I am going to summarize the argument of a video I just watched. I watch a lot of videos on Youtube that I don't think they are worth summarizing here but in this case the argument used has made me think and I want to expose it.
Why I am Betting AGAINST the Crowd on This. Alessio Rastani.Is all the money printing going to cause hyperinflation in the next few years? No, we are more likely heading towards deflation.
We are likely heading towards an economic depression and History has taught us that recessions and depressions are deflationary, not inflationary. The previous recession we had in 2008 was deflationary:
Inflation dropped massively and the same happened in the year 2000. Instead of seeing rising prices in the next economic recession or depression we are likely to see falling prices.
Another reason why we are heading towars a recession in the nexts few years is because bonds have likely bottomed and have started and uptrend.
But what about all the money that has been printed?
Japan has been massively printing money for several years but have they seen inflation? No.
In Japan, They’re Still Worried About Deflation, Not InflationIn a recession or a depression, the banks usually cut the supply of credits. We have to bear in mind that for inflation to ocurr we need and increase in the supply of credits. Do banks like to lend money to people during a recession? No. They know people are more likely to default and not pay them back. In those kinds of situations (recessions and depressions) they reduce the supply of credits, they make it more difficult for people to borrow and that kind of action causes falling prices.
That's why in the 2008 recession we had what was called the "credit crunch".
There is something else that happens during recessions and depressions: money goes out from risky assets to cash and the USD gets stronger.
The majority of people out there think the dollar is doomed but because they are expecting hyperinflation. All the media talks about now is inflation and not deflation. So people are expecting a crash in the USD, which is the opposite of what he is expecting. In fact, he is betting against the crowd in this point. Then he explain that as long as some technical (analysis) points are not broken he remains bullish on the USD and bonds.
So much for the summary. The truth is that I had not seen anyone talking about this. Everyone talks about inflation or hyperinflation without taking into account the credit crunch and the historical deflationary nature of the crises.
Another thing to analyze, if he is right, is how Bitcoin would behave in a deflationary environment. I believe that at the beginning of a crisis it would happen like in March 2020, that people would panic and sell fast to get cash. But once the initial scare passed, money would return to Bitcoin, which is an asset that is perceived increasingly as safe. Also, traditionally gold was a safe haven during crises, and I think it will be replaced by Bitcoin.