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ftwinnovations | 9 years ago
As to those who claim QE ended, and other nonsensical ignorant claims, that is irrelevant. The money went to reliquify the broke banks' balance sheets, and so of course did not immediately leave their digital vaults. That takes time, and we are slowly (technically not at all slowely) watching the destruction of the dollar's purchasing power via mass inflation, beginning with the assets closest to the money printing spigot: real estate, stocks, fine art, and other elite assets.
forgetsusername|9 years ago
Inflation is the rise in overall price level, not the increase in a few select asset classes. We aren't seeing inflation. The people who have been making that claim for 5+ years have been wrong. Period.
unknown|9 years ago
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rtpg|9 years ago
Declaring mass inflation for the dollar doesn't seem to align with how CPI is evolving though, and it's not like the dollar is losing much ground to foreign currencies. If standard purchases haven't changed much, and purchasing abroad hasn't changed much, could we say that things have changed much?
Though you're saying slowly, maybe I'll ride the bubble til it bursts just like the rest of 'em.
pessimizer|9 years ago
Depends on how leveraged it is.
Spooky23|9 years ago
rmrm|9 years ago
It seems a more appropriate statement would be destruction of all currencies purchasing power. Which leads me to wonder - what is the impact of that exactly?
Should the dollar be allowed to strengthen greatly (relatively to basket of all other currencies), is that what people are proposing? Can we guess at what the dollar based economy might do in that instance?
toephu2|9 years ago
unknown|9 years ago
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unknown|9 years ago
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shostack|9 years ago