Ever  since the beginning of the financial crisis and quantitative easing,  the question has been before us:  How can the Federal Reserve maintain  zero interest rates for banks and negative real interest rates for  savers and bond holders when the US government is adding $1.5 trillion  to the national debt every year via its budget deficits?  Not long ago  the Fed announced that it was going to continue this policy for another 2  or 3 years. Indeed, the Fed is locked into the policy. Without the  artificially low interest rates, the debt service on the national debt  would be so large that it would raise questions about the US Treasury’s  credit rating and the viability of the dollar, and the trillions of  dollars in Interest Rate Swaps and other derivatives would come unglued.  
 
 In other words, financial deregulation leading to Wall Street’s gambles,  the US government’s decision to bail out the banks and to keep them  afloat, and the Federal Reserve’s zero interest rate policy have put the  economic future of the US and its currency in an untenable and  dangerous position.  It will not be possible to continue to flood the  bond markets with $1.5 trillion in new issues each year when the  interest rate on the bonds is less than the rate of inflation. Everyone  who purchases a Treasury bond is purchasing a depreciating asset.  Moreover, the capital risk of investing in Treasuries is very high. The  low interest rate means that the price paid for the bond is very high. A  rise in interest rates, which must come sooner or later, will collapse  the price of the bonds and inflict capital losses on bond holders, both  domestic and foreign.
 
 The question is: when is sooner or later?  The purpose of this article is to examine that question.
 
 Let us begin by answering the question: how has such an untenable policy managed to last this long?  
 
 A number of factors are contributing to the stability of the dollar and  the bond market. A very important factor is the situation in Europe.   There are real problems there as well, and the financial press keeps our  focus on Greece, Europe, and the euro. Will Greece exit the European  Union or be kicked out?  Will the sovereign debt problem spread to  Spain, Italy, and essentially everywhere except for Germany and the  Netherlands?
 
 Will it be the end of the EU and the euro?  These are all very dramatic  questions that keep focus off the American situation, which is probably  even worse.
 
 The Treasury bond market is also helped by the fear individual investors  have of the equity market, which has been turned into a gambling casino  by high-frequency trading. 
 
 High-frequency trading is electronic trading based on mathematical  models that make the decisions. Investment firms compete on the basis of  speed, capturing gains on a fraction of a penny, and perhaps holding  positions for only a few seconds.  These are not long-term investors.  Content with their daily earnings, they close out all positions at the  end of each day. 
 
 High-frequency trades now account for 70-80% of all equity trades. The  result is major heartburn for traditional investors, who are leaving the  equity market. They end up in Treasuries, because they are unsure of  the solvency of banks who pay next to nothing for deposits, whereas  10-year Treasuries will pay about 2% nominal, which means, using the  official Consumer Price Index, that they are losing 1% of their capital  each year.  Using John Williams’ (shadowstats.com)  correct measure of inflation, they are losing far more.  Still, the  loss is about 2 percentage points less than being in a bank, and unlike  banks, the Treasury can have the Federal Reserve print the money to pay  off its bonds.  Therefore, bond investment at least returns the nominal  amount of the investment, even if its real value is much lower. (For a  description of High-frequency trading, see: here. )
 
 The presstitute financial media tells us that flight from European  sovereign debt, from the doomed euro, and from the continuing real  estate disaster into US Treasuries provides funding for Washington’s  $1.5 trillion annual deficits. Investors influenced by the financial  press might be responding in this way.  Another explanation for the  stability of the Fed’s untenable policy is collusion between Washington,  the Fed, and Wall Street. We will be looking at this as we progress.
 
 Unlike Japan, whose national debt is the largest of all, Americans do  not own their own public debt.  Much of US debt is owned abroad,  especially by China, Japan, and OPEC, the oil exporting countries. This  places the US economy in foreign hands.  If China, for example, were to  find itself unduly provoked by Washington, China could dump up to $2  trillion in US dollar-dominated assets on world markets. All sorts of  prices would collapse, and the Fed would have to rapidly create the  money to buy up the Chinese dumping of dollar-denominated financial  instruments.
 
 The dollars printed to purchase the dumped Chinese holdings of US dollar  assets  would expand the supply of dollars in currency markets and  drive down the dollar exchange rate. The Fed, lacking foreign currencies  with which to buy up the dollars would have to appeal for currency  swaps to sovereign debt-troubled Europe for euros, to Russia, surrounded  by the US missile system, for rubles, to Japan, a country over its head  in American commitment, for yen, in order to buy up the dollars with  euros, rubles, and yen. 
 
 These currency swaps would be on the books, unredeemable and  making  additional use of such swaps problematical.  In other words, even if the  US government can pressure its allies and puppets to swap their harder  currencies for a depreciating US currency, it would not be a repeatable  process.  The components of the American Empire don’t want to be in  dollars any more than do the BRICS.
 
 However, for China, for example, to dump its dollar holdings all at once  would be costly as the value of the dollar-denominated assets would  decline as they dumped them. Unless China is faced with US military  attack and needs to defang the aggressor, China as a rational economic  actor would prefer to slowly exit the US dollar.  Neither do Japan,  Europe, nor OPEC wish to destroy their own accumulated wealth from  America’s trade deficits by dumping dollars, but the indications are  that they all wish to exit their dollar holdings.
 
 Unlike the US financial press, the foreigners who hold dollar assets  look at the annual US budget and trade deficits, look at the sinking US  economy, look at Wall Street’s uncovered gambling bets, look at the war  plans of the delusional hegemon and conclude: “I’ve got to carefully get  out of this.”
 
 US banks also have a strong interest in preserving the status quo. They  are holders of US Treasuries and potentially even larger holders. They  can borrow from the Federal Reserve at zero interest rates and purchase  10-year Treasuries at 2%, thus earning a nominal profit of 2% to offset  derivative losses. The banks can borrow dollars from the Fed for free  and leverage them in derivative transactions. As Nomi Prins puts it, the  US banks don’t want to trade against themselves and their free source  of funding by selling their bond holdings.  Moreover, in the event of  foreign flight from dollars, the Fed could boost the foreign demand for  dollars by requiring foreign banks that want to operate in the US to  increase their reserve amounts, which are dollar based. 
 
 I could go on, but I believe this is enough to show that even actors in  the process who could terminate it have themselves a big stake in not  rocking the boat and prefer to quietly and slowly sneak out of dollars  before the crisis hits.  This is not possible indefinitely as the  process of gradual withdrawal from the dollar would result in continuous  small declines in dollar values that would end in a rush to exit, but  Americans are not the only delusional people.
 
 The very process of slowly getting out can bring the American house  down. The BRICS—Brazil, the largest economy in South America, Russia,  the nuclear armed and  energy independent economy on which Western  Europe (Washington’s NATO puppets) are dependent for energy, India,  nuclear armed and one of Asia’s two rising giants, China, nuclear armed,  Washington’s largest creditor (except for the Fed), supplier of  America’s manufactured and advanced technology products, and the new  bogyman for the military-security complex’s next profitable cold war,  and South Africa, the largest economy in Africa—are in the process of  forming a new bank. The new bank will permit the five large economies to  conduct their trade without use of the US dollar.
 
 In addition, Japan, an American puppet state since WWII, is on the verge  of entering into an agreement with China in which the Japanese yen and  the Chinese yuan will be directly exchanged.  The trade between the two  Asian countries would be conducted in their own currencies without the  use of the US dollar. This reduces the cost of foreign trade between the  two countries, because it eliminates payments for foreign exchange  commissions to convert from yen and yuan into dollars and back into yen  and yuan.  
 
 Moreover, this official explanation for the new direct relationship  avoiding the US dollar is simply diplomacy speaking.  The Japanese are  hoping, like the Chinese, to get out of the practice of accumulating  ever more dollars by having to park their trade surpluses in US  Treasuries. The Japanese US puppet government hopes that the Washington  hegemon does not require the Japanese government to nix the deal with  China.
 
 Now we have arrived at the nitty and gritty.  The small percentage of  Americans who are aware and informed are puzzled why the banksters have  escaped with their financial crimes without prosecution. The answer  might be that the banks “too big to fail” are adjuncts of Washington and  the Federal Reserve in maintaining the stability of the dollar and  Treasury bond markets in the face of an untenable Fed policy.
 
 Let us first look at how the big banks can keep the interest rates on  Treasuries low, below the rate of inflation, despite the constant  increase in US debt as a percent of GDP—thus preserving the Treasury’s  ability to service the debt.  
 
 The imperiled banks too big to fail have a huge stake in low interest  rates and the success of the Fed’s policy. The big banks are positioned  to make the Fed’s policy a success.  JPMorgan Chase and other  giant-sized banks can drive down Treasury interest rates and, thereby,  drive up the prices of bonds, producing a rally, by selling Interest  Rate Swaps (IRSwaps).  
 
 A financial company that sells IRSwaps is selling an agreement to pay  floating interest rates for fixed interest rates. The buyer is  purchasing an agreement that requires him to pay a fixed rate of  interest in exchange for receiving a floating rate.
 
 The reason for a seller to take the short side of the IRSwap, that is,  to pay a floating rate for a fixed rate, is his belief that rates are  going to fall. Short-selling can make the rates fall, and thus drive up  the prices of Treasuries.  When this happens, as these charts illustrate, there is a rally in the Treasury bond market that the  presstitute financial media attributes to “flight to the safe haven of  the US dollar and Treasury bonds.”  In fact, the circumstantial evidence  (see the charts in the link above) is that the swaps are sold by Wall  Street whenever the Federal Reserve needs to prevent a rise in interest  rates in order to protect its otherwise untenable policy.  The swap  sales create the impression of a flight to the dollar, but no actual  flight occurs. As the IRSwaps require no exchange of any principal or  real asset, and are only a bet on interest rate movements, there is no  limit to the volume of IRSwaps. 
 
 This apparent collusion suggests to some observers that the reason the  Wall Street banksters have not been prosecuted for their crimes is that  they are an essential part of the Federal Reserve’s policy to preserve  the US dollar as world currency. Possibly the collusion between the  Federal Reserve and the banks is organized, but it doesn’t have to be.  The banks are beneficiaries of the Fed’s zero interest rate policy.  It  is in the banks’ interest to support it.  Organized collusion is not  required.
 
 Let us now turn to gold and silver bullion. Based on sound analysis,  Gerald Celente and other gifted seers predicted that the price of gold  would be $2000 per ounce by the end of last year.  Gold and silver  bullion continued during 2011 their ten-year rise, but in 2012 the price  of gold and silver have been knocked down, with gold being $350 per  ounce off its $1900 high. 
 
 In view of the analysis that I have presented, what is the explanation  for the reversal in bullion prices?  The answer again is shorting.  Some  knowledgeable people within the financial sector believe that the  Federal Reserve (and perhaps also the European Central Bank) places  short sales of bullion through the investment banks, guaranteeing any  losses by pushing a key on the computer keyboard, as central banks can  create money out of thin air. 
 
 Insiders inform me that as a tiny percent of those on the buy side of  short sells actually want to take delivery on the gold or silver  bullion, and are content with the financial money settlement, there is  no limit to short selling of gold and silver. Short selling can actually  exceed the known quantity of gold and silver.
 
 Some who have been watching the process for years believe that  government-directed short-selling has been going on for a long time.  Even without government participation, banks can control the volume of  paper trading in gold and profit on the swings that they create.  Recently short selling is so aggressive that it not merely slows the  rise in bullion prices but drives the price down.  Is this  aggressiveness  a sign that the rigged system is on the verge of  becoming unglued? 
 
 In other words, “our government,” which allegedly represents us, rather  than the powerful private interests who elect “our government” with  their multi-million dollar campaign contributions, now legitimized by  the Republican Supreme Court, is doing its best to deprive us mere  citizens, slaves, indentured servants, and “domestic extremists”   from  protecting ourselves and our remaining wealth from the currency  debauchery policy of the Federal Reserve. Naked short selling prevents  the rising demand for physical bullion from raising bullion’s price.   
 
 Jeff Nielson explains another way that banks can sell bullion shorts when they own no bullion. (See SLV And Silver Manipulation)   Nielson says that JP Morgan is the custodian for the largest long  silver fund while being the largest short-seller of silver. Whenever the  silver fund adds to its bullion holdings, JP Morgan shorts an equal  amount.  The short selling offsets the rise in price that would result  from the increase in demand for physical silver. Nielson also reports  that bullion prices can be suppressed by raising margin requirements on  those who purchase bullion with leverage.  The conclusion is that  bullion markets can be manipulated just as can the Treasury bond market  and interest rates.
 
 How long can the manipulations continue?  When will the proverbial hit the fan?
 
 If we knew precisely the date, we would be the next mega-billionaires.
 
 Here are some of the catalysts waiting to ignite the conflagration that burns up the Treasury bond market and the US dollar:
 
 A war, demanded by the Israeli government, with Iran, beginning with  Syria, that disrupts the oil flow and thereby the stability of the  Western economies or brings the US and its weak NATO puppets into armed  conflict with Russia and China. The oil spikes would degrade further the  US and EU economies, but Wall Street would make money on the trades.
 
 An unfavorable economic statistic that wakes up investors as to the true  state of the US economy, a statistic that the presstitute media cannot  deflect.
 
 An affront to China, whose government decides that knocking the US down a  few pegs into third world status is worth a trillion dollars.
 
 More derivate mistakes, such as JPMorgan Chase’s recent one, that send  the US financial system again reeling and reminds us that nothing has  changed. 
 
 The list is long. There is a limit to how many stupid mistakes and  corrupt financial policies the rest of the world is willing to accept  from the US.  When that limit is reached,  it is all over for “the  world’s sole superpower” and for holders of dollar-denominated  instruments.
 
 Financial deregulation converted the financial system, which formerly  served businesses and consumers, into a gambling casino where bets are  not covered. These uncovered bets, together with the Fed’s zero interest  rate policy, have exposed Americans’ living standard and wealth to  large declines.  Retired people living on their savings and investments,  IRAs and 401(k)s can earn nothing on their money and are forced to  consume their capital, thereby depriving heirs of inheritance.  Accumulated wealth is consumed.
 
 As a result of jobs offshoring, the US has become an import-dependent  country, dependent on foreign made manufactured goods, clothing, and  shoes. When the dollar exchange rate falls, domestic US prices will  rise, and US real consumption will take a big hit. Americans will  consume less, and their standard of living will fall dramatically. 
 
 The serious consequences of the enormous mistakes made in Washington, on  Wall Street, and in corporate offices are being held at bay by an  untenable policy of low interest rates and a corrupt financial press,  while debt rapidly builds. The Fed has been through this experience once  before. During WW II the Federal Reserve kept interest rates low in  order to aid the Treasury’s war finance by minimizing the interest  burden of the war debt. The Fed kept the interest rates low by buying  the debt issues. The postwar inflation that resulted led to the Federal  Reserve-Treasury Accord in 1951, in which agreement was reached that the  Federal Reserve would cease monetizing the debt and permit interest  rates to rise. 
 
 Fed chairman Bernanke has spoken of an “exit strategy” and said that  when inflation threatens, he can prevent the inflation by taking the  money back out of the banking system.  However, he can do that only by  selling Treasury bonds, which means interest rates would rise. A rise in  interest rates would threaten the derivative structure, cause bond  losses, and raise the cost of both private and public debt service. In  other words, to prevent inflation from debt monetization would bring on  more immediate problems than inflation. Rather than collapse the system,  wouldn’t the Fed be more likely to inflate away the massive debts?
 
 Eventually, inflation would erode the dollar’s purchasing power and use  as the reserve currency, and the US government’s credit worthiness would  waste away.  However, the Fed, the politicians, and the financial  gangsters would prefer a crisis later rather than sooner.  Passing the  sinking ship on to the next watch is preferable to going down with the  ship oneself. As long as interest rate swaps can be used to boost  Treasury bond prices, and as long as naked shorts of bullion can be used  to keep silver and gold from rising in price, the false image of the US  as a safe haven for investors can be perpetuated.  
 
 However, the $230,000,000,000,000 in derivative bets by US banks might  bring its own surprises. JPMorgan Chase has had to admit that its  recently announced derivative loss of $2 billion is more than that.  How  much more remains to be seen. According to the Comptroller of the  Currency [PDF] the five largest banks hold 95.7% of all derivatives. The five banks  holding $226 trillion in derivative bets are highly leveraged gamblers.   For example, JPMorgan Chase has total assets of $1.8 trillion but holds  $70 trillion in derivative bets, a ratio of $39 in derivative bets for  every dollar of assets. Such a bank doesn’t have to lose very many bets  before it is busted.
 
 Assets, of course, are not risk-based capital. According to the  Comptroller of the Currency report, as of December 31, 2011, JPMorgan  Chase held $70.2 trillion in derivatives and only $136 billion in  risk-based capital. In other words, the bank’s derivative bets are 516  times larger than the capital that covers the bets.
 
 It is difficult to imagine a more reckless and unstable position for a  bank to place itself in, but Goldman Sachs takes the cake. That bank’s  $44 trillion in derivative bets is covered by only $19 billion in  risk-based capital, resulting in bets 2,295 times larger than  the  capital that covers them.   
 
 Bets on interest rates comprise 81% of all derivatives. These are the  derivatives that support high US Treasury bond prices despite massive  increases in US debt and its monetization.
 
 US banks’ derivative bets of $230 trillion, concentrated in five banks,  are 15.3 times larger than the US GDP.  A failed political system that  allows unregulated banks to place uncovered bets 15 times larger than  the US economy is a system that is headed for catastrophic failure.  As  the word spreads of the fantastic lack of judgment in the American  political and financial systems, the catastrophe in waiting will become a  reality.  
 
 Everyone wants a solution, so I will provide one. The US government  should simply cancel the $230 trillion in derivative bets, declaring  them null and void.  As no real  assets are involved, merely gambling on  notional values, the only major effect of closing out or netting all  the swaps (mostly over-the-counter contracts between counter-parties)  would be to take $230 trillion of leveraged risk out of the financial  system.  The financial gangsters who want to continue enjoying betting  gains while the public underwrites their losses would scream and yell  about the sanctity of contracts. However, a government that can murder  its own citizens or throw them into dungeons without due process can  abolish all the contracts it wants in the name of national security.   And most certainly, unlike the war on terror, purging the financial  system of the gambling derivatives would vastly improve national  security.
Paul Craig Roberts [email him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s first term. His home page is paulcraigroberts.org.
He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University, and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded the Legion of Honor by French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the author of Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for Peter Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.