Thursday, January 22, 2015

De-Corporatization: The New World Order

When Wall Street blows itself up again - the preparation for which is well advanced - the new era will involve shedding of multinational arbritrageurs to the benefit of the local economy

Since the mid-term elections in November, Republicans have successfully repealed significant portions of the minimal regulations that were imposed on Wall Street post 2008. This has involved rolling back key gambling provisions embedded in Dodd-Frank as well as delaying the Volcker Rule which would have prevented banks from gambling with insured deposits. 

"the bill also contained a provision, said to be written by Citigroup, repealing a key part of the Dodd-Frank Act."

"The provision enables the big banks once again to use insured deposits and other taxpayer subsidies and guarantees to gamble in the derivatives markets—the very type of business that drove the 2008 financial crisis and the economic devastation that followed."

Never before have so many ultra-wealthy fools bought ALL IN to the same delusion...
These critical gambling allowances, in conjunction with Wall Street's terminal addiction to Central Bank monetary heroin, will be their final undoing. The business cycle - which still exists unfortunately - has been totally obscured by all of the monetary stimulus flowing from global Central Banks, taking turns playing Wall Street's bukkake whores.  And that fake "stimulus", which comes at the expense of the real economy, is the very reason why the ever-growing deflationary signals have been wholly ignored throughout this entire era.

Just as it was with FXCM, which pushed back on government regulatory attempts to limit currency speculators' leverage to 10:1, it will be Wall Street's successful efforts in rejecting regulation that will be their demise.

A Glimpse into Wall Street's Future
50:1 leverage visualized aka. Stay tuned for future events:


The process of de-Corporatization is well underway
This process I speak of is no fantasy. By their own hand, corporations have turned themselves into mere middle-men, straddling two divided markets consisting of wage enslaved "producers" and debt enslaved "consumers". By their own actions they have made themselves thoroughly redundant having outsourced all production to Third World nations, hence making themselves obsolete. The only thing standing between multinationals and their obliteration is their Marketing "Brand" which is the end result of $500 billion in annual advertising and copious brain-washing of a marginally employed Idiocracy.

The Business Cycle Visualized
Utilities: