*There’s another side to low interest rates that no one really likes to talk much about. They’re a sign that all is not well. Period.
Interest Rate Fact #1 — Western nations are living (and dying) on debt: Western governments are drowning in debt and need to borrow trillions of dollars more just to survive.
The U.S. government alone may have to rollover and borrow as much as $3 trillion in the next 12 months. Europe is staring at at least a trillion in rollover financing, not to mention another trillion it may soon need to bail out its sinking banks.
Simply put, they desperately NEED low interest rates to survive. Even if it means you don’t get a return on your savings anymore.
Interest Rate Fact #2 — Fed Chief Bernanke knows fully well that allowing interest rates to rise would destroy any economy that’s as sick as ours is: Higher borrowing costs would dampen consumer spending … push millions of employers over the brink … bankrupt millions more homeowners … increase unemployment, and more.
So from that point of view, low interest rates are a sign of how ill our economy is, and not how great things could be with low rates.
Interest Rate Fact #3 — To keep rates low, the Fed (and other central banks) will soon have to resort to more money printing, and lots of it.
Right now, they’re getting lots of help keeping rates low as investors all over the world, frightened by sinking economies, are pulling their money out of stock and commodities and instead, are plowing that money mostly into U.S. government notes and bonds.
That’s helping governments, especially Washington, keep rates low.
But that’s not going to last much longer. For one thing, central banks don’t like it one bit at all when disinflation hits the markets. That means declining asset prices, which makes it more difficult for consumers to borrow, even when rates are low, and also creates a negative wealth effect, making consumers fell less wealthy.
So central banks have no other choice when that happens but to step back in and print trillions more, both to keep interest rates low — through the increased supply of money and credit — and to inflate asset prices back up again.
Thing is …
You’re caught in the middle. When asset prices fall, you lose money … and then, when central banks flood the world with trillions of dollars of new money, the value of every dollar you have declines in value.*
That puts your wealth in a pickle, to put it lightly. It’s also why I believe
that it’s now more important than ever that you watch every word spoken by any central banker, the world over.
They hold all the cards right now. They are far more powerful than most like to admit. I personally believe
Fed Chief Bernanke is the most powerful man on the planet, far more powerful than our President, because Big Ben can print money at will. And there is nothing that can stop him.