"If there is one lesson to be learned from the Japanese experience with
deleveraging over the past few decades it’s that deleveraging cycles have there
own special rhythm of reflationary and deflationary interludes. Pretty simple
thinking as balance sheet deleveraging by definition cannot be a short term
process given the prior decades required to build up the leverage accumulated in
any economic/financial system. If deleveraging were a short term process, it
would play out as a massive short term depression. And clearly any central bank
would act to disallow such an outcome, exactly has been the case not only in
Japan over the last few decades, but now also in the US and the Eurozone. We
just need to remember that this is a dance. There is an ebb and flow to the
greater (generational) deleveraging cycle. Just as leveraging up was not a
linear process, neither will the process of deleveraging be linear. Why bring
this larger picture cycle rhythm up right now? The recent price volatility
we’ve seen in assets that can be characterized as offering purchasing power
protection within the context of a global central banking community debasing
currencies as their preferred method of reflation for now, specifically recent
the price volatility of gold..."
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-it-aint-over-til-its-over
at http://www.zerohedge.com/news/guest-post-it-aint-over-til-its-over