If you want another reason to place your thumb on your nose and wave your fingers in contempt at proponents of a cashless society like Harvard's Lawrence Summers and Kenneth S. Rogoff, two economist who value their egos more than your financial futures, read this.
Near zero and negative interest rates have been killing savers for several years now. But people are finally catching on as confidence in bureaucrats running the show and their institutions wanes. Then, just last week, Deutsche Bank’s CEO came about as close to shouting fire in a crowded negative rate theater, when, in a Handelsblatt Op-Ed, he warned of “fatal consequences” for savers in Germany and Europe – to be sure, being the CEO of the world’s most systemically risky bank did not help his cause.
Germans are renown for many things, one of which is frugality. Another is their penchant for savings.
Indeed, as even the WSJ now admits, for years, “Germans kept socking money away in savings accounts despite plunging interest rates. Savers deemed the accounts secure, and they still offered easy cash access. But recently, many have lost faith.” We wondered how many “fatal” warnings from the CEO of DB it would take, before this shift would finally take place. As it turns out, one was enough.
To be sure, the Germans are merely catching up to where the Japanese were over half a year ago. As we wrote in February, “look no further than Japan’s hardware stores for a worrying new sign that consumers are hoarding cash–the opposite of what the Bank of Japan had hoped when it recently introduced negative interest rates. Signs are emerging of higher demand for safes—a place where the interest rate on cash is always zero, no matter what the central bank does.
“In response to negative interest rates, there are elderly people who’re thinking of keeping their money under a mattress,” one saleswoman at a Shimachu store in eastern Tokyo told The Journal, which also says at least one model costing $700 is sold out and won’t be available again for a month.“According to the BOJ theory, they should have moved their funds into riskier but higher-earning assets. Instead, they moved into pure cash that earned nothing,” Richard Katz, author of The Oriental Economist newsletter wrote this month.
Now it’s Germany’s turn.
“It doesn’t pay to keep money in the bank, and on top of that you’re
being taxed on it,” said Uwe Wiese, an 82-year-old pensioner who
recently bought a home safe to stash roughly €53,000 ($59,344),
including part of his company pension that he took as a payout.Interest rates’ plunge into negative territory is now accelerating demand for impregnable metal boxes.
Read more:
davidstockmanscontracorner.com/thanks-mario-boom-in-german-market-for-home-safes/
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