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Martin Armstrong Slams "Myopic" Policymakers' Ignorance That Lower Rates Fuel Deflation

Submitted by Martin Armstrong via ArmstrongEconomics.com,

Those in power never understand markets. They are very myopic in their view of the world. The assumption that lowering interest rates will “stimulate” the economy has NEVER worked, not even once. Nevertheless, they assume they can manipulate society in the Marxist-Keynesian ideal world, but what if they are wrong?

Chesapeake Bonds Plummet To 27 Cents Of Par After Company Hires Restructuring Advisor

After numerous false starts and months of hollow hopes for the stakeholders of beleaguered gas producer Chesapeake Energy, including an activist stake built up by none other than Carl Icahn which was the source of much transitory joy, various notional reducing debt exchanges, and speculation of asset sales, the time is coming when the inevitable debt-for-equity restructuring, one which could wipe away most or all of the existing $2.6 billion equity tranche (down from $11 billion a year ago) is on the table.

Chinese Officials Admit To "Significantly Faking And Overstating" Economic Data

Slowly all the wheels of the legacy propaganda narrative are falling off, only this time dealing not with some ridiculous economic "recovery" tripe (for those still confused, the global economy just suffered its worst USD-denominated GDP collapse in 50 years), but with the credibility of Chinese data, which most have known is completely fabricated, only there was never an actual admission from within. Now there is.

These Are Deutsche Bank's Two Top Trades After A Fed Rate Hike

When it comes to Wednesday's rate hike, the opinion of Deutsche Bank, which has openly called such a move a "policy error" in the past, is quite clear: "the Fed’s objective is to slow credit. With deficient market liquidity that is easier done and said. In doing so it appears they also may help tidy up outstanding FX issues around RMB. Neither are good for risk on now and both favor curve flattening."

Will The Market Force Yellen Into 'None-And-Done'?

The market has a way of getting what it wants. And right now, it surely does not want Yellen to hike this week. Will she nevertheless, as is widely expected? Or will the buoyant markets force yet another delay, ultimately resulting in a 'none-and-done'?

There's no denying that the Fed policies fueled this stock bull market. The liquidity of QE 1 to 4 propelled the markets to new highs with every shot. At the completion of the QE tapering in October 2014, the S&P 500 hovered around the 2,000 mark. Today, we're trading at exactly the same levels. No QE, no advance.

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