A good friend of mine, John Shippen, who works in the investment banking industry in Japan, says he totally agrees with my take on the disaster heading toward Japan that I wrote about two days ago. Please refer to: Japan's Collapse Will Be Absolute and it Cannot be Stopped - Here's Some BIG Reasons Why. The only thing about that article that John seems to take umbrage with is my description that the "disaster is heading Japan's way." John says it's the opposite. He says that the disaster isn't coming, Japan is intentionally driving into it... He describes it as, "Japan is a bug that's looking for a windshield."
Hope you got a laugh from that. It's the only one you'll get from this post.
On that note, an easy article this morning for you referring to the huge financial calamity that is quickly heading our way (or, if you prefer, we are heading full speed ahead towards!) If you live in Japan, better put down that coffee before reading this. Hate to spill!
First a few charts from Mish Shedlock about debt in Europe - Sovereign Bond Yields Sharply Higher in Spain, Italy, Portugal:
This debt crisis has terrible repercussions for the world economy and Japan. Reuters has a good article on it entitled: Europe Poses Global Recession Threat: IMF. The article is a good rundown of the debt problem but the solutions they offer of throwing money at the problem are completely wrong (Been there, done that. Didn't work)... For proof of that, just look at how well throwing good money after bad has done for Greece.
Looks bad. These things have a way of getting out of control. But Japan is OK, right? Because these European countries can't print their way out. Japan can. Let's look at a few charts there. Here's a chart that shows the world ratio of debt to GDP:
As of the writing of this post, Japan's national debt according to the Japanese National Debt Clock is: ¥972, 133,157,539,777 (about $11.8 trillion USD) at debt of over ¥7.5 million per person (about $91,000 USD).
To see what the debt is now, at this moment, go see the Japanese National Debt Clock here.
But wait! Things are getting better, right? Wrong! Here's an article you might want to read from a the New York Times that asks the laughable question: "Could Japan's Debt Lead to a Crisis?" (Let me ask you: "Could the next Pope be Catholic?") But, like I said, that article is a year old. I add it because it is a typical example of the confused reporting emanating out of the MSM... "Everything will be alright as long as government's keep printing money! We have to save the system!"
Well, no. We don't have to save the system. We can't save the system. The system is a wreck.
Here's a much more realistic and sober account of the mess we're in from Global Economic and Market Analysis That Matters: Debt Crisis 2012: Forget Europe, Check Out Japan:
This seems like a fine middle ground to meet at:
ReplyDelete"You Can Get A Bad Economy With Rising Equity Prices"
http://marcfaberblog.blogspot.com/2012/04/you-can-get-bad-economy-with-rising.html
... It's a bit bizzare though, but hey, we all live in Bizzaro World these days (or Wally-World) so it seems to make sense?
- clark
Oh, and, yes, I did get a laugh out of this, a small one: "Japan is a bug that's looking for a windshield."
ReplyDeleteThanks.
- clark
The world economy is "multi-polar" and needs urgent therapy!
ReplyDeleteMike awesome articles by the way!
Just to be fair, the "bug in search of a windshield" description of Japan belongs to John Mauldin, who has been using it in his financial newsletter for years now (highly recommended)
ReplyDelete