One of the (many) fascinating things about this latest global financial crisis
is that there's no single catalyst. Unlike 2008 when the carnage could be traced
back to US subprime housing, or 2000 when tech stocks crashed and pulled down
everything else, this time around a whole bunch of seemingly-unrelated things
are unraveling all at once.
China's mal-investment binge is crashing global commodities, an overvalued
dollar is crushing emerging markets (most recently forcing China to devalue),
the pan-Islamic war has suddenly gone from simmer to boil, grossly-overvalued
equities pretty much everywhere are getting a long-overdue correction, developed-world
political systems are being upended as voters lose faith in mainstream parties
to deal with inequality, corporate power, entitlements, immigration, really
pretty much everything. For one amusing/amazing example of the latter problem,
consider Germany's response to the mobs of men that suddenly materialized and
began molesting women: Cologne
mayor slammed after telling German women to keep would-be rapists at arm's
length.
Why do causes matter at times like this? Because where previous crises were "solved" with
a relatively simple dose of hyper-easy money, it's not clear that today's diverse
array of emerging threats can be addressed in the same way. Interest rates,
for instance, were high by current standards at the beginning of past crises,
which gave central banks plenty of leeway to comfort the afflicted with big
rate cut announcements. Today rates are near zero in most places and negative
in many. Cutting from here would be an experiment to put it mildly, one with
an uncertain outcome and myriad possible unintended consequences including
a flight to cash that empties banks of deposits and a destabilizing spike in
wealth inequality as negative interest rates support asset prices for the already-rich
while driving down incomes for savers and retirees.
And with debt now $57 trillion higher worldwide than in 2008, it's not at
all clear that another borrowing binge will be greeted with enthusiasm by the
world's bond markets, currency traders or entrepreneurs. Here's that now-famous chart
from McKinsey:
Easier money will have no effect on the supply/demand imbalance in the oil
market, which is still growing. The likely result: Sharply lower prices in
the year ahead, leading to a wave of defaults for trillions of dollars of energy-related
junk bonds and derivatives.
As for stock prices, in the previous two crises equities plunged almost overnight
to levels that made buying reasonable for the remaining smart money. Today,
virtually every major equity index is still high by historical standards, so
the necessary crash is still to come -- and will add to global turmoil as it
unfolds.
The upshot? It really is different this time, in a very bad way. And this
fact is just now dawning on millions of leveraged speculators, mutual fund
and pension fund managers, individual investors and central bank managers.
Right this minute virtually all of them are staring at screens, scrolling over
to the sell button, hesitating, pulling up Bloomberg screens showing how much
they've lost in the past few days, calling analysts who last year convinced
them to load up on Apple and Facebook, getting no answer, going back to Bloomberg
and then fondling the sell button some more. Think of it as financial collapse
OCD.
What happens next? At some point -- today or next week or next month, but
probably pretty soon -- the dam will break. Everyone will hit "sell" at the
same time and find out that those liquid markets they'd come to see as normal
have disappeared and yesterday's prices are meaningless fantasy. The exits
will slam shut and -- as in China last night where the markets closed a quarter-hour
into the trading session -- the whole world will be stuck with the positions
they created back when markets were liquid and central banks were omnipotent
and government bonds were risk-free and Amazon was going to $2,000.
And one thought will appear in all those minds: Why didn't I load up on
gold when I had the chance?