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The Expected Financial Crash Is Finally Here

When two experienced economy and finance analysts, who both correctly predicted the derivative crisis of 2008, again warn of an imminent crash one better listens up.

Today Yves Smith of Naked Capitalism writes about the now Inevitable Financial Crisis:

For months, I have been confident that Europe would suffer a financial crisis and a depression, as in a real economy catastrophe accompanied by a market crash. It might not be that severe and lasting as 1929, but the breadth would mean there would not be 1987 quick bounceback nor a 2008 derivatives crisis concentrated at the heart of the banking system. Even though that looked like financial near-death experience, the same factors that made it more acute in many respects also made it easier for the officialdom to identify and shore up the key institutions that took hits below the water line.The short version of what follows is things are looking even worse now, and on multiple fronts.

Below we’ll discuss the rapidly accelerating real economy crisis, which is exacerbated by central bank tightening as pretty much the only line of defense against inflation that is almost entirely the result of a multi-fronted supply shock.1 Needless to say, the Fed raising interest rates (which Bernanke recognized as necessary in 2014 to tame bubbly asset prices but then lost his nerve) does nothing to get more chips from China or magically cure Covid-afflicted staffers so they can show up at work. But it will whack all sorts of speculators and financial firms who have wrong-footed their interest rate positions.

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7 thoughts on “The Expected Financial Crash Is Finally Here”

  1. I can no longer afford raw peanuts for the birds. $34 for ten pounds of unsalted, raw peanuts is too much to pay. Sorry, Blue Jays.

  2. Most of us can barely afford to eat now. What’s it going to be like when we have to start heating our homes, on top of all the other rising costs for food gas and everything else.?

  3. When Walmart starts reporting financial trouble, then look out!
    It will be interesting which retail businesses survive this year after Christmas.
    I for one won’t be purchasing anything.

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