“There is a $1 trillion stash of cash idling in the banking system,” writes Peter Eavis in this morning’s Wall Street Journal. “It’s too big to ignore, and it’s a cause for concern.” (see “The U.S. Economy’s $1 Trillion Question“)
Banks are required by the Federal Reserve to hold a small amount of funds in reserve to meet their liability needs. But these bank reserves now exceed the minimum by over $1 trillion — up from a surplus of just $2 billion in September of 2008.
By now, most our readers should have seen the inflation scare chart — the expansion of the monetary base. With such an explosion in the potential money supply, it is understandable why inflation hawks have caused a stir. As Eavis continues, “In theory, these sleeping funds could be ‘activated’ to support a huge volume of new loans, which in turn could fuel demand and inflation… [But] for now, though, the inflation fears look overdone. Bank credit is actually falling, despite the excess reserves. That raises an opposing fear: That banks remain nervous, even after all that has been done to support them. They would rather cling to low-yielding cash than lend it.”
In case anyone wonders where all of the Fed’s newly “printed”money has gone, you now have your answer. Rather than lending out the massive bulge of liquidity you see in the link above, banks have decided to sit on it — all one trillion dollars of it!
So, what does this actually mean? It means that inflation is not an imminent threat. Until banks recover their appetite for risk (and consumers recover their appetite for new debt), the velocity of money will remain depressed and deflation — not inflation — will remain the primary concern.
Charles Sizemore, CFA
Co-author of the recently-published Boom or Bust: Understanding and Profiting from a Changing Consumer Economy
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Charles: So we are likely now seeing a bubble in gold, as the people are practically chanting for the death of the dollar as the pundits in hyper-inflation camp including Schiff and Celente receive lots of press at this moment. Even the TV is filled with commercials asking you to turn in your gold and receive lots of cash. As of late the gold’s price seems to move lock step with the S&P 500. This bubble in gold is likely to pop soon, any guess’ on how high it will go, when it will pop or what the catalyst is likely to be?
Clint,
At this point, I’d hesitate to put a specific target on gold. It’s become a VERY one-sided trade, and when that happens, it’s generally just a matter of time before the bubble bursts. Commodity bubbles often (but not always) enjoy a massive blowoff rally, and we haven’t seen that yet. It’s a tough call, but I’d say it’s highly likely that gold will be significantly lower in one year from now than it is today…but I frankly have no idea what it’s going to do in the meantime.
I sure would love to see Peter Schiff proved wrong though
CLS
Yes Schiff seems to have an edge to him. I do like Celente, I just disagree with him on the “Watch Gold” stance he has, on many other notes, he’s great.