1. IMO it ends in inflation and crisis or stock crash and crisis, it's created a very unstable system addicted to fed stimulus. Possible of course that the fed can keep printing and try to prolong the agony a little longer.
2. For the last few months and more strongly recently the Fed has been signalling that they are going to taper stimulus, hence the rocky ride in the US stock market (driven to spectacular highs over the last decade by Fed purchases of treasuries and even corp bonds).[1]
3. US stocks in particular have not been valued on fundamentals in a long time - the indexes are propped up by a small group of tech stocks which are very overvalued, even world indexes are imbalanced in this way (50% US, 2% Apple for VWRL for example).
4. Well so far, they will doubtless have some wobbles on the way and may even reverse position completely as they have in the past (see 2013 and 2018 withdrawal of QE below [2]). This prevarication IMO just makes the eventual shock when they have to withdraw it even greater, and/or devaluation of the currency worse. They may choose to devalue the currency further so that nominally stock prices stay level, but that leads to inflation...
5. I don't think the two are linked, save that commodities are also linked to monetary and fiscal policy which has bid them up to unsustainable highs and led to unrest around the world (after 2008 and now again as price inflation rises). Sorry if that was unclear, I meant the Fed policies were starting to feed through to inflation.
To be fair to cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, this is precisely the sort of market distortion and financial repression it was created in reaction to and attempts to solve, it's just unfortunate it was unsuited to use as a currency and has been taken over instead by speculative carpet baggers intent on fleecing others.
The last point you made about cryptocurrencies fleecing others bit built with intent to prevent market distortion is dead on.
People getting into crypto in fratboy style have gone on the rollercoaster and often are pushing it to their desires.
In the history of money (I'm talking U.S. at this point but other countries have their story) this carpet bagging happened earlier on... we've just been using it long enough that the story was forgotten and long before our time.
I'm referring to the Gold Reserve act Executive Order 1602 of 1933 where gold was required by law to be turned in at an exchange of $20/oz and a year later jacked up to $35/oz an ounce.
This decoupled the Federal Reserve from backing credit with gold, etc. The story continues but you get my point.
2. For the last few months and more strongly recently the Fed has been signalling that they are going to taper stimulus, hence the rocky ride in the US stock market (driven to spectacular highs over the last decade by Fed purchases of treasuries and even corp bonds).[1]
3. US stocks in particular have not been valued on fundamentals in a long time - the indexes are propped up by a small group of tech stocks which are very overvalued, even world indexes are imbalanced in this way (50% US, 2% Apple for VWRL for example).
4. Well so far, they will doubtless have some wobbles on the way and may even reverse position completely as they have in the past (see 2013 and 2018 withdrawal of QE below [2]). This prevarication IMO just makes the eventual shock when they have to withdraw it even greater, and/or devaluation of the currency worse. They may choose to devalue the currency further so that nominally stock prices stay level, but that leads to inflation...
5. I don't think the two are linked, save that commodities are also linked to monetary and fiscal policy which has bid them up to unsustainable highs and led to unrest around the world (after 2008 and now again as price inflation rises). Sorry if that was unclear, I meant the Fed policies were starting to feed through to inflation.
To be fair to cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, this is precisely the sort of market distortion and financial repression it was created in reaction to and attempts to solve, it's just unfortunate it was unsuited to use as a currency and has been taken over instead by speculative carpet baggers intent on fleecing others.
[1] https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/wall-street-closes-sh...
[2] https://www.investopedia.com/terms/t/taper-tantrum.asp