"When the house of (credit) cards begins to fall in on itself, the trend
turns from inflation to deflation. That's when creditors turn their
focus from lending to collecting and debtors turn their focus from borrowing
to repaying. But by this time there are too many IOUs, and debtors cannot
service them, much less repay them. Falling asset values and economic contraction
thwart efforts to honor the loans. Debtors begin to default. When that happens,
the game is up." - Bob Prechter, Elliot Wave Theorist
"The problem is that vital markets that most people never see - the constant
borrowing and lending and trading among huge institutions - have been paralyzed
by losses, fear, and uncertainty. And you can't get rid of losses, fear,
and uncertainty by cutting rates."
Bank Deposits
"Real-estate loans, not failed stockbrokers' accounts, were the largest
single element in the failure of 4,800 banks in the years from 1930 to 1933." Homer
Hoyt. One Hundred Years of Land Values in Chicago.
We are expecting a large number of bank failures as conditions deteriorate:
"At times like these, also, it becomes clear that bank deposits are not
really money- even on a paper, let alone a gold standard- but mere money-substitutes,
which serve as money ordinarily, but reveal their true identity when nationwide
confidence begins to collapse." Murray Rothbard, America's Great Depression.
While bank deposits up to $100k are insured, the FDIC is under no time restraint
to pay depositors back. Similarly, many hedge funds have
halted withdrawals "tying up tens of billions of dollars for an indefinite
period." Due to FDIC backlogs, we expect that bank depositors will not have
access to their cash when it is time to benefit from bargain prices.
Looking Back To May
In last year's report titled "May
10th - Credit Collapse," we provided a description of the credit crunch
of 1837. We return to the year 1837 once again, specifically to Chicago,
where easy credit had induced a real estate bubble. Homer Hoyt in One
Hundred Years of Land Values in Chicago describes the impact of the credit
collapse:
"Under these conditions it soon became impossible to borrow money on real
estate or to renew existing loans...Still there was no distress sales and
no drastic declines in land values. In 1838 business improved temporarily
and the Illinois banks, after a suspension of thirteen months, resumed specie
payments on August 13, 1838. Only 17,640 acres were sold (436,992 acres in
1836) by the Chicago land office in 1838, however, and very few sales were
made in Chicago itself. Another financial crisis swept through the country
in the autumn of 1839...That real estate values had declined drastically
could no longer be concealed by 1839. The extent of the decline was revealed
when the government insisted on selling..."
William B. Ogden, a resident of Chicago, reveals the extent of the decline
in a November 1839 letter preserved by the Chicago Historical Society:
"One fourth of 1836 prices can hardly be obtained for much business property
at this time and one 10th to a 20th is about all town property will bring
or is worth compared to sales of 1836."
At Lamont Trading Advisors, we provide wealth preservation strategies for
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***No graph, chart, formula or other device offered can in and
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Paul J. Lamont is President of Lamont
Trading Advisors, Inc., a registered investment advisor in the State
of Alabama. Persons in states outside of Alabama should be aware that we
are relying on de minimis contact rules within their respective home state.
For more information about our firm visit www.LTAdvisors.net,
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