Kyle
Bass: "Japanese Retirees Will Lose Up To Half Of Their Life
Savings"
While
Kyle Bass notably
remarks that pinpointing the end of a 70-year debt super-cycle is
naive, the combination of the resurgence of nationalism (impacting
trade with China)
and the dreadful impact of the earthquake/tsunami (drastically
changing Japan's supply chain) has secularly shifted Japan's trade
balance for the worst at a time when the current account is already
negative. "They
are all in denial,"Bass
notes as the government has failed to deal with its problems over the
last 20 years.
Simply
put, Japan
needs a Schumpeterian 'creative destruction' moment
instead of the constant rolling of debts and expanding of government
balance sheets to paper over the cracks. The 'moment' feels like it
is now, he notes, expanding that "JPY
could hit 200," as
they lose control; following two decades of volatility-smoothing, the
chance of a disorderly collapse are high.
Critically,
he fears, "the
social fabric of Japan will tear," as
with one-third of the nations at retirement age, the fallout from the
policies of Abe-Kuroda could cause them to "lose 30-50% of their
life savings." What is perhaps even more concerning, he
adds, "you
are starting to see the central banks not trust each other."
At
a certain point in time, "nationalist
interest takes over the global [G7] kumbaya," and
that is occurring now.
"When
your debts are 24-times your government tax revenue, you have a
secular decline in population, and all of the things are finally
catching up to you, what happens when you have a debt crisis?"
Central
Banks believe "Devaluation is 'supposedly' the way to freedom"
3:00
- Japan's tearing social fabric
4:30
- G7 Kumbaya unwind
6:00
- "There is no way out" for Japan - it's a matter of when
not if. And "if
there is no way out for them, there is no way out for the rest of us
- unless we change the way we operate."
6:30
- "If there is no consequence to the US profligacy [rates not
moving against them] well then they will keep spending."
- "Central banks are enabling the spending"
7:15
- "The Modus Operandi of the west is running deficits; and what
that has meant in the past is runaway cost-push inflation - and I
think that is what we are going to see"
8:00
- "Investors are too complacent" - this is the single-most
riskiest time to be complacent in our generation - "investing
with the typical endowment model... is not going to work"
9:00
- "The
insidious nature of a runaway inflation is that it bankrupts the
middle class... the poor stay poor, the middle class (with savings in
the banks) get wiped out, the wealthy (with productive assets) do the
best"
9:40
- ... which leads to social unrest globally - and that is a
problem...
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