innonimatu
the resident Cassandra
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2006
- Messages
- 15,374
This has nothing to do with the monetization of debt. That monetization is not the thing feeding the speculative bubble, the suppression of interest rates on public debt is.
Basically governments are placing debt at zero interest with their central banks. Something they always said was impossible but now turns out to be both possible and unavoidable by them.
This suppression of the traditional rentier in public debt has the effect of shifting that portion of rent-seeking to other stuff. Hence speculative bubbles. Bitcoin happens to be one of those bubbles. Stock are in another bubble. Even the price of junk bonds is in a bubble (rates collapsed to near zero). The reason for all this is that the funds created and accumulated must be "invested" somewhere - there is pressure to do so, so many people live from that - and are chasing anything that looks like it might be profitable. It could be tulip bulbs if they got promoted as "growing asset". Ironically that would at least be biologically true!
Some people are saying that this will end in hyper-inflation. But this asset price inflation has not been translating to actual commodity price inflation, or wage inflation. Structurally it's exclusively an asset bubble. And indeed one cannot happen without the other, no commodity inflation without rising wages. The rising prices of some asset classes only indicates an increase in the desire to trade those assets. And the expected profit is not interest but price speculation - classic bubble behavior. Where it goes in the near future just cannot be reasoned.
Basically governments are placing debt at zero interest with their central banks. Something they always said was impossible but now turns out to be both possible and unavoidable by them.
This suppression of the traditional rentier in public debt has the effect of shifting that portion of rent-seeking to other stuff. Hence speculative bubbles. Bitcoin happens to be one of those bubbles. Stock are in another bubble. Even the price of junk bonds is in a bubble (rates collapsed to near zero). The reason for all this is that the funds created and accumulated must be "invested" somewhere - there is pressure to do so, so many people live from that - and are chasing anything that looks like it might be profitable. It could be tulip bulbs if they got promoted as "growing asset". Ironically that would at least be biologically true!
Some people are saying that this will end in hyper-inflation. But this asset price inflation has not been translating to actual commodity price inflation, or wage inflation. Structurally it's exclusively an asset bubble. And indeed one cannot happen without the other, no commodity inflation without rising wages. The rising prices of some asset classes only indicates an increase in the desire to trade those assets. And the expected profit is not interest but price speculation - classic bubble behavior. Where it goes in the near future just cannot be reasoned.