


Dear CIGAs,
Long speculated upon in our community, the rock and the hard place has finally become a reality. An economy not accelerating at an accelerating rate is declining at an accelerating rate. The mirage of a recovery is getting harder and harder to MOPE about. It simply is not there. We are entering a declining phase that will not end in any kind of a soft landing.
Stimulation monetarily, QE, and fiscal are like controlled substances in that the real high is on the first injection. After that, each additional stimulation of an economy must be multiples of the first stimulation in ever increasing size just in order to hold the line. QE3 is guaranteed unless the powers that be want to see a depression that will make the Great Depression look like kindergarten in the pain department.
This week we saw a European Bank forced to sell their US mortgage derivatives and the loss was a shocker. These pieces of crap are not worth the digital bits they are written on. Smart money has not let this event pass their view, and know now how broke the US financial system really is. This event broke the camouflage of FASB’s selling their souls out to politics by allowing the banks to value their mortgage derivatives at any price the bank wanted on the bank’s cartoon balance sheets. The western balance sheets of their financial institutions are raging misstatements. The system is broke. This is why there is no recovery of merit but rather a statistical aberration, which was until recently only holding the line.
Here we are at that place we have anticipated for the past 45 years knowing that all the games being played had to play out at that point where super stimulation had no effect and it became totally appreciated that even many trillions of printed money will only impact the currency and not business.
The rock and the hard place is a time when the Western World is simply screwed.
The risk of not stimulating is stagflation at a spiritual level. The risk of stimulating is stagflation at a spiritual level. The risk of doing nothing is both an economic and currency collapse of biblical proportions.
This is what the three illustrations of the skier teach. Should the Fed lose control of this, which is predictable, then currency induced cost push inflation would take gold to Martin Armstrong’s $12,500.
The odds are 70/30 right now that  hyperinflation occurs. That takes gold over $1650. If the odds shift  then gold starts a run to balance the International Balance Sheet of the  USA and will secure Martin Armstrong’s target of $12,500.
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Guest Post: Bankrupt Nations Try To Stop The Future From Happening, Fail
Debt is slavery… or at least indentured servitude  of the worst kind.  That looming mortgage, the high interest credit  card debt, the short-term car loan– these are the forces that keep  people from breaking free and taking action. Ironically, debt begets  more debt. According to FinAid, the average US student loan debt for a  four-year private university graduate is nearly $36,000, and $24,000 for  public. Throw in that first car loan and maybe a mortgage, and suddenly  you’re staring at hundreds of thousands of dollars in demoralizing  claims on your future income. At this point, most people figure… ‘hey,  I’m already in debt up to my nose, might as well get in up to my  eyeballs and buy a new plasma screen on credit.’ Debt is an enormous  psychological burden that influences life’s major decisions. It’s why so  many people stay committed to jobs that are unfulfilling in cities they  detest under conditions they find disheartening. Nobody wants to rock  the boat too much… take too many risks and you could lose your job, and  hence the ability to make those monthly payments. This familiar story  has been playing out across the developed world for years. This is not  an ill, however, that exclusively affects individuals and families. Even  at the macro level, debt has the power to subjugate entire nations to  the whims of their creditors. Enter the IMF. 
Spiegel Greek Hit Piece #2: Bailout Troika Finds "Greece Missed All Fiscal Targets" - Next Steps: Game Over?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2011 14:04 -0400Germany's Der Spiegel seems hell bent on  getting sued to hell and back by Greece. After a few weeks ago it  "broke" the news of a secret meeting that would consider the expulsion  of the country from the Eurozone, it is once again stirring passions  with an article claiming  that Greece has missed all fiscal targets agreed under its bailout  plan, according to a mission from an international inspection team,  putting further funding for Athens at risk, Reuters summarizes. "The troika (aka the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission and the European Central Bank) asserts in its report to be presented next week that Greece had missed all its agreed fiscal targets,"  weekly Spiegel magazine reported in a prerelease. In other words, this  could be the political game over for Greece, whose fate as has been  disclosed recently, is intimately tied with the perception that it is  following the troika's demands for fiscal change. If the three key  bailout institutions are already leaking that Greece is done, next week  could well be the beginning of the end for the €. In about 48 hours,  even as America is enjoying a Monday off (or precisely because to that,  to avoid a market panic), the European market could be digesting a very  bitter pill of testing just how well pre-provisioned all those German,  French and Dutch banks really are.
Mike Krieger Interviewed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2011 13:31 -0400
You read his weekly articles on Zero Hedge, now here if your chance to listen to Mike Krieger interviewed by Future Money Trends. Among the now topical issues discussed are the debt ceiling, QE3, geopolitical instability, US and global economies, $100 silver (as well as the recenty take down of the metal), market manipulation and much more, as well s Krieger's several proposed scenarios for the future.
More Political Capture: Goldman Hires Top Republican Fed Transparency Foe; Spends More Time With SEC Than Any Other Bank
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2011 12:55 -0400The name Judd Gregg is not new to Zero Hedge  readers. Back in the 2009-2010 battle for Fed transparency, which  continues to be only fractionally on the way to being won, Gregg, who  then served as the top Republican on the Budget Committee and a member  of the Banking Committee, said that "opponents of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's second term are  guilty of "pandering populism"." Odd that these  populism panderers, of which Zero Hedge was a proud member, ultimately  succeeded in not only getting a one time Fed audit, but also won the  legal case initiated by Mark Pittman to expose the Fed's dirty laundry,  without which we would not know that not only did the Fed bail out  primarily foreign investment banks during the financial crisis, but also that the biggest user of the Fed's somewhat secret Short Term Open Market Operations facility,  also known as a 0.01% subsidy, was none other than Goldman Sachs,  contrary to the firm's sworn statements that it did not really need  bailing out. Gregg continued: "There's a lot of populism going on in  this country right now, and I'm tired of it." Gregg warned that the  growing tide of populism would threaten some of the most central institutions to the economy's recovery. "What  it's going to do is burn down some of the institutions which are  critical to us as a nation and as an economy to recover and create  jobs," he warned." It was therefore only a matter of time that Gregg,  following the end of his political career, has decided to step down, and  work for one of these "central institutions to the economy's recovery" -  Goldman Sachs.  As such we present the list of companies that courtesy of their "top  contributor" status with the senator over the years, are about to get  preferential treatment from Goldman's sell side analysts, and see a  prompt upgrade to Buy and/or Conviction Buy list in the near term. After  all there is no such thing as squid-pro-zero in a world controlled by  Wall Street's institutions "central to the economy's recovery."
Add The Middle East To China And India As Another Source Of Surging Gold Demand, Says Jim O'Neill
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2011 12:22 -0400The latest observations the spread of gold's  popularity comes from none other than BRIC expert, Goldman's Jim  O'Neill, who advises clients in his latest letter that it may be prudent  that in addition to China and India as a source of ever increasing  demand for gold, it may be time to also add the Middle East to the ever  increasing list of investors (typically quite wealthy) who believe in  the yellow metal. "Not because of this particular anecdote, but the  Middle East being what it is, my meetings involved more discussion about  Gold prices than is usually the case in other parts of the world. While  the gold bar machine anecdote adds to all the other colourful stories I  pick up, the recent remarkable resilience of gold, despite what has  happened to silver and other commodities, is rather impressive. This  gold price strength may perhaps be just a simple function of both the  extremely low level of G7 real interest rates and the prospect that they  might not rise anytime soon. I got the impression that there a quite a few bulls of Gold in the Middle East."
 
 
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