks and the Fed are preparing for a US default – and the chaos expected to follow

Bonds / analysis
War rooms and bailouts: How banks and the Fed are preparing for a US default – and the chaos expected to follow
jp
‘Default doomscrolling’ again, Mr. Powell? Kimimasa Mayama/Pool Photo via AP.

By John W. Diamond*

Convening war rooms, planning speedy bailouts and raising house-on-fire alarm bells: Those are a few of the ways the biggest banks and financial regulators are preparing for a potential default on U.S. debt.

“You hope it doesn’t happen, but hope is not a strategy – so you prepare for it,” Brian Moynihan, CEO of Bank of America, the nation’s second-biggest lender, said in a television interview.

The doomsday planning is a reaction to a lack of progress in talks between President Joe Biden and House Republicans over raising the US$31.4 trillion debt ceiling. Without an increase in the debt limit, the U.S. can’t borrow more money to cover its bills – all of which have already been agreed to by Congress – and in practical terms that means a default.

What happens if a default occurs is an open question, but economists – including me – generally expect financial chaos as access to credit dries up and borrowing costs rise quickly for companies and consumers. A severe and prolonged global economic recession would be all but guaranteed, and the reputation of the U.S. and the dollar as beacons of stability and safety would be further tarnished.

But how do you prepare for an event that many expect would trigger the worst global recession since the 1930s?

Preparing for panic

Jamie Dimon, who runs JPMorgan Chase, the biggest U.S. bank, told Bloomberg he’s been convening a weekly war room to discuss a potential default and how the bank should respond. The meetings are likely to become more frequent as June 1 – the date on which the U.S. might run out of cash – nears.

Dimon described the wide range of economic and financial effects that the group must consider such as the impact on “contracts, collateral, clearing houses, clients” – basically every corner of the financial system – at home and abroad.

“I don’t think it’s going to happen — because it gets catastrophic, and the closer you get to it, you will have panic,” he said.

That’s when rational decision-making gives way to fear and irrationality. Markets overtaken by these emotions are chaotic and leave lasting economic scars.

Banks haven’t revealed many of the details of how they are responding, but we can glean some clues from how they’ve reacted to past crises, such as the financial crisis in 2008 or the debt ceiling showdowns of 2011 and 2013.

One important way banks can prepare is by reducing exposure to Treasury securities – some or all of which could be considered to be in default once the U.S. exhausts its ability to pay all of its bill. All U.S. debts are referred to as Treasury bills or bonds.

The value of Treasurys is likely to plunge in the case of a default, which could weaken bank balance sheets even more. The recent bank crisis, in fact, was prompted primarily by a drop in the market value of Treasurys due to the sharp rise in interest rates over the past year. And a default would only make that problem worse, with close to 190 banks at risk of failure as of March 2023.

Another strategy banks can use to hedge their exposure to a sell-off in Treasurys is to buy credit default swaps, financial instruments that allow an investor to offset credit risk. Data suggests this is already happening, as the cost to protect U.S. government debt from default is higher than that of Brazil, Greece and Mexico, all of which have defaulted multiple times and have much lower credit ratings.

But buying credit default swaps at ever-higher prices limits a third key preventive measure for banks: keeping their cash balances as high as possible so they’re able and ready to deal with whatever happens in a default.

Four white men sit on white couches in a large office filled with presidential portraits.
Little has come out of fiscal negotiations between Mitch McConnell, left, Kevin McCarthy, second from left, President Joe Biden, second from right, and Chuck Schumer. AP Photo/Evan Vucci.

Keeping the financial plumbing working

Financial industry groups and financial regulators have also gamed out a potential default with an eye toward keeping the financial system running as best they can.

The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, for example, has been updating its playbook to dictate how players in the Treasurys market will communicate in case of a default.

And the Federal Reserve, which is broadly responsible for ensuring financial stability, has been pondering a U.S. default for over a decade. One such instance came in 2013, when Republicans demanded the elimination of the Affordable Care Act in exchange for raising the debt ceiling. Ultimately, Republicans capitulated and raised the limit one day before the U.S. was expected to run out of cash.

One of the biggest concerns Fed officials had at the time, according to a meeting transcript recently made public, is that the U.S. Treasury would no longer be able to access financial markets to “roll over” maturing debt. While hitting the current ceiling prevents the U.S. from issuing new debt that exceeds $31.4 trillion, the government still has to roll existing debt into new debt as it comes due. On May 15, 2023, for example, the government issued just under $100 billion in notes and bonds to replace maturing debt and raise cash.

The risk is that there would be too few buyers at one of the government’s daily debt auctions – at which investors from around the world bid to buy Treasury bills and bonds. If that happens, the government would have to use its cash on hand to pay back investors who hold maturing debt.

That would further reduce the amount of cash available for Social Security payments, federal employees wages and countless other items the government spent over $6 trillion on in 2022. This would be nothing short of apocalyptic if the Fed could not save the day.

To mitigate that risk, the Fed said it could could immediately step in as a buyer of last resort for Treasurys, quickly lower its lending rates and provide whatever funding is needed in an attempt to prevent financial contagion and collapse. The Fed is likely having the same conversations and preparing similar actions today.

A self-imposed catastrophe

Ultimately, I hope that Congress does what it has done in every previous debt ceiling scare: raise the limit.

These contentious debates over lifting it have become too commonplace, even as lawmakers on both sides of the aisle express concerns about the growing federal debt and the need to rein in government spending. Even when these debates result in some bipartisan effort to rein in spending, as they did in 2011, history shows they fail, as energy analyst Autumn Engebretson and I recently explained in a review of that episode.

That’s why one of the most important ways banks are preparing for such an outcome is by speaking out about the serious damage not raising the ceiling is likely to inflict on not only their companies but everyone else, too. This increases the pressure on political leaders to reach a deal.

Going back to my original question, how do you prepare for such a self-imposed catastrophe? The answer is, no one should have to.The Conversation


*John W. Diamond, Director of the Center for Public Finance at the Baker Institute, Rice University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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59 Comments

It's purely posturing to apply pressure to Congress to fast-track the approval.  The chances of Congress allowing a default are precisely zero.

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Agreed. But...it depends on what compromises and changes have to be made for that to happen. They, could have just as much impact as a default.

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The biggest hegemon on the planet - and we'll never see another as big - is unable to pay its way.

All else is irrelevant.

The banks have zero chance that by 'sorting the plumbing' they can solve the emptying reservoir.

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Which is why, as many will soon realise, what happens in a tiny economy at the bottom of the planet means nothing compared to what happens to the Big Economies. It doesn't matter how 'good' NZ Debt/GDP is etc. What matters what USA figures; the UK, EU, China, Japan are....

All we can do is try to make sure we are as prepared as we can be, and if the RBNZ has done us one big favour, it's getting that process going.

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Of course our macroeconomic performance matters, maybe not to the global financial system but it does to us and our standard of living. 

The debt ceiling negotiations are opportunity for House Republicans to exert leverage. Maybe a black swan event is what we need though, I mean what is the point in a debt ceiling if you keep increasing it?

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Christmas will come if the Turkeys don't vote to raise the debt ceiling. They'll raise it because they have to in order to remain in power.  

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And get paid, of course.

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Jargon.

Macroeconomic performance. Standard of living.

It's the throughput of energy and resources, in linear fashion, nothing more. Sure, less of both/either will reduce physical throughput, but that isn't what a lot of us think of as good living.

And even total debt forgiveness, doesn't solve draw-down problem underlying everything.

Economics - pshawwww...

 

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If life does ever become a Cormac McCarthyesque cannabilistic fight for survival PDK, I'll apologise and make sure there is a spot for you in the rohe and marae.

 

 

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Correct the whole thing is a yawn fest. Just chuck a few more Trillion dollars on the total with a few key strokes, no how about just doubling it so we don't need to go through this every other year ?

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If global markets fall over most of NZ is insolvent.   We will need to go on a war footing with electronic ration books and state handouts...   many companies would need to be nationalised to ensure services would continue.....    We would experience it as a depression where not credit was available.   

The solution would be to nationalise critical suppliers and rebase the economy on a domestic basis.  It would be like nothing we have experienced in recent memory.

 

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Agreed. NZ is a far more vulnerable now than in the recent past: for ex, the GFC where we sailed through relatively unscathed. In the case of NZ and Aussie, it was China's stimulus that worked in our favor and all our pawns were in the right place. Like sprats feeding. 

I just get tired of the never-ending propaganda surrounding our 'failsafe' banks and our national fiscal position. It's all worded accordingly and dressed up in the appropriate language for what tickles the sheeples' imaginations - "best safest in the world / compared to other OECD nations", etc.   

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But... 100,000 immigrants...!

Starting to understand risk of deflation is on the cards, not like anything anybody alive in this country will know about/remember. Including myself. Inflation is starting to look like a lovely prospect in comparison.

Time for a coffee and some fresh air.

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Starting to understand risk of deflation is on the cards, not like anything anybody alive in this country will know about/remember. Including myself. Inflation is starting to look like a lovely prospect in comparison.

NZ is woefully unprepared for deflation mainly because of the high cost structures necessary to run a business that caters for those needs on the bottom rung of the hierarchy.   

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Deflation is unlikely. 

Prolonged stagflation is much more likely.  The RBNZ would print like a boss at the first signs of headwinds and slash the OCR in prediction of deflation, only to find that international supply constraints are inflationary.  Just like they did 2 years ago.

The value of the NZD will fall faster than our economy contracts.  

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Prolonged stagflation is much more likely.  The RBNZ would print like a boss at the first signs of headwinds and slash the OCR in prediction of deflation, only to find that international supply constraints are inflationary.  Just like they did 2 years ago

Deflation was never prevented in Japan despite the cash rate manipulated down and QE.

F'more, even during this Covid period inflation bout, Japan CPI inflation has been comparatively benign. I agree that supply constraints impact prices, but Japan appears to have been prepared. Remember, JPYUSD has fallen approx 20% in 2 years. Yet inflation is still much lower there than in NZ.  

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Most of our goods and service exports still originate in the regions, which means the urban areas have been the real drag on our economic prosperity, growing simply by piling on more debt and migrants each year.

Auckland makes up roughly 37% of our national economy but contributes to ~20% of exports. Bear in mind that a big chunk of Auckland's exports also includes packing/processing food grown in the regions and transport & transit services to international visitors here for the regions.

Transport/warehousing, retail, wholesale and admin services are 4 of its 5 fastest-growing industries.

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Will people still need to pay their mortgage if the banks collapse? Asking for a friend. 

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What's the alternative ? Some people must think if the bank collapses, somehow you own the house and the mortgage is gone. Before the banks go down they will call in the mortgage to try and stay afloat, you either pay the balance or you are out the door.

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Can't they package it as reasonably stable debt and sell it at a premium to someone else?

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Haha

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Out the door you say. How do they plan to enforce that if 1000's of people are in the same boat. Is this when we when need to start arming ourselves like the yanks?!

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Killjoy

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Likely, yes.

Your mortgage is an asset on the bank's balance sheet. As the bank is being wound up, these assets will be sold on to someone else, and you'd end up paying them.

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Assuming this sucker doesn't go down (to paraphrase Bush-the-lower).

If it all implodes - more likely than not, in my opinion - then all bets are off; there is nobody 'else'.

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The banks must stay open ...    so u can use eftpos to buy food etc....   but if insolvent they getting taken over by State, BS11 triggers if parent cant or wont fund any gaps...     then the RBNZ appoints a Statutory Mgr, old bank fails but the asset ramins on the balance sheet and they still collect or take your house.....   now your debt is to the NZ taxpayer....

In a global depression many would lose there jobs and possibly loose the house.   Its how we rsolve these things in a capitalistic system.

The alternative is chaos.

 

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From RNZ "Some 32 percent of New Zealand households have a mortgage on the primary residence, with the median property debt increasing to $260,000 in the year ended June 2021, up $56,000 over the past three years".

That is 1.6m people who might be forced out of their homes. Taking 1000s of homes from people, likely many of them through force, sounds pretty chaotic to me! 

Anyway, I'm sure it will all be fine but an interesting discussion. 

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The most vulnerable will be those who took on high debts relative to their incomes.

Based on RBNZ data, the number of loan commitments by banks to borrowers who were taking on debt with a debt to income ratio of 6 or above:

1) in 2021, there were over 52,000 borrowers

2) in 2020, there were over 38,000 borrowers

 

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That photo looks like a scene from an upmarket rest home.

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No rest for the wicked

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Each time the debt limit is raised, it is one step closer to the end of the American empire. 

They seriously need to reign in their spending and reduce their attempts to be the world police - while domestically everything falls apart.

If you have read Dalio's 'Changing World Order' you will know that what the US is currently doing is exactly what every failing world power has done in the past - it overextends itself, thinking it is doing the right thing, but ultimately it is just ensuring its own demise as it can't fund the cost of mainting its geopolitical/military prescence around the world.

If America is going to get through this, without a complete collapse that causes extreme global instability, it is going to have to stop funding Ukraine (other peoples wars), reduce its number of military bases around the world, and get things back in balance domestically (politically and financially) - it is too busy throwing stones from a glass house and one that is looking very weak and vulnerable - at risk of collapse if the wind picks up or someone decides to throw a pebble or two at it. 

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Comment of the day

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Thanks PDK - it appears common sense but these things have forces of their own that history suggest to be impossible to control/prevent (the madness of people/crowds/power/control). 

Dalio attempted to capture it graphically with charts like this:

https://i.pinimg.com/736x/98/71/19/987119c1f8a6b48c80c9113dfc503193.jpg

As you can see, the US really does risk falling off a cliff here unless something drastically changes - they need to pull back and quickly or they risk repeating the same mistakes made by the British, the Dutch and if you look back far enough the Chinese (without considering the Romans etc even further back in history). 

The loss of power via process of consolidation and limiting expenses never appears to be an option because once a nation has experienced being the world power, it wants even more of that power and expects it. But the debt eventually becomes an issue to fund this as the nation always ends up spending more than it can produce. Which is exactly the problem the US now has - it is living off cheques it can't pay for to keep the current system going just a little bit longer (how long? - perhaps another few decades...I don't know). 

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I suggest the fault really lies with the way they've structured their financial system. The Fed is a private bank , but is supposedly the official bank of the US government! 

But it is not that simple either. The US has a fundamentally corrupt political system where spending constraint doesn't really exist. It is this corruption that will cause the demise of the American empire, as it is driven purely by greed and a lust for power. Between this, Xi and Putin the world is screwed!

As to the 'other peoples wars' bit; I'd suggest that while they've missed the boat with Ukraine, and continue to do so, the war could have been stopped in it's very early days if the world had been prepared to call Putin on his BS, but it is still cheaper than letting Putin run wild through Europe, and eventually he would look further afield.

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"It is this corruption that will cause the demise of the American empire, as it is driven purely by greed and a lust for power"

Happens to every empire as eventually they spend more trying to maintain world control relative to the income they can produce to fund the military and diplomatic activities abroad - such as necessary to keep the empire standing. This gap (between spending and earning) is filled by creating excess debt and printing money - but when this happens, it's the beginning of the end (there are no exceptions to this either throughout history). 

You could argue Nixon taking the USD off the gold standard was the beginning of the end for the US (i.e. around the peak of its powers) and since then it has funded endless wars that it didn't need to be involved in - all of which have been extremely expensive to fund, resulting in the massive debt they have today. And the very vulnerable position they find themselves in. 

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Going off the Gold Standard was during a default.  America has defaulted twice in its history already.  The first time there were convenient wars they could profiteer from by funding all sides of the conflict(yes that side too), this time is likely to be somewhat similar.  Prepare to be drafted men.

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You hit on a very important point, an unintended consequence, albeit a positive one, that wouldn't have been realised at the time. The gold standard placed a constraint on the amount of money available in the system. that constraint coming from a finite and very limited resource. Taking it away unleashed the dogs of greed.

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What the IMF failed to complete in Ukraine in the immediate aftermath of the Soviet Union’s dissolution, it hopes to accomplish with it post-2014 shock therapy policies. As an instrument of western imperialist financial interests, the IMF is determined to ensure the people of Ukraine suffer through austerity, poverty, precarity, and now prolonged war so that the U.S. capitalist class can plunder their country, extract everything they can, and line their pockets in the wake of the devastation.

https://www.liberationschool.org/imf-debt-trap-in-ukraine/

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The Fed isn't a private bank, no one owns it. 

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Peter Ziehan believes pulling back form world policeman is exactly what the US is doing.  This will bring an end to freedom of the seas and associated ability of safe movement for world trade. 

The case for the US to maintain top dog spot in such a scenario is well argued.

Don't write off the US.

 

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Yeah, the US has the resources to adjust after much pain.  On the other hand, if fuel tankers stop making it down this way for any reason we have about 8 weeks and then poof - NZ will be like a bug smeared on a windscreen.  A small bug.  With not much juice.

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Garden implements, heirloom seeds.

 

Happy to help PDK.

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Does Congress not pass a budget like in New Zealand? Why don't the representatives increase the debt ceiling when they pass a budget? Has the US Government spent more than was appropriated by Congress? If so, why is it Congress who is made out to be the unreasonable party? Or has it just been unexpected costs due to increases in borrowing costs?

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Another strategy banks can use to hedge their exposure to a sell-off in Treasurys is to buy credit default swaps, financial instruments that allow an investor to offset credit risk.

So credit default swaps were only created 1994, were a very profitable avenue for the GFC, and now banks are effectively shorting the housing market to offset risk? While it may only be a portion of their investment portfolios I'm a tad confused on this one. 

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I'm going to expose how little I know via this question, but in the face of collapse, would term deposits in aussie/nz banks be safe?

I've moved overseas almost entirely because I'd never be able to afford a house if i stayed in nz, so have spent the last 7 years building a good deposit. I'd hate to lose it all now! 

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You're asking a bunch of doomers are we gonna doom

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If things really start looking bad with the housing market and the Australasian banks, buy some government bonds.

Are your $$ in NZD?

If so, I'd buy some Kiwi Bonds if things are looking like they are really going south (not right now, but if they deteriorate later this year it might be a good option) - you can get 1 year at 5% at present. So the risk premium the banks are giving you at present (relative to the 'risk free rate' that the government is willing to pay for the same term) is very poor given how exposed they are to the NZ property market!

Kiwi Bond interest rates | New Zealand Debt Management - The Treasury

You might take a haircut if you leave the money in the bank, but at least you are almost certain to get all of your money back from the government via the kiwibonds. If you lose money from the kiwi bonds, it means that the whole country has gone to hell (ie we must be at war with one another internally and no longer maintaining our debt obligations as a nation - worry about money at that point might be the least of your concerns). 

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"relative to the 'risk free rate' that the government is willing to pay"

This article is about government not being able to meet its obligations… how risk free is the investment in bonds then…?

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You do have a point Yvil but there is no sign of the issues which are occurring in the US occurring in NZ anytime soon. 

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Good point! So if we are worried about 'risk free' assets, we should be REALLY worried about assets that aren't 'risk free' (shares, corporate bonds, property, bank savings).

And note I didn't say to buy US treasuries, but NZ Kiwi Bonds.

US government debt to GDP = 120% (bad)

NZ government debt to GDP = 30-40% (good....less risk of default as its debt relativ to income is much lower!)

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Thanks for the thoughtful reply! Yes, it's all in nzd. I'll save this comment to read over if sh** starts to hit the fan

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A us default would mean massive immediate margin requirements for any holder of US derivatives... so much it would probably cause the entire stack of cards to tumble down.... I doubt there is enough liquidty anywhere to meet requirements and it only has to fail at one big systemically important bank to bring the others down...

IMHO this will happen one day as the system cannot keep expanding... of cause if interest rates went negitive for long enough  time would wipe out most debt....... but you would not be able to access any credit 

we are in uncharted waters, there be dragons.

They have few tricks left, but perhaps they pushing up rates now knowing they will have to cut hard when things break, then they print and go negitive...    very bad inflation for any country that imports food or energy., US prob better then china so perhaps this will occur.    Countries would need to rely on domestic markets so very bad for large importers or export countries.

Economic warfare is not different then normal hot war really.

 

 

 

 

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The USA can print money forever while it has reserve status. The shit hits the fan when countries start to move away from trading in USD, which is exactly what has already started. The USA is going to implode, I give it 10 years tops.

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What's going too replace the USD? Not the BRICS worthless currencies...LOL

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Right or wrong these games of brinksmanship always remind me Rio Tinto’s threats to close Tiwai.

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Orange Man Bad! Impeach! Oh wait... 😄

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If ever we do get financial Armageddon, we'll be glad we live here. A country with (endless) water that can grow food year round is about the safest place to be in that case. Foundation and Empire, we could start the next one from here.

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The fact is the USD is the reserve currency and US Treasury Notes are the most creditworthy investments on the planet.

In financial Armageddon as many goldbugs are eternally predicting, you better have paid off the mortgage or you're going to be on the street, no one will want a chunk of gold. It's all been done before, about 1930.

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