"Jim Grant of Grant's Interest Rate Observer recently made an appearance on WealthTrack with Conseulo Mack to talk "Financial Bubbles of Historic Proportions".
They connect past present and future.
And they help us calibrate credit risk - the chances of somebody not getting paid.
They help corporate managers decide whether a certain investment is worthwhile," Grant says.
"They're prices, and prices in general I think are better discovered in the marketplace."
"Worldwide, we have a regime of price administration and suppression.
Which, I think, is trouble."
When asked how the Fed got so powerful, Grant said: "It wasn't what was intended.
... we have an omnipresent, ubiquitous and all powerful institution."
The Fed has "left us with a bond market that all but has been destroyed with respect to the proper functioning of a bond market".
It's not just the Fed, Grant says, it's a "worldwide regime of interest rate suppression and manipulation".
"I think it's not everyday that you get 4,000 year lows in rates," Grant joked.
"Junk bond yields begin with a number 3," Grant points out when asked where the bond market is skewed the most.
Without "buying 10's of billions of dollars in bonds per month to suppress rates - I'd say Treasury Yields would be closer, at the long end of the curve, to 3.5% to 4%."
... "We have a broad money supply growing 26% year over year and we have fiscal stimulus upon stimulus well in excess, in dollar terms, well in excess of the lapse in GDP owing to the lockdown.
These monetary actions are truly gigantic.
If in a year, if inflation isn't 2.5%, 3% or 4%, people are going to say 'What did you expect?'"
"Where this may end is an unscripted inflation that will surprise the bond market, which is still trusting the Fed, and as the bond market sells off and rates go up, high flying stocks come down."
"It's then I'll say to (Fed) Chairman Powell: 'What did you expect?'"
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