(Bankers
think they are so smart to make sure that 100% of the general public
are renters, and more than 50% are actually unemployed, while those
that are employed are making only less that $20,000 a year, and for
them all to make investments in Stock!!!)
The Stock Markets of the 10 Largest Global Economies Are All Crashing
Since
the peak of the market earlier this year, the Dow is down almost three
times as much as that 777-point crash back in 2008. (Reuters)
You would think that the simultaneous crashing
of all of the largest stock markets around the world would be very big
news. But so far, mainstream media in the United States are treating it
like it isn't really a big deal.
Over the last 60 days, we have witnessed the
most significant global stock market decline since fall 2008, and yet
most people still seem to think that this is just a temporary "bump in
the road" and that the bull market will soon resume. Hopefully they are
right.
When the Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted
777 points on Sept. 29, 2008, everyone freaked out, and rightly so. But a
stock market crash doesn't have to be limited to a single day. Since
the peak of the market earlier this year, the Dow is down almost three
times as much as that 777-point crash back in 2008.
Over the last 60 days, we have seen the
eighth-largest and 10th-largest single-day stock market crash in U.S.
history on a point basis. You would think that this would be enough to
wake people up, but most Americans still don't seem very alarmed. And of
course what has happened to U.S. stocks so far is quite mild compared
to what has been going on in the rest of the world.
Right now, stock market wealth is being wiped
out all over the planet, and none of the largest global economies have
been exempt from this. The following is a summary of what we have seen
in recent days:
1. The United States—The Dow Jones Industrial
Average is down more than 2,000 points since the peak of the market.
Last month we saw stocks decline by more than 500 points on consecutive
trading days for the first time ever, and there has not been this much
turmoil in U.S. markets since fall 2008.
2. China—The Shanghai Composite Index has
plummeted nearly 40 percent since hitting a peak earlier this year. The
Chinese economy is steadily slowing down, and we just learned that
China's manufacturing index has hit a 78-month low.
3. Japan—The Nikkei has experienced extremely
violent moves recently, and it is now down more than 3000 points from
the peak that was hit earlier in 2015. The Japanese economy and the
Japanese financial system are both basket cases at this point, and it
isn't going to take much to push Japan into a full-blown financial
collapse.
4. Germany—Almost one-fourth of the value of
German stocks has already been wiped out, and this crash threatens to
get much worse. The Volkswagen emissions scandal is making headlines all
over the globe, and don't forget to watch for massive trouble at
Germany's biggest bank.
5. The United Kingdom—British stocks are down
about 16 percent from the peak of the market, and the U.K. economy is
definitely on shaky ground.
6. France—French stocks have declined nearly 18
percent, and it has become exceedingly apparent that France is on the
exact same path that Greece has already gone down.
7. Brazil—Brazil is the epicenter of the South
American financial crisis of 2015. Stocks in Brazil have plunged more
than 12,000 points since the peak, and the nation has already officially
entered a new recession.
8. Italy—Watch Italy. Italian stocks are already
down 15 percent. Look for the Italian economy to make very big
headlines in the months ahead.
9. India—Stocks in India have now dropped close
to 4,000 points, and analysts are deeply concerned about this major
exporting nation as global trade continues to contract.
10. Russia—Even though the price of oil has
crashed, Russia is actually doing better than almost everyone else on
this list. Russian stocks have fallen by about 10 percent so far, and if
the price of oil stays this low, the Russian financial system will
continue to suffer.
What we are witnessing now is the continuation
of a cycle of financial downturns that has happened every seven years.
The following is a summary of how this cycle has played out over the
past 50 years:
It started in 1966 with a 20 percent stock market crash.
Seven years later, the market lost another 45 percent (1973-74).
Seven years later was the beginning of the "hard recession" (1980).
Seven years later was the Black Monday crash of 1987.
Seven years later was the bond market crash of 1994.
Seven years later was 9/11 and the 2001 tech bubble collapse.
Seven years later was the 2008 global financial collapse.
2015: What's next?
Seven years later, the market lost another 45 percent (1973-74).
Seven years later was the beginning of the "hard recession" (1980).
Seven years later was the Black Monday crash of 1987.
Seven years later was the bond market crash of 1994.
Seven years later was 9/11 and the 2001 tech bubble collapse.
Seven years later was the 2008 global financial collapse.
2015: What's next?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A lot of people were expecting something "big" to happen on Sept. 14, and were disappointed when nothing happened.
But the truth is that it has never been about
looking at any one particular day. Over the past 60 days, we have seen
extraordinary things happen all over the planet, and yet some people are
not even paying attention because their preconceived notions of how
events should play out did not come to pass.
And this is just the beginning. We haven't even
gotten to the great derivatives crisis that is coming. All of these
things are going to take time to fully unfold.
A lot of people who write about "economic
collapse" talk about it like it will be some type of "event" that will
happen on a day or a week and then we will recover.
Well, that is not what it's going to be like.
You need to be ready to endure a very, very long
crisis. The suffering that is coming to this nation is beyond what most
of us could even imagine.
Even now we are seeing early signs of it. For
instance, the mayor of Los Angeles says that the growth of homelessness
in his city has gotten so bad that it is now "an emergency":
On Tuesday, Los Angeles officials announced the
city's homelessness problem has become an emergency, and proposed
allotting $100 million to help shelter the city's massive and growing
indigent population.
LA Mayor Eric Garcetti also issued a directive
on Monday evening for the city to free up $13 million to help house the
estimated 26,000 people who are living on the city's streets.
According to the Los Angeles Homeless Services
Authority, the number of encampments and people living in vehicles has
increased by 85 percent over the last two years alone.
And in recent years we have seen poverty
absolutely explode all over the nation. The "bread lines" of the Great
Depression have been replaced with EBT cards, and there is a possibility
that a government shutdown in October could "suspend or delay food
stamp payments":
A government shutdown Oct. 1 could immediately
suspend or delay food stamp payments to some of the 46 million Americans
who receive the food aid.
The Agriculture Department said Tuesday that it
will stop providing benefits at the beginning of October if Congress
does not pass legislation to keep government agencies open.
"If Congress does not act to avert a lapse in
appropriations, then USDA will not have the funding necessary for SNAP
benefits in October and will be forced to stop providing benefits within
the first several days of October," said Catherine Cochran, a
spokeswoman for USDA. "Once that occurs, families won't be able to use
these benefits at grocery stores to buy the food their families need."
In the U.S. alone, there are tens of millions of
people that could not survive without the help of the federal
government, and more people are falling out of the middle class every
single day.
Our economy is already falling apart all around us, and now another great financial crisis has begun.
When will the "nothing is happening" crowd finally wake up?
Hopefully it will be before they are sitting out on the street begging for spare change to feed their family.
Michael T. Snyder is the publisher of The Economic Collapse Blog and author of The Beginning of the End.
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