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The Fed's balance sheet is now at $6T, which is too large for them to unwind. This only ends in one of two ways: 1. A massive asset bubble and a fundamental re-evaluation of risk/reward ratios for all investments. Historically, the average P/E ratio for S&P 500 companies is around 16. Roughly speaking, this means that investors are comfortable making their investment back in 16 years in static market conditions. Does this decision calculus change if you know that the Fed will bail you out as soon as times get tough? You bet it does. Similarly, corporations are much more incentivized to take on as much debt as possible in hopes of inflating their stock prices. When times are good, massive bonuses for execs all around. When times are bad...hey, bailout! I expect the "new normal" for P/E ratios to be in the 30-50 range. In the short term (next decade or so), this means the party continues, and we see massive growth in the stock market. But when the bubble pops, it'll pop harder than ever... 2. The second scenario is that debt-holders worldwide lose faith in the dollar and start dumping Treasuries, leading to hyperinflation. This doesn't seem to be happening as of today, in fact, the more money the Fed prints, the stronger the dollar. Central banks worldwide are printing money as well, so the dollar looks like the "least ugly" choice by comparison. The big unknown is how long the Fed can keep printing before debt-holders start second guessing the dollar's value. |
3. Dollar devaluation through expansion of the balance sheet even further.
The BoJ balance sheet is about 100% of GDP. The Fed balance sheet is about 30% of GDP. That gives a lot of room to add assets before the US looks anything like Japan in that department.
This balance sheet expansion could happen against a backdrop of stock prices that would otherwise be falling. Expanding the balance sheet through stock purchases allows the Fed to correct the global dollar short squeeze while preventing calamitous stock repricing at the same time.
Nominally, things wouldn't look much different to those in the US. But in real terms, the result would be crushing. It seems, however, that politicians and many voters only consider nominal returns, not real returns.
This is one of the reasons I find it hard to believe people who claim the Fed is "out of ammunition." We're at the level of bazookas now, but the Fed has everything from that to nuclear ICBMs and more to play with courtesy of the dollar's reserve currency status.
https://www.lynalden.com/global-dollar-short-squeeze/