Welcome to Invest in your Wealth Blog!

I’m sure you will find a variety of useful information for you.
Still much more to come in the future.

Take your time, enjoy and read!

When creditors are forced to accept big losses, as they did this week for Greece, that’s called a DEFAULT (bankruptcy) . When an economy contracts by close to 7%, as it’s doing now in Greece, that’s called a DEPRESSION. And when at least four other countries are in line for the same fate, that’s called a DISASTER! Not exactly cause for celebration, is it?

All what is happening so far is extending the pain for the country to default later, with the expense of other countries tax payers hard earn money.

Good trading and trade save !

Erik

 

 

 

As I write this, the world is holding its breath over Greece’s massive debts.

The Greek government, European Central Bank and euro-zone leaders are in meetings with investors who own Greek bonds, trying to shove massive losses down their throats.

Unsurprisingly, the private bondholders — mostly other governments, banks and hedge funds — are fighting any “haircut” tooth and nail.

At this point, only one of two things can happen:

They could announce that they have come to an agreement …

OR, they could announce that they have failed to reach an agreement — in which case, the Greek government will be forced to default on its debt.

Which way will it go? Nobody knows for sure, of course. I’m guessing that the bondholders will ultimately relent and a deal will be reached.

But here’s the thing: The announcement could come at any moment. It may have already happened before you see this post!

And when it does, it will almost surely hit stocks like a ton of bricks: If last year is any guide, a deal could send stocks screaming higher. On the other hand, if there is no deal, stocks could plunge.

But agreement or no agreement, this situation perfectly highlights the #1 question you need to answer in the year ahead …

How do you invest in a crazy world like this one?

The great news is, there is a way for prudent, safety-conscious investors to grow wealth consistently today.

I will touch base later on with more info’s until then for now

Good trading

Erik

“If you do not change direction, you may end up where you are heading.” — Lao Tzu

 

Most everyone thinks they know where China is headed — that is, toward world domination thanks to having the most-vibrant large economy in the world.

Of course, whenever we project from the recent past, we usually end up disappointed. And for many, their expectations for China will be no exception.

There are many obstacles along the way before China rules the economic world, and one of them is what we have dubbed “The Japanese Parallel.” This would be a game-changer, one with major implications for all global asset markets, especially currencies.

The credit crunch that happened circa 2008 took a big bite out of the U.S. consumer and has drained a lot of dollar credit out of the global system. In the aftermath, the Chinese government stepped up in a big way — replacing U.S. consumer demand with direct stimulus, to the tune of approximately half the size of the country’s GDP, in an effort to keep the music playing.

The song should be a familiar one because, interestingly, we saw a similar scenario play out before in the global economy. China’s future is on a seemingly eerie parallel with Japan’s global macroeconomic history.

The Parallel in Play

During the 1980s, it appeared Japan — as the “Creditor Superpower” — was going to gobble up the world with its powerful export machine and massive current account surpluses rolling in.

Then a little thing called the U.S. stock market crash in 1987 changed the game.

Dollar credit flowed from the global system, triggering an improvement in the U.S. current account balance (see the top-left gold box in the chart below) that was followed by a U.S. recession. This came as the Japanese yen was appreciating in value, thanks to the G-7 Plaza Accord to pressure the yen higher because of all those Japanese exports.

Black Swan Capital
Source: Black Swan Capital

Here’s a brief history on what happened to Japan:

  1. Japan’s very hot stock market broke in 1989.
  2. Then its extremely overpriced real-estate bubble started its collapse. (Remember when the Imperial Palace in Tokyo was worth more than the entire state of California?)
  3. Japanese authorities did all they could in the form of stimulus to try to keep air in the bubble. They …
    1. Pumped more money into the stock and property markets in order to revive the wealth effect for domestic consumers.
    2. Subsidized export companies to keep exports flowing (but the world’s major consumer — the U.S. economy — was entering recession and therefore wasn’t there to buy).
    3. Lowered interest rates to zero.
    4. Continued massive fiscal stimulus by building infrastructure across the country.

But, it didn’t work.

The massive dislocations were caused by the artificial channeling of credit within the Japanese economy in order to focus almost entirely on building a global export machine.

In turn, these dislocations created the malinvestment that has taken years to work off, precisely because the Japanese economy was so imbalanced when it came to production versus consumption.

Attempts to change this model were scant at best; instead, they kept morbid companies alive and forced consumers to save money, thanks to artificially low interest rates.

7 Reasons Why the China Story
Might Not Have a Happy Ending

Fast-forward to China today … and you can witness the parallels …

Instead of the U.S. stock market crash being the triggering event, we have the credit crunch in its place — arguably a much-bigger and more-powerful global event.

Secondly, global leverage — i.e., debt in the system — was massively larger in 2007 than it was in 1987. (In other words, the world was hooked on massive dollar-based credit spewed out by the trillions of dollars in derivatives production.)

Mr. U.S. consumer has pulled in his horns much more quickly and to a greater degree than he did back in 1987. This takes much more global demand for goods out of the market — demand that China was and still is so highly addicted to.

And interestingly, now we also have the Chinese currency starting to rise in value, albeit at a much-slower pace than the Japanese yen did in the 1980s.

So what has China done to overcome this sea change in the global economy that’s evidenced by the improvement in the U.S. current account? The country has done many of the same things Japan has done, and we are seeing a replay of events to a degree.

Here’s where those parallels really come into play:

1) China’s very hot stock market topped out in October 2007 and is now 59 percent off its old high. (That is a major drag on the so-called “wealth effect.”) The Chinese government owns or controls most of the stocks on its exchange and, yet, it has been unable to keep them pumped up.

2) China’s real estate prices have started falling and the “bubbly conditions” are becoming quite apparent to all. But now, with tightening credit in China, the bubble is in jeopardy. As a recent Financial Times article reported:

“The number of property transactions in China’s largest cities has fallen to dangerously low levels, according to regulatory documents obtained by the Financial Times.

“According to the documents, the China Banking Regulatory Commission earlier this year ordered domestic banks to weigh the impact of a 30% decline in housing transactions in ‘stress tests’ aimed at determining the health of the Chinese financial system.”

3) China’s real estate market, especially on the commercial side, is extremely overbuilt. A massive amount of speculative credit has poured in that could come rushing out; already there are signs that the hot money is running from China.

Interesting point here: Despite Western pressure on China’s currency policy, country leaders have made it clear there will not be any type of one-time ramp-up revaluations; this adds to the momentum of hot money (that had poured into China) to leave.

Part of that hot money was specifically positioned in real assets to benefit from such a large one-off revaluation.

4) The country pumped more money into the stock and property markets in order to revive the wealth effect for domestic consumers. It hasn’t worked, just as it didn’t in Japan.

And just as Japan found out, there is no fallback to local demand if international demand disappears for their exports. This is already in play.

5) They subsidized export companies to keep exports flowing. (But the world’s major consumer is taking the goods to the degree that it did before the credit crunch.)

China has managed to push some of the pain of domestic adjustment off its trade partners thus far. But if the U.S. consumer does not materialize, trade frictions will grow for China — not just in the West, but also from its Asian-bloc competitors. This is already in play as well.

6) China’s interest rates are not at zero, but they are extremely low for a country supposedly growing as fast as it has. This low interest rate policy is similar to what Japan did. This leads to forced savings and smothers local consumer demand at a time when domestic consumption is most needed.

7) They continued massive fiscal stimulus by building infrastructure across the country. China’s infrastructure development is legendary. It has led to extreme overcapacity across many sectors.

If global demand is not there to take the final goods all this capacity can produce, then much of that capital will be wasted (i.e., malinvestment). This is what happens when a government determines investment policy instead of letting the market do its job.

Officially, China sports quite a low debt-to-GDP ratio. But if you consider that Chinese banks are effectively government conduits, some have estimated debt-to-GDP in China is somewhere between 70 percent and 80 percent.

Could China Get Hit
Harder Than Japan?

The credit crunch is the market’s way of starting to rebalance a very imbalanced global world that has at the heart of it:

  • A flawed world reserve currency system;
  • Inordinate demand and depth of capital markets concentrated in one place (i.e., the United States); and
  • A beggar-thy-neighbor — by which the country attempts to help itself by using measures that negatively impact other countries — export policy (Asia), leading to massively suppressed relative currency values.

This potential global macro replay shows that policymakers have either learned little, or are unwilling to do the heavy lifting, when it comes to real global monetary reform.

If the Chinese economy plays out like Japan’s did when its credit bubble burst, the implications for the global economy would be dire, as we are still in the midst of massive private deleveraging. This is already overwhelming the public debt being poured into the system, and it has created the nasty byproduct of shaky sovereign credits across all Western nations.

So, we continue to watch as China ticks off the historical markets that crushed Japan’s growth and economic leadership. And we hope that the part about history repeating in another form is wrong. Otherwise, it could be even uglier this time around.

Good trading

Erik

Ps. Source: Jack Cook – Senior Currency investor and market analyst

 

Dear Investor and guest,

Even if you’re not interested in investments or finance … and no matter where in the world you may live, this news will in fact change your life, one way or the other. It marks the end of government bailouts and the beginning of a new Great Depression – not only in Europe but also in America …Read below…

— O —

German Chancellor Angela Merkel again ruled out joint euro-area borrowing and an expanded role for the European Central Bank in fighting the debt crisis.

Euro bonds are “not needed and not appropriate,” Merkel said today at a press conference with Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti and French President Nicolas Sarkozy in Strasbourg, France. She said euro bonds would “level the difference” in euro-region interest rates. “It would be a completely wrong signal to ignore those diverging interest rates because they’re an indicator of where work still needs to be done.”

Merkel, the leader of Europe’s biggest economy, has so far backed a focus on debt reduction and closer economic coordination, calling for a revision of European Union treaties, a move that threatens to bog down in a multiyear negotiation, as core euro economies risk succumbing to the contagion that began in Greece in 2009.

German analysts, newspaper editorials and opposition politicians stepped up calls for Merkel to shift from an incremental approach after the government sold a fraction of the bonds it auctioned yesterday.

“As the crisis deepens with yesterday’s bond auction, the veil has been torn off Merkel’s policy of muddling through,” Sebastian Dullien, a senior fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations in Berlin, said in a telephone interview. “It’s only got us closer to the end-game, either the breakup of the euro or euro bonds. The strategy has failed.”

Losing ‘Sex-Appeal’

“The flop shows that bunds are losing their sex-appeal as an extremely secure investment,” Germany’s Handelsblatt business newspaper said in a commentary today. “This shows the crisis has reached the entire euro-zone core. France, Finland, the Netherlands and Austria have to pay more interest for their bonds than just a few months ago.”

German bunds fell a second day. The 10-year bund yield rose as much as 12 basis points, or 0.12 percentage point, to 2.26 percent, the highest since Oct. 28, and was at 2.19 percent at 12:55 p.m. London time. Bids at yesterday’s auction of 10-year securities amounted to 3.889 billion euros ($5.2 billion), out of a maximum target for the sale of 6 billion euros.

Handelsblatt said the shortfall was a “wake-up call” for Merkel’s government, which opposes both issuing bonds for the entire 17-member euro region and allowing the ECB to buy unlimited amounts of euro-nation bonds.

Germany Rejects

The German government stood by its rejection of any common bonds for the euro bloc following a report in Bild newspaper that Merkel’s coalition is concerned it may have to agree to euro bonds under certain conditions. The newspaper didn’t say where it got the information.

“We say ‘no’ to euro bonds,” Economy Minister Philipp Roesler, who is also vice chancellor, said today in parliament in Berlin. “A transfer union would be wrong because it would mean German taxpayers pick up the costs. Euro bonds are wrong because they would mean a rise in interest rates for Germany.”

That contrasted with Handelsblatt’s view. “The ECB remains the only investor that can keep down the interest rates of bonds from euro states in the short-term,” Handelsblatt said. “In the long-term, there’s no getting around the necessity of creating fiscal union with at least partial euro bonds.”

The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper said that while the low demand for German bunds was “no reason to panic” it shows that “around 2 percent interest for investors in these uncertain times is simply not enough.”

‘Moment of Truth’

“Pressure is growing on Merkel,” said Die Welt newspaper. “Up until now she managed to steer the nation through the crisis so that the people didn’t really notice the turbulence.”

Merkel now faces a “moment of truth” in the crisis as her opposition to ECB bond purchases and euro bonds “is being challenged,” Die Welt said.

German opposition parties ratcheted up calls for euro bonds. Frank-Walter Steinmeier, parliamentary leader of the Social Democratic Party in parliament, said on Nov. 21 that his party wants euro bonds as part of a solution to the crisis.

“A model using euro bonds that links European bonds to a reform program is the better alternative,” Juergen Trittin, a co-leader of the opposition Greens party, said in an N24 television interview today.

In Paris, the French government underlined calls for giving the ECB a bigger role in fighting the crisis.

“What’s not working is confidence and that’s what we must restore,” French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said today in an interview on France Inter radio. “I hope that reflection will move forward that the ECB should have an essential role to restore confidence.”

 

Have a Good & Save Trading

 

Erik

 

Main Input Source: Bloomberg, Tony Czuczka

 

In this financial market, it’s easier than ever to be confused. I say that because Wall Street pundits and European technocrats keep telling you that “All is well.”

They keep saying that stocks have to rise because it’s the end of the year.

They keep saying they have the sovereign debt crisis licked.

They keep announcing bailout plan after plan after plan, promising that this time, it will really work.

And frankly, what would you expect them to say? They need YOUR money to pay THEIR salaries and bonuses!

Well I don’t have those conflicts. So I’m going to give you the plain, unvarnished truth: Things aren’t getting better. They’re getting much, much worse … and it’s only a matter of time before the unfolding crisis in the CREDIT market spills over in a major way to the STOCK market! Or in other words, the sell off of the past couple of days could be just a sneak preview of a much worse meltdown to come!

Borrowing Costs Surging!
Bailouts Failing!

Sometimes a picture is worth a 1,000 words, so I’m going to let the charts do the talking. First is one showing the three-month euro-dollar, cross-currency basis swap (interest). Don’t let the fancy name fool you. This is simply a way to track how expensive it’s getting for private European banks to fund their dollar-based loans and investments.

As you can see, that cost is exploding to levels not seen since the worst days of the LAST phase of the credit crisis. The reason: Nobody wants to lend to European banks because they’re worried they won’t get paid back!

Next up is a chart of the yield on Belgium’s 10-year note. Yes, I said Belgium. You already know from my previous updates perhaps ? that the PIIGS countries — Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece, and Spain — are in dire serious trouble. They’re having to pay through the nose to borrow money, and their economies are stumbling as a result.

But now, the crisis is spreading to several other European countries you may not be aware of. As you can see, Belgium’s government note yields just hit a multi-month high of 4.88 percent. The cause: Concerns over the stability of its government (no real government since election last summer) and costs associated with its proposed bailout of mega-bank Dexia.

And it’s not just Belgium, either. Austria is one of the AAA-rated countries in the euro zone that’s supposed to help support its weaker brethren. But contagion selling is now spreading to that country’s debt market, driving the yield on its 10-year notes to double the yield level on comparable Germany notes!

Speaking of contagion selling, here’s the last chart. It shows the spread — or difference — in yields between French 10-year notes and German 10-year notes. As you can see, it just exploded to 190 basis points (1.90 percentage points). That’s a fresh euro-era record … and proof that investors are increasingly worried France will lose its AAA rating.

These aren’t small peripheral nations like Greece we’re talking about. They’re huge countries like Spain and Italy, and even “core” European nations like France, whose bond markets and economies are now tanking.

Even in the U.S., short-term borrowing costs are rising steadily as banks find it tougher to find other banks willing to lend to them. Three-month LIBOR just hit 48 basis points, the highest level since last July.

Plus, the 2-year swap spread is blowing out. It hit 53 basis points this week, the highest level in 17 months. That’s an indicator that banks don’t trust other banks, and are demanding they pay much more if they want to enter into derivatives transactions.

Bottom line: Credit markets are going nuts! Several indicators are at levels not seen since the depths of the 2007-2009 crisis, or headed in that direction. Others are much WORSE now than they were then. These were clear LEADING indicators of a stock market collapse back then, and I believe they are clear leading indicators of a stock market collapse now.

The only thing propping up stocks was the “year end” effect … the need for bullish portfolio managers to juice stocks in order to pad their own bonuses. But I don’t think that one minor positive is enough to offset the complete collapse of the global credit markets. In fact, the next major leg down may now be getting underway.

This is all for now, please stay tuned as this crisis unfold in the near future.

Good trading and invest save.

Erik

 

 

Of the four biggest economies – the US, China, Japan and Germany – the US is the oddball. The only debtor in the bunch. The other three run huge surpluses each and every year.

In fact, apart from size, you could argue that the US has more in common with Greece than it does with the other major economic powers. Like Greece it can’t meet domestic demand for goods and services from its own factories and companies.

And, of course, we can’t forget this: The US is dependent on other countries to finance their annual deficits, just like Greece is.

Greece has depended on European banks, the US on China. In the excerpt below, Mr. Martin Wolf from the Financial Times argues that it’s the debtor, the US, that rules its relationship with China: “If [China] stops buying [US bonds], it imposes a shock on itself.”

Wolf is saying nothing new here. But he says the same is true about Greece. Little Greece has the ability “to inflict a great deal of damage on everybody.”

The US and Greece are both victims of global imbalances in trade. Asia and China are way overbuilt. To prosper their factories need markets like the US’s. Germany is also overbuilt and needs markets like Greece’s to prosper.

From the Financial Times

Three of the world’s four largest economies — China, Germany and Japan — are creditors: they run current account surpluses, in good and in bad times. They believe they are entitled to lecture debtors on their follies. China, an ascendant superpower, enjoys berating the U.S. for its imprudence. Japan, a U.S. ally, is more discreet. Germany’s ambitions are closer to home. It wishes to turn its euro zone partners into good Germans, instead.

Yet creditors are vulnerable. Their economies have a capacity to supply goods and services that borrowers desire far larger than their own residents will ever buy. Deficit economies are mirror images: their capacity to supply such goods and services falls short of their demand. These surpluses and deficits are embedded in both kinds of economy.

Within creditor countries, the producers of tradeable goods and services are a powerful lobby for the supply of credit to debtors. Private funding will halt once financiers realize how bad their lending has been. Policy makers are then caught between throwing good money after bad or tolerating brutal adjustment, as their markets disappear. In punishing profligate borrowers, they also damage their own citizens.

This story lies behind what is happening to the world. It is behind the agenda of the European summit of last week and that of the Group of 20 leading economies this weekend. As Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England, stated in a recent speech, it is the story behind all the crises since 2007: “Persistent trade surpluses in some countries and deficits in others did not reflect a flow of capital to countries with profitable investment opportunities, but to countries that borrowed to finance consumption or had lost competitiveness. The result was unsustainably high levels of consumption (whether public or private) in the U.S., UK and a range of other advanced economies and unsustainably low levels of consumption in China and other economies in Asia, and some advanced economies with persistent trade surpluses, such as Germany and Japan.” In brief: everybody helped make a mess and everybody has to play their part in fixing it.

Greece is taking the brunt of the world’s anger right now. But one of these days it will be the US, even though as Wolf puts it, it’s “a trap of creditor countries’ own making.”

Good Trading

Erik

Right now, we’re seeing much the same global reaction we saw after many of the union’s previous 13 crisis summits:

Officials are congratulating themselves for doing next to nothing. The media is proclaiming the meetings “successful.” So are all stock markets and currencies except for the dollar.

But let’s consider the real news:

— There are no details on how the ECB will raise the money needed to fund the bailout mechanism to the tune of $1.4 trillion. The ECB is very reluctant to just print money like the USA FED has done in the past, so where will the money come from? Nobody knows!

— Even Europe’s banks have no idea where they’re going to get the $150 billion of additional funding that they’re being ordered to come up with. Plus, insiders say that the requirements are so liberal that even troubled banks could avoid compliance with little if any trouble.

— And perhaps worst of all, savvy analysts and traders know that $1.4 trillion, as large as that figure is, is nowhere near enough to kill Europe’s debt crisis in its tracks. Experts predict that as much as $3 trillion will be needed!

So where’s the beef behind Europe’s latest news? WELL, THERE IS NONE!

The next steps I believe are predictable: On the short term, over the next few days, the reality of the union’s hopeless situation will set in with investors. The euro will continue its collapse. And unless I miss my guess or a miracle happens over night, the investments I use at times like this will skyrocket in value.

 

Good Trading

 

Erik

 

Dear Friends, Investors and guest readers,

I think this headline tells enough for the reader to actually know what this is all about. It is a very serious matter with great alarming effect, this devastating event will have a great impact for many people no matter where in the world you live. Please read it and digest it and please do act while there is still time accordingly to protect your self and your love ones, this is indeed a serious tread to many peoples life’s.

An historic, world-changing event is about to crush the U.S. economy and stock market.

It will destroy the income, savings, investments and retirements of millions of Americans.

It will plunge vast numbers of families into the nightmare of poverty … hunger … and homelessness.

Only a minority of investors will survive intact. And some will actually build their wealth in the process.

I want to introduce to a friend and great researcher Martin Weiss, founder and chairman of Weiss Research — the ONLY firm in America that rated and specifically NAMED, well ahead of time, the companies that got crushed by the last crisis, including General Motors, Lehman Brothers, Fannie Mae, Citigroup and dozens more. Those who ignored their warnings lost nearly everything. Those who heeded them had the opportunity to make fortunes.

Please go ahead and read:

American Apocalypse

American Apocalypse (video version)

Good trading and God bless,

Erik

 

 

 

 

Beijing – China is one of the world’s largest producers and purchasers of precious metals, especially gold and silver. Beijing has now unveiled its first gold ATM machine in a shopping district. More than 2,000 will be installed in the next two years.
Since the beginning of the global economic meltdown, China has been purchasing and producing commodities at a rapid pace. Digital Journal has reported in the past that its central bank has bought gold bullion and state-television outlets have even urged citizens to acquire silver bullion. Digital Journal has also reported of gold ATM machines being installed in Germany and the United States. Now, China has unveiled its first gold ATM machine in Beijing’s shopping district of Wangfujing Street. Although it was opened for business on Sunday, it was shut down a few hours later because it was not producing receipts for customers. Operations manager of Gongmei Gold Trading said the technical issues were being repaired, but did not note when the machine will be up and running again. The machine, built by Germany’s Ex Oriente Lux AG, allows customers to purchase one million yuan ($157,000) worth of gold bars and coins in various sizes at regular up-to-date market prices. Gold can be purchased by cash or credit card. “The people in Asia have a unique taste for gold, especially in China and India, and the channels of investment in China are way too narrow right now,” said Zheng Ruixiang, Gongmei president, in an interview with China Daily. “To puts residents’ cash deposits into gold deposits can reduce cash flow and reduce pressure on commodity prices.” Chinese officials are planning to install more than 2,000 more machines over the course of the next two years. They will be placed in secure locations, such as private clubs, financial institutions and gold stores. Since 2000, gold has risen astronomically from $250 per ounce to as high as $1,900. A report from the World Gold Council suggested that China acquired more gold than India.

 

Good trading

Erik

One of America’s giant financial institutions, which I’ll name in a moment, could be a candidate for bankruptcy in a double-dip recession scenario.

It controls nearly $2.3 trillion in assets and has 57 million customers.

It does big business with virtually every other major financial institution in the country.

It is THE largest financial institution in America.

It’s so large, in fact, that, if it cannot avoid failure … it will cause so many other dominoes to fall and so many millions of Americans to lose money … the entire U.S. economy will be threatened.

And even if it can avoid failure, investors holding its shares will be decimated.

This forecast is not based on conjecture, rumor or hyperbole. It’s grounded in solid analysis and hard data.

Nor is it without direct precedent. In fact, this mammoth financial institution already came within a hair of bankruptcy less than three years ago!

The only reason it’s still a big player today is because it was one of the main beneficiaries of the largest federal bailout of all time.

But despite the bailout, its business has continued to deteriorate, and its prospects for survival have continued to darken.

Its name: Bank of America Corp., the largest banking conglomerate in the United States and 3.6 times larger than Lehman Brothers was when it failed in the fall of 2008.

Will BofA go the way of Lehman? Probably not. The authorities would likely break it up into pieces they feel must be saved and pieces that can be more easily shut down.

Is a future failure written in stone? No.

If the U.S. economy can somehow sidestep a double-dip recession, BofA can continue limping along.

Or if its lobbyists in Washington can somehow overcome the stiff resistance of Republicans in Congress to pass another giant TARP bailout bill, it may escape doomsday.

But the realities of our time are already reducing the chances of those escape routes:

  The U.S. economy is already slipping into a double dip with no force on the horizon strong enough to change its course.

  The U.S. Congress is already far stingier than at any time in modern history.

  And, considering his noncommittal speech at Jackson Hole last week, even Fed Chairman Bernanke seems far more reluctant to promise action than he was just one year ago.

Why Bank of America Is in Danger

Right now, BofA is caught in a vicious cycle of its own making.

The main reason: Back in January of 2008, it made the horrendous blunder of buying the nation’s largest mortgage company, Countrywide Financial, just before the mortgage market’s worst collapse in history.

Result: Bank of America’s main banking unit is saddled with $3.9 billion in repossessed real estate. (Back in March 2009, even when its stock was in the gutter and it was getting an emergency capital transfusion from Washington, it had less than half that much in repossessed properties — only $1.7 billion.)

And the homes BofA has foreclosed on so far are just the tip of the iceberg. The bank also has a whopping $20 billion in home mortgages that are in the process of foreclosure, up a shocking 224 percent from March ’09.

Yes, for a few months last year, there was some hope of a housing market recovery. But now those hopes have been dashed by the reality of sinking home prices — down another 5.9 percent in the second quarter, their biggest drop since 2009.

The main drivers: 3.7 million foreclosed homes in America, making it virtually impossible to sell properties without deep discounting; 6.5 million homes delinquent or in foreclosure; plus millions more on the way as the economy sinks.

See how vicious this cycle is? Prices are being driven lower by massive unsold inventories of foreclosed homes … while, at the same time, millions of Americans are walking away from their homes and foreclosing precisely because prices are falling!

And see how Bank of America is caught smack in the middle of this storm? It has a total of $421.7 billion tied up in mortgages — more than any other bank on the planet!

More Troubles

But that’s not all …

  Bank of America has just been sued by AIG to recover more than $10 billion in losses on $28 billion of investments, claiming that the bank misrepresented the quality of the mortgages. It’s the biggest suit of its kind in history, but not the only one. A horde of investors is suing the bank for similar reasons.

  Bank of America continues to hold $52.5 trillion in notional value derivatives. That figure is more than 36 times larger than its total assets and nearly 341 times bigger than its risk-based capital!

  Perhaps most frightening of all, the bank’s exposure to the credit risks of derivatives — the possibility that some of its trading partners might default — is 182 percent of its capital, according to the Comptroller of the Currency.

These are frightening numbers. And I am NOT alone in forecasting big trouble for the bank …

Chart1

1. Former Merrill Lynch analyst Henry Blodget estimates BofA may need to write off between $100 billion and $200 billion in additional losses.

If Blodget is right and the bank can’t raise the funds, that would be enough to wipe out the main banking unit’s $154 billion in capital.

What about Warren Buffett’s $5 billion loan to Bank of America announced last week? It’s a drop in the bucket compared to the bank’s potential capital needs.

2. Stock investors, recognizing the severity of the crisis, have driven the bank’s shares to within striking distance of its March 2009 lows. And …

Chart1

3. The market for credit default swaps — insurance contracts to protect against a BofA default — is now saying that the crisis is actually WORSE than it was at height of the debt crisis in 2009.

The proof:

In March of 2009, when the fear of Bank of America’s possible demise was sending shock waves of panic through the global financial markets, the cost of insuring $10,000,000 in BofA debt was $343,375 per year (with a ten-year contract).

Now, just this week, the same coverage has cost as much as $378,235, or nearly $35,000 more. (See chart above.)

Conclusion: No matter what you or I may think about the bank’s future, the collective wisdom of investors, as reflected in the current premium cost for default insurance, is saying the probability that Bank of America could go bankrupt is now greater than it was at any time during the great debt crisis of 2008-2009!

What to Do ( If you live in the U.S. )

BofA is not going to keel over tomorrow. It still has capital. And the double-dip recession which we feel could be a key cause of its demise is just beginning.

But it’s not too soon for you to take preparatory steps …

Step 1. Make sure your savings are safe.

  Go to www.weisswatchdog.com

  Sign up (it’s free). Or sign in if you’re already a member.

  Search for your bank (using the first word of the name)

  Add it to your Watchlist, and

  Check the rating. If it’s rated D+ or lower, it’s weak and should be avoided for most of your funds. If it’s rated B+ or better, it’s strong and likely to have the wherewithal to survive some of the toughest of times.

Step 2. Hedge against a worsening banking crisis with gold. The most convenient vehicle: The largest ETF that invests in gold bullion, symbol GLD.

Good luck and Have a Save Trading!
Erik

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