Are You Prepared for Financial Prohibition?

ROME – What are we doing in Rome?

We’ll tell you Monday. That will give us time to figure it out…

In the meantime, remember: Cash is king. It’s one of the best-performing major asset classes this year. (More on that below in today’s Market Insight…)

It’s also – by far – the safest.

Even billionaire investor Carl Icahn is now urging investors to get into cash. Cash will someday disappoint us. But probably not today… or tomorrow.

Now, the feds drive investors into speculative stocks – often run by nefarious cronies – and dangerous “high-yield” (aka junk) debt. Investors will end up with an awful hangover, but at least they won’t go blind.

When those schemes fail to quench the thirst for cash, as they inevitably do, the feds will turn to more drastic measures. After all, if you can make alcohol illegal, surely the sky’s the limit on social and financial engineering.

Rewriting the Script

When beads of sweat begin to form on regulators’ brows during the next 2008-style crisis, one of their first calls will be to Harvard economics professor Ken Rogoff.

“So, Ken, how does that ban on cash work again?” they will ask.

Rogoff did some good work, along with Harvard colleague Carmen Reinhart, in their book This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly. They showed that, throughout history, high levels of debt have gone hand in hand with low economic growth.

We’d add that debt as a percentage of GDP has a habit of growing faster and faster – until the whole thing blows up.

But like almost all modern economists, Mr. Rogoff has little amor fati. That is Nietzsche’s phrase for letting nature take her course. Rather than relax and enjoy the show, Rogoff proposes to rewrite the script.

He has a solution! But not the obvious one – letting Mr. Market sort it out. Instead, he wants to make cash illegal.

It’s true that Mr. Market is likely to handle investors roughly. He practices a version of “tough love.” He corrects mistakes by teaching investors a lesson. Still, he gets the job done – quickly and as painlessly as possible.

The goal of practically every regulator, politician, crony, and economist is to stop him.

Mr. Rogoff, for example, wants to ban cash in order to impose “negative interest rates” on bank account holders.

Negative interest rates are a tax on savings. With no recourse to cash, your money would be trapped in bank accounts, where governments can easily levy negative interest rates.

No vote in Congress is necessary… no lobbying… no horse-trading… no smoke-filled rooms – none of the messiness of modern pseudo-democracy.

Instead, the bald-headed, gray-bearded PhDs will simply make it part of banking regulation. Like a drone attack on a suspected terrorist, no questions will be asked!

Buy a Home for $1,500

Meanwhile, we continue wondering what it takes to live on $500 a month.

Remember, our goal is to live better. We’re not sure if a used motor home in a Walmart lot will take us where we want to go.

So, let’s look at some alternatives:

Our son Will has been looking at shipping containers. You can buy them for as little as $1,500. They are spacious. They are strong. They can be outfitted in almost any way you like. And they can be set up easily, almost anywhere you like.

From container living website ContainerHomePlans.org comes this information:

There are an estimated 17 million of these throughout the world at the moment, with around 6 million currently in use; this means there are literally millions of these containers that aren’t in use that could be recycled and put toward a better use.Recycling shipping containers into homes is one of the more eco-friendly approaches as it avoids the energy-intensive process of melting the steel back down while it’s being recycled.

First, they aren’t susceptible to dry rot and other fungus infections. Second, wood is predisposed to mold, which steel isn’t.

Finally, water leakage is much more common in log cabins when compared to the steel roofs on container homes.

Container houses are cheap, flexible, and fast, say proponents. Those who’ve tried them report making complete houses out of them for as little as $20,000.

If – if – you were able to finance that… at 5%… you’d pay about $100 a month.

But wait. You have to put them somewhere.

Hmm… how about this?

Maybe you could build a house out of containers on someone else’s land. You live there but when you die or leave, the container house reverts to the landowner.

Are container houses BETTER than regular houses?

Remember, that is our goal: to live better on less. For that, we may need to think out-of-the-container-box.

Reprinted with permission from Bonner & Partners

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