ART
CASHIN: There Are Parallels Between The US And Weimar Germany Where
Hyperinflation Destroyed Society
13
October, 2012
UBS's
Art Cashin is sounding alarms on hyperinflation again.
The
worry is that all of the Fed-induced liquidity in the financial
system will begin to churn, causing the price of goods to surge.
These
are the ingredients of inflation are in place like dominos, said
Cashin to Eric King of King
World News.
And once those dominos fall, it'll happen very fast:
Listeners
(and readers) will have to keep an eye on the velocity of money.
Watch figures like, here in the United States, the M2 (figure), and
see if it begins to grow through velocity, and get very cautious at
that point. There are some potentially eerie parallels (today
vs the Weimar Germany era). The United States trauma was
unemployment and deflation (in the 30s), but in Germany in the 20s,
it was money that ruined an entire society.
…
There is a kind of delayed effect (from all of the money printing), and you want to watch very carefully. If that starts to accelerate, if you begin to see not just the first signs of inflation, but actual acceleration, it will come very fast. Then you have to think about, are you protected? Do you have your money in hard assets?
And
it's more imminent than you think:
I
think you are certainly at a ‘flashing yellow alert.’ You
have in place a variety of things that could begin to react somewhat
domino-like. As I said, there are measures and items that the
listeners (and readers) can look for themselves. Look at what
is the growth in the money supply, M2? It comes out every week.
If
it begins to grow rapidly, then the money that the Fed has created
will be seen as moving through the system. That will create the
high risk of accelerated inflation, and perhaps, God forbid, runaway
inflation.
Cashin
also had another scary thing to say:
Vladimir
Lenin said that the best way to take over a country and subjugate the
people is to debase the currency. So whether you do it by
accident or purposely, it has a very deleterious (damaging) effect on
the population and on the culture.”

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