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2015/03/27

The Next Currency to Crumple

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Chaos in America: 41 States on High-Alert!

Something scary is happening right here in America. If you live in one of the 41 states highlighted in blue — it's critical you pay close attention. As NPR reports, a vehement new movement "is showing signs of taking root across the map." When you see this shocking interview you'll see exactly what's going on and why this quickly developing movement will soon devastate millions of unprepared Americans. Fair warning: This material is very controversial. Click here for the full story.


The City of Scarecrows

By Jeff D. Opdyke, Editor of Profit Seeker

today's editor

The future of Japan — and at this point it's shaping up as quite the sad future — sits alone on a stump in a picturesque valley on the southern island of Shikoku.

It's a scarecrow.

Not the skinny broomstick scarecrows populating backyard gardens across America. It's a hand-stitched figure that looks almost lifelike in her pants and rain boots, a pink anorak and a sun hat. Tsukimi Ayano stitched this scarecrow, one of about 150 she has fashioned and scattered around her hometown of Nagoro. The village now numbers just 35 living residents, and the scarecrows are a reminder of all who have passed or left as the city slowly slips into Japanese history.

The town and its scarecrows have become Japan's version of a looking glass, and the Japanese know this. They can see the future and they realize that, because of social and economic dogma, they're on the path to extinction as a race, just as Nagoro is on the path to extinction as a village. And as callous at it sounds, there's money to be made as Japan fades away.


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Japan's problem is two pronged:

1. It has heinous demographics.

Japan is the most rapidly aging country in the world because of atrociously low birth rates and a xenophobic mindset toward mass immigration that would allow migrants to repopulate the country — albeit without Japanese bloodlines. By 2060, the country's current population of nearly 130 million will be below 90 million — and 40% of those people will have topped 65 years.

By 2110, less than 43 million Japanese will likely populate the nation, and an even greater percentage will be retirees.

That's a significant dilemma because...

2. Japan has an unwavering and flawed belief in Keynesian economics.

Keynesianism is the oxymoronic belief — more moronic than oxy — that a country can, through the government, tax, spend, devalue the currency and inflate its way to prosperity. It's precisely why the West is so sick today. Government has gorged on too much public debt over the last many decades in an effort to keep Western citizens happy and middle class.

The fiscal situations that now exist in America and Western Europe prove that Keynesianism is largely a discredited economic model. But in the context of a population declining as fast as Japan's, the economic philosophy is the equivalent of putting an obese person on a high-calorie diet.

Because of its longstanding faith in the fallacy of Keynesian theology, Japan is already headed in the wrong direction economically. It's home to a debt load that is the highest in the world at more than 225% of GDP, more than double the troubled debt load here at home.

Consider what happens to a population that is A) shrinking, while B) the government continues to pile on additional debts to stimulate the economy, which is exactly what Japan is doing with its last-gasp Abenomics economic policies. The fewer and fewer Japanese will be less and less able to support the economic growth — and the taxes — needed to repay the larger and larger governmental debts. And that's especially true when you consider how many of those people are retirees, no longer generating a paycheck or spending to the degree that younger workers do.

That's why Japan is an all but lost cause at this point.

The Fading Yen

There's talk in Japan that leaders, realizing the quandary their country faces, are now considering allowing mass immigration — though whether that actually happens is debatable, given the militantly insular nature of Japan's belief in cultural purity.

But even that won't save the country from the gaping fiscal problems it now has because of decades of Keynesian ideology. Japan needs to start over. It won't, of course. Instead, through a massive currency-printing campaign, it will sacrifice the yen in a desperate effort to generate any kind of growth it can.

No sustained growth is possible, though, for a litany of reasons, such as: Older people are not spending heavily on the consumer items and services that grow the economy; too much tax revenue now must be funneled into debt repayment; and Japan's once-vaunted savings rate has plunged to near-U.S.-like levels.

Ultimately, Japan is going to face an existential crisis wrapped up in a fiscal, financial and economic crisis. And as part of that, the Japanese yen the world knows today will fade into history.

On the way to that point, the yen, now in the range of 119 to the dollar, will plunge through 200 or 300 to the dollar, meaning anyone who shorts the yen against the dollar in the medium- to long-term is going to make a small fortune on the demise of Japan.

This is exactly why I've put readers of my Sovereign Investor monthly newsletter into an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that profits when the yen declines. The endgame is clear in Japan … and the end draws nearer with every new Keynesian plan the country introduces. The road does not end well for Japan.

But there's money to be made on the coming crash.

Until next time, stay Sovereign…

Jeff D. Opdyke
Editor, Profit Seeker

P.S. Japan isn't the only country on the edge of ruin. America is seeing the rise of a movement that could change the landscape of our country forever. To watch the controversial video detailing this movement and how you can protect yourself, click here.

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