Maybe WH's are saving a crash for a bit later?
Maybe the cabal still has cards to play?
Am I wrong in thinking that the system needs to come down, including a stock market crash, in order to reveal the precipice moment?
Discussion and opinions welcome. Looking for insights related to whether or not the stock market will be part of the precipice.
The dollar is in higher demand than normal because countries are trying to get out of their US dollar denominated debt (which has to be all paid in dollars).
There is also a limited amount of dollars in circulation since the money printer is no longer going brr for the moment.
This leads to a dollar squeeze where the dollar will spike in value very fast for a relatively short period of time. This also means your nonessential items will go down in price (and possibly essential items like food too) because the dollar will buy more.
The dollar rising up in value compared to everything else also means the price of stocks will fall relative to the dollar. So a consistent stock market for a period of time.
We are nowhere at that point yet. Wait at least a year or two for that.
The current stock market crash that could happen right now or next couple of months would be from the
$1 trillion in credit card debt.
$17 trillion total household debt.
Not to mention auto car loans and other loans all being defaulted on.
And the drop in prices of Commercial Real Estate (about a $7 Trillion valuation if I remember right) from people working from home which would collapse Corporate Mortgage Backed Securities (CMBS) and cause banks and financial behemoths (hello Blackrock) to go under.
And the LIBOR to SOFR transition which involves $600 Trillion of all contracts but is being measured by $200 Trillion volume in Derivatives. Complete 100% change must be completed by June 30, 2023 and we are only 70% of the way there. This has been worked on since 2012 and the hard date for June 30 was set sometime in 2020. The change from LIBOR to SOFR benchmark interest rate system is not completely and immediately changes the values of those contracts as soon as the switch, causing volatility. With $600 trillion worth of contracts and relatively small change in immediate price becomes a huge ripple in the economy.