Tuesday, 7 June 2011

Editor's note: Today, we continue our series from Porter Stansberry. For more than two years, Porter has been covering what he calls the "End of America" – a crisis created by government borrowing and spending. Below, he shows you why we're about to enter a new phase of the crisis… and how to protect yourself…

The Beginning of the Panic

By Porter Stansberry

Tuesday, June 7, 2011
In the next few weeks, our country will enter a period without precedence in our experience.

On June 30, the Federal Reserve has pledged to cease buying U.S. Treasury bonds. This is the second time 
since the financial crisis it has intervened in the Treasury market in a major way. The program of buying new 
Treasury issues has been dubbed "quantitative easing II" (QE2).

We'd wager not one in 1,000 Americans has any idea (or at least any real understanding) of what has been 
going on in the market for U.S. Treasury bonds since the financial crisis. For the last nine months, the Fed has 
been printing up new dollars and buying huge amounts of newly issued debt from the U.S. Treasury – $600 billion
 of bonds. And these purchases followed a $1.75 trillion program of quantitative easing that ran from 
March 2009 to March 2010.

It is no exaggeration to say that a printing press has kept our economy going for the last two years. But what
 will happen when the printing stops?

While we honestly don't know, we're going to speculate that, in the short term, the U.S. dollar will rally and 
commodities will suffer a serious correction. We will see a dramatic slowdown in the rate of monetary inflation. 
People will think prices will stop going up. Economic activity will begin to decline. Fear will lead a lot of investors 
to "go to cash." That means buying short-term U.S. Treasury bonds because they're the most liquid, most 
frequently traded form of cash.

As this process unfolds, we expect to see another global panic. Especially if Bernanke's decision to stop the 
presses coincides with a Republican political gambit – refusing to raise the debt ceiling, which could cause a 
default on U.S. Treasury bonds.

Whether the debt ceiling is raised or not, it's only a matter of time before the Fed will have to turn on the 
presses again. And when "QE3" begins, it will send our creditors an unmistakable message: You will never 
be repaid in anything other than massively devalued paper. 

That will be a horrible day for the value of our currency. It may even mean the end of the U.S. dollar as the 
world's reserve currency.

But rather than face these unpleasant facts and consider where they are leading us, most people continue to 
think, "It can't happen here. This is America."

Meanwhile, our country has been depending on a printing press to make our economic system work. When is 
the last time that happened in America? The Civil War.

How many other things most people didn't think would ever happen in America have happened recently? What 
about the collapse of our investment banks, the bankruptcy of General Motors, the liquidation of Fannie Mae 
and Freddie Mac, the failure of AIG, hundreds of banks being seized, millions of homes in foreclosure, or real 
unemployment rates close to 20%? We could go on…

As we frequently point out to our critics, the question isn't when this crisis will begin – it started in 2008. The 
question is, when will it end… and how bad will it get before it does? 

We believe every American ought to be ashamed, outraged, and furious that the most powerful political union 
in history proceeded down the path of these bankrupting policies. But most of all, you ought to be afraid of 
where these policies have led us.

Don't forget: At the end of this month, the Federal Reserve will stop buying Treasury bonds.

That's the first time since March 2009 our economy will stand on its own two feet. And we expect that just l
ike a child riding a bike without training wheels for the first time… it will crash.

We are not alone.

Bill Gross, manager of the world's largest bond fund, has put 4% of his fund short U.S. government bonds. 
Just consider that for a minute: The most powerful fixed-income manager in the world (not just in America) 
is selling the U.S. Treasury short. 

The University of Texas endowment fund recently took physical delivery of $1 billion gold bars. That's an 
enormous bet from some of the wealthiest and best-informed investors in the world that the U.S. monetary 
system falls apart.

Finally, in what we believe is the ultimate death knell for the U.S. dollar, our trading partners are moving out 
of the dollar and into gold. Mexico, for example, one of our most important trading partners, just purchased
 almost 100 tons of gold.

All around the world, more and more central banks are selling dollars and buying gold. They're doing so because 
they can plainly see America's credit has become unreliable and the value of the dollar is likely to decline.

If you think you might be trading in something other than U.S. dollars in the future, you might not want to be 
holding U.S. dollars. You might want to be holding that currency.

And if you can't hold that currency, consider holding gold.

Good investing,

Porter

P.S. I urge you to watch the video I've made about these issues. But I caution you, it will take up over a half 
hour of your time. There's still time to protect yourself from the crisis I see ahead, but not much. You have to
 educate yourself as soon as possible. And you have to take action. Watch the video here.

P.P.S. In tomorrow's essay, I'll show you a secret about U.S. finances you won't read about anywhere else. 
We don't think many Americans – even sophisticated investors – have considered these numbers…