Dimon says JPMorgan preparing for 'potentially catastrophic' US credit default
> JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said that the multinational
> investment bank has started to prepare for a "potentially
> catastrophic" situation in which the United States could default
> on the national debt.
> https://thehill.com/policy/finance/5743 ... it-default
The Democrats are a party in crisis, with a mentally deficient leaderGuest No 3 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 30, 2021 6:34 am> Oh, this is just great.
> John, do you still think the US dollar will be the last man
> standing? Is gold still a bad investment?
who is responsible for one catastrophe after another -- the
Afghanistan catastrophe, the open borders debacle, mass slaughter of
blacks on the streets -- and who are badly split over trying to
implement the next catastrophe, their multi-multi-trillion dollar
Democrat fantasy ("reconciliation") bill.
Because of the gargantuan size of the fantasy bill, they would like
for the Republicans to have skin in the game in paying for it
(pretending to pay for it). The Republicans have been unanimous in
saying that the Democrats can raise the debt ceiling on their own,
with no Republiclan involvement. The Democrats know that, but they
also know that then they would get the entire blame as the midterms
election approach.
Many Democrats believe that failing to pass the fantasy bill will be a
political disaster, since it would just be one more failure on top of
all the others. Getting the debt ceiling raised is a prerequisite,
since the government would have to be allowed to borrow trillions of
dollars. So they're resorting to hysterial threats to get the
Republicans to cooperate.
So first off, there is no realistic possibility for a debt defuault
for a long time, even if the debt ceiling isn't raised, since
statutory debt payments can be met using continuing tax revenues, even
if the government can't borrow any more money.
Second, even if the government did default on some statutory debt, it
wouldn't affect the value of the dollar, just as you missing a credit
card payment doesn't affect the value of the dollar.
Third, Jamie Dimon has joined the hysteria because he stands to gain a
great deal politically and financially if the debt ceiling is raised,
and the fantasy bill is passed. So his remarks are just more verbal
garbage from politicians.
As for gold, it's in an asset bubble, just like the stock market and
the bond market. The long-term trend value of gold is around $500 an
ounce, but if the bubble bursts then its value will overshoot its
trend value and reach $100-200 per oz -- which is where it was around
2000.
I believe that most (or all) of the members of this forum agree that
we're headed for a major financial crisis. When that happens, I
expect stock prices to crash, bond prices to crash, and gold prices to
crash. I expect the strongest asset to be cash (the dollar).
That will be a "potential catastrophe," but not the one that Jamie
Dimon would like. We'll also be at war with China, and probably none
of this will matter.