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Prophets Of Doom: 12 Shocking Quotes From Insiders About The Horrific Economic Crisis That Is Almost Here

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Prophets Of Doom: 12 Shocking Quotes From Insiders About The Horrific Economic Crisis That Is Almost Here

Courtesy of Michael Snyder of Economic Collapse

We are getting so close to a financial collapse in Europe that you can almost hear the debt bubbles popping.  All across the western world, governments and major banks are rapidly becoming insolvent.  So far, the powers that be are keeping all of the balls in the air by throwing around lots of bailout money.  But now the political will for more bailouts is drying up and the number of troubled entities seems to grow by the day.  Right now the western world is facing a debt crisis that is absolutely unprecedented in world history.  Europe has had a tremendously difficult time just trying to keep Greece afloat, and several much larger European countries are now on the verge of a major financial crisis.  In addition, there is a growing number of very large financial institutions all over the western world that are also rapidly approaching a day of reckoning. 

The global financial system is a sea or red ink, and when we get to the point where there are hundreds of ships going under how is it going to be possible to bail all of them out?  The quotes that you are about to read show that quite a few top financial and political insiders know that things cannot hold together much longer and that a horrific economic crisis is coming.  We built the global financial system on a foundation of debt, leverage and risk and now this house of cards that we have created is about to come tumbling down.

A lot of people in politics and in the financial world know what is about to happen.  Once in a while they will even be quite candid about it with the media.

As I have written about previously, Europe is on the verge of a financial collapse.  If things go really badly, things could totally fall apart in a few weeks.  But more likely it will be a few more months until the juggling act ends.

Right now, the banking system in Europe is coming apart at the seams.  Because the global financial system is so interconnected today, when major European banks start to fail it is going to have a cascading effect across the United States and Asia as well.

The financial crisis of 2008 plunged us into the deepest recession since the Great Depression.

The next financial crisis could potentially hit the world even harder.

The following are 12 shocking quotes from insiders that are warning about the horrific economic crisis that is almost here....

#1 George Soros: "Financial markets are driving the world towards another Great Depression with incalculable political consequences. The authorities, particularly in Europe, have lost control of the situation."

#2 PIMCO CEO Mohammed El-Erian: "These are all signs of an institutional run on French banks. If it persists, the banks would have no choice but to delever their balance sheets in a very drastic and disorderly fashion. Retail depositors would get edgy and be tempted to follow trading and institutional clients through the exit doors. Europe would thus be thrown into a full-blown banking crisis that aggravates the sovereign debt trap, renders certain another economic recession, and significantly worsens the outlook for the global economy."

#3 Attila Szalay-Berzeviczy, global head of securities services at UniCredit SpA (Italy's largest bank): "The only remaining question is how many days the hopeless rearguard action of European governments and the European Central Bank can keep up Greece’s spirits."

#4 Stefan Homburg, the head of Germany's Institute for Public Finance: "The euro is nearing its ugly end. A collapse of monetary union now appears unavoidable."

#5 EU Parliament Member Nigel Farage: "I think the worst in the financial system is yet to come, a possible cataclysm and if that happens the gold price could go (higher) to a number that we simply cannot, at this moment, even imagine."

#6 Carl Weinberg, the chief economist at High Frequency Economics: "At this point, our base case is that Greece will default within weeks."

#7 Goldman Sachs strategist Alan Brazil: "Solving a debt problem with more debt has not solved the underlying problem. In the US, Treasury debt growth financed the US consumer but has not had enough of an impact on job growth. Can the US continue to depreciate the world’s base currency?"

#8 International Labour Organization director general Juan Somavia recently stated that total unemployment could "increase by some 20m to a total of 40m in G20 countries" by the end of 2012.

#9 Deutsche Bank CEO Josef Ackerman: "It is an open secret that numerous European banks would not survive having to revalue sovereign debt held on the banking book at market levels."

#10 Alastair Newton, a strategist for Nomura Securities in London: "We believe that we are just about to enter a critical period for the eurozone and that the threat of some sort of break-up between now and year-end is greater than it has been at any time since the start of the crisis"

#11 Ann Barnhardt, head of Barnhardt Capital Management, Inc.: "It's over. There is no coming back from this. The only thing that can happen is a total and complete collapse of EVERYTHING we now know, and humanity starts from scratch. And if you think that this collapse is going to play out without one hell of a big hot war, you are sadly, sadly mistaken."

#12 Lakshman Achuthan of ECRI: "When I call a recession...that means that process is starting to feed on itself, which means that you can yell and scream and you can write a big check, but it's not going to stop."

*****

In my opinion, the epicenter of the "next wave" of the financial collapse is going to be in Europe.  But that does not mean that the United States is going to be okay.  The reality is that the United States never recovered from the last recession and there are already a lot of signs that we are getting ready to enter another major recession.  A major financial collapse in Europe would just accelerate our plunge into a new economic crisis.

If you want to read something that will really freak you out, you should check out what Dr. Philippa Malmgren is saying.  Dr. Philippa Malmgren is the President and founder of Principalis Asset Management.  She is also a former member of the Bush economic team. You can find her bio right here.

Malmgren is claiming that Germany is seriously considering bringing back the Deutschmark.  In fact, she claims that Germany is very busy printing new currency up.  In a list of things that we could see happen over the next few months, she included the following....

"The Germans announce they are re-introducing the Deutschmark. They have already ordered the new currency and asked that the printers hurry up."

This is quite a claim for someone to be making. You would think that someone that used to work in the White House would not make such a claim unless it was based on something solid.

If Germany did decide to leave the euro, you would see an implosion of the euro that would be truly historic.

But as I have written about previously, it should not surprise anyone that the end of the euro is being talked about because the euro simply does not work.

The only way that the euro would have had a chance of working is if all of the governments using the euro would have kept debt levels very low.

Unfortunately, the financial systems of the western world are designed to push governments into high levels of debt.

The truth is that the euro was doomed from the very beginning.

Now we are approaching a day of reckoning.  We have been living in the greatest debt bubble in the history of the world, but the bubble is ending.  There are several ways that the powers that be could handle this, but all of them will lead to greater financial instability.

In the end, we will see that the debt-fueled prosperity that the western world has been enjoying for decades was just an illusion.

Debt is a very cruel master.  It will almost always bring more pain and suffering than you anticipated.

It is easy to get into debt, but it can be very difficult to get out of debt.

There is no way that the western world can unwind this debt spiral easily.

The only way that another massive economic crisis can be put off for even a little while would be for the powers that be to "kick the can down the road" a little farther by creating even more debt.

But in the end, you can never solve a debt problem with more debt.

The next several years are going to be an incredibly clear illustration of why debt is bad.

When the dominoes start to fall, we are going to witness a financial avalanche which is going to destroy the finances of millions of people.

You might want to try to get out of the way while you still can. 

 

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Mon, 10/03/2011 - 09:49 | 1732839 DosZap
DosZap's picture

Just why do you hate US citizens so much, AnAnonymous?

He's pissed because he was unfortunate in the scheme of things, that he wasn't born in this country.

He's a foreigner, that has no clue who or what regular Ameericans are like.How hard most work,  and always have for what they have.We tend to be myopic here, and never seem to see the real Americans that built this country while breaking their backs.

That they get up every day, go to work, (if they still have a job) do the work of 3 for the pay of one(put in 80hrs for 40 in pay, and dare not bitch about it,lest they lose that wonderful check, bust their asses, and still have it better than 90% of the world.

He fails to see they had no choice in who their parents were,or why they were born here.

It's called CHANCE.

He just hates.

 

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 08:07 | 1732592 Smiddywesson
Smiddywesson's picture

Shouldn't you be out invading someone else's islands you Chinese troll?

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 08:17 | 1732620 BigJim
BigJim's picture

Yes, AnAnonymous, shouldn't you be out 'liberating' some more land from Tibetans?

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 11:37 | 1733201 LFMayor
LFMayor's picture

AnAnonymous is pissed because we don't import opium at discount rates to his country anymore.

I read the Chines just plain LOVED that shit.

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 07:46 | 1732530 itchy166
itchy166's picture

Sometimes its so hard not to flame people.

 

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 06:31 | 1732469 Cynical Sidney
Cynical Sidney's picture

the writing is on the wall

don't blame US if you fall

because everybody dies

that's the only thing guaranteed in life

no way for everyone to survive

on a long enough time line.

 

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 01:56 | 1732349 Hephasteus
Hephasteus's picture

One shocking quote about the USA. We are in the same sandwich. Just cause europe is mayonaise and cheese doesn't mean the meat is not going to get eaten by fate too.

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 11:13 | 1733122 HD
HD's picture

That sandwich comes with unlimited fiat fries...

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 02:33 | 1732347 Parallel FORECLOSURE
Parallel FORECLOSURE's picture

The global financial system is a sea or red ink, and when we get to the point where there are hundreds of ships going under how is it going to be possible to bail all of them out?

 

The answer is....  Take the existing banking paradigm of "Restructuring any debt requires a default", and convert it to, "Restructuring any debt DOES NOT require a default."

Restructuring a debt does not mean debt forgiveness, it just means TAKING LESS in the form of profit above and beyond the actual debt, aka, interest rate profits.

I find it disconcerting how many economists take an either or position, stay the course or debt forgiveness, yet very few seem to support restructuring a debt without requiring a default first.

 

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 06:22 | 1732464 FinkPloyd
FinkPloyd's picture

Ah the old make it up as we go along trick.

The fact that the banks are leveraged pretty much throws that idea out on the street.

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 08:12 | 1732609 Smiddywesson
Smiddywesson's picture

Ah the old make it up as we go along trick.

The fact that the banks are leveraged pretty much throws that idea out on the street.

I think you hit the nail on the head.  If debt restructuring were an answer to the current problem, I believe TPTB would have already taken that path.  We are awash in debt and derivatives that dwarf the underlying, restructuring has not been tried, and fixing the system has not been tried, because they know it won't work. 

I'm not saying there won't be some debt forgiveness when the system collapses, but I am saying the collapse is unavoidable at this point.  That's why I'm stacking physical. 

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 10:49 | 1733076 DaveyJones
DaveyJones's picture

hard to remodel during a flood

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 08:01 | 1732570 Ancona
Ancona's picture

Nothing like a big, hot bowl of doom for breakfast! Tyler, you always manage to deliver.

It's a shame that our MSM don't have the fucking balls to tell the truth. What a bunch of pussies.

Mon, 10/03/2011 - 08:15 | 1732615 Smiddywesson
Smiddywesson's picture

It's not a lack of nerve, it's self interest.  Everybody has to earn a paycheck.  Even Allen Greenspan changed his tune about gold when it came time to earn a living.

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