The Fed and Opioids

While the U.S. press harps on inequality, there is no mention of Marx’s 5th plank, i.e. The Federal Reserve. “The creation of money out of thin air, or legal counterfeiting, by central banks,” wrote Frank Hollenbeck for mises.org. creates “undesirable and unjustified source of income inequalities.” He continued, “It should be no surprise the growing gap in income inequalities has coincided with the adoption of fiat currencies worldwide.”

The Nightmare of Bureaucracy

the federal government makes the simple process of disposing of government properties into a kafkaesque nightmare. “The federal government has long owned more real estate than it knows what to do with — buildings that sit empty and sites that are underdeveloped — but it must jump through hoops before it can sell its holdings,”

Fantasy's End

Although famous for his business acumen, for Trump, numbers were not a fixed thing, “for him they were surprisingly, even magically elastic.” Elections, like bets, lie in the fickle hands of the Goddess of Wagering and as the aforementioned Axthelm wrote: "The Goddess must be appeased, soothed, tithed. She must never be affronted by statements hinting that a gambler has taken fate into his own firm grip."

The End of the Sound Economy

The US economy has become hyper financialized, says Pal. If the S&P 500 goes down, employees are laid off. And, we all know that one of the Fed’s mandates is maximizing employment. “It's like nothing will last long because the Fed will not allow it to.”

Cryptocurrencies D.C.'s Latest Roadkill

Republicans and Democrats have identified a pocket they both agree on to pick to fund their spendapolloosa: cryptocurrency brokers. The Senate, at the last minute, figured it can raise $28 billion with a “large-scale increase in the requirements for crypto brokers and investors to report their transactions to the Internal Revenue Service.

Allegiant Stadium Known Unknowns

Instead of getting the sweaty, intoxicated crowd home in under three hours, Clark County Commissioner Michael Naft told the LVRJ, “I think there were lots of departments and agencies that were taking notes and making sure that every situation was an opportunity to learn from.”

Catalytic Theft

South African labor needs to employ more capital, but they can't because mining companies are afraid to provide the capital. These same companies need to open new mines as well, along with providing sustaining capital investments in the existing mines. But, why would they, they're not sure who's going to own the mines?

Can't Find True Distress

Back in the days of quasi-Laissez Faire, a pandemic would have created plenty of opportunities for the Zells of the world, but, as Grant explains, “Hotels, malls and other properties have suffered enormous declines in revenue. But few owners have been forced to sell at steep discounts thanks to government stimulus programs and the Federal Reserve’s easy money policy which kept a lid on foreclosure.”

Homebuyers Fear the Crash

This generation of skilled labor was neutered long ago when parents insisted their kids go to college so they can get office jobs. At the same time, in population centers, neighborhood associations band together to stop any new development in their backyards. Especially any proposal for affordable homes.

Bricks and Bitcoin

My friend echoed those comments, talking about how cool the scene was. Playboy had a booth, there were ladies walking about dressed only in paint. To someone who has attended plenty of stodgy gold and natural resource conferences, not to mention Austrian economics confabs, the Miami happening sounds like a Grateful Dead concert by comparison.

Transitory or Stagflation

Supply chain breaks and increased demand are not inflation. A more clear-eyed view is from Peter Boockver, who wisely looks at price inflation, first in services, and then in goods. In an interview with Real Vision’s Ed Harrison, Boockvar said, “When it comes to services, take out energy, so call it core services, over the last 20 years, it's averaged an annual gain of 2.7%.”

Plumbing Problems

According to Bianco, the plumbers working at the Eccles Building don't understand their own plumbing. In September 2019 when the repo market blew up, Powell referred to it as a technical plumbing problem, in other words, too complicated for mere mortals and leave it to the monetary gods.

Price Discovery is Alive and Well in Crypto

Weston Nakamura in an interview with Real Vision’s Jack Farley made the trenchant point, “This is what markets look like when you don't have global central banks artificially suppressing volatility, intervention of central banks buying every dip, putting a safety net under every single slight tremor or taper tantrum or whatever it may be, this is what happens.”