Opportunity cost: Canada traded a safe-haven asset for paper bonds - JUNK US DEBT πŸ‘Œ

#Gold #Canada #Bond

@lecteur I don't think Canada had $149B in gold in 1965. Maybe $149M ?

Gold holdings don't pay interest, and there are considerable costs to storing and securing it.

If Canada has a trade surplus with the US, as is often the case, that means that Canadian central bank, commercial banks, firms are accumulating USD. Can sell it for CAD, driving up the value of CAD. Can sell it for gold, awkward to hold. Or sell it for a US federal bond, guaranteed to pay interest+principal. Not exactly junk.

@johnefrancis @lecteur Any "guarantees" by the US government is worth less than a roll of toilet paper.

@driusan @lecteur while I loathe their current govt. and aspects of US society, making payments on their bonds is not a problem. Currency issuers can always make the interest payments on their bonds, or pay out the balance of principal to bondholders that want to redeem them.

Why wouldn't they pay? It's nothing to them.

@johnefrancis @lecteur They shut down their whole government on an annual basis (I'd guess, on average lately) for political grandstanding and because they don't feel like paying bills despite being a currency issuer.

They wouldn't pay the interest because they don't feel like it.

@driusan @lecteur sure, they stopped paying their employees, because they are assholes, but they are definitely still paying bondholders, so far.

The fallout from a default would be extremely severe and harm the US-centric financial system and the extremely wealthy a lot more than everyone else.

What would be the benefit?

Jerome Powell says the $39 trillion national debt is β€˜not unsustainable,’ but warns the trajectory β€˜will not end well’

β€œThe federal government debt is growing substantially faster than our economy,” the Fed chair told a roomful of Harvard students.

Fortune

@lecteur @driusan this is a garbage article. How has the US debt trajectory been "unsustainable for decades"? It was unsustainable when USD was tied to gold. Since the 70's...it's absolutely sustainable.

There's no need for a currency issuer to ever bring it's outstanding balance to zero. That would leave zero USD in existence.

Want to pay off the foreign obligations of bonds? Go ahead, "print" the cash, pay them all off and remove ~ 1/3rd of the fiscal deficit.

@johnefrancis @driusan

US debt now stands at 99 % of GDP. it's unsustainable...Without the petrodollar and the printing machine and in the context of a Brics de-dollarization this will collapse rapidly..