Fake money is warping the economy. By Quoth the Raven.
Nearly everything I’ve written over the past few years has revolved around how grotesquely overvalued the market is. Pick your metric. The Buffett Indicator is screaming. Traditional price-to-earnings ratios are absurd. The Shiller CAPE is parked near all-time highs yet again.
Historically, these measures existed to anchor investors to something resembling reality, accounting for cycles, earnings power, and the inconvenient fact that prices are supposed to relate to value. Today, they are waved away by growth narratives and financial influencers who treat valuation like an outdated superstition.
But let’s entertain a heretical thought. What if 40x earnings isn’t overvalued anymore?
By historical standards, it is indefensible. By economic logic, it is laughable. But markets no longer operate on either. The real regime change happened around the turn of the millennium, when quantitative easing went from emergency response to permanent lifestyle choice.
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You can’t put out a physical fire with fuel.
That’s what’s happening right now in paper metals markets.The system is responding to insurmountable real-world constraints with more credit, and it’s making the imbalance worse, not better.$silver $gold $platinum $palladium… pic.twitter.com/ecwI4YWuVO
— @mcm_ct_usa (@mcm_ct_usa) January 1, 2026
The market we grew up studying does not exist anymore. Drawdowns are no longer allowed to mature into corrections because the Federal Reserve panics at the first whiff of discomfort. Five percent down? Emergency meeting. Ten percent? Liquidity firehose. Investors have been coddled into submission and trained like Pavlovian dogs to expect rescue at the slightest sign of pain.
That expectation may be the single most powerful force pushing valuations into territory that would have once been dismissed as satire.
Modern monetary theory has quietly poisoned the usefulness of traditional valuation metrics. When money is created without constraint, deficits are celebrated, and central banks openly admit that asset prices are a policy tool, the concept of “fair value” becomes a relic.
Earnings no longer justify prices. Prices justify themselves through liquidity. Stocks stop being ownership claims on productive businesses and instead become dumping grounds for excess capital that cannot sit in cash without being destroyed by inflation.
Picture the environment we are already halfway living in. Economic growth is mediocre at best. Productivity gains are weak. Real wages lag. None of that matters. Liquidity is abundant and relentless. Bonds guarantee negative real returns. Cash is a melting ice cube. Housing is inaccessible to anyone without existing assets. Capital is forced into equities not because they are attractive, but because they are the least bad option left. Under those conditions, valuation multiples do not expand because optimism is high. They expand because participation is compulsory. Fifty or sixty times earnings stops being a bubble and starts being the logical endpoint of a broken system. …
After decades of intervention, investors no longer fear downside. They fear missing out. Buying dips is no longer a strategy; it is an article of faith. Risk has been redefined. Expensive is considered safe. Cheap is considered broken. If the collective belief is that central banks will never allow asset prices to fall in any sustained way, then valuation ceilings simply evaporate. Markets do not top because they are expensive. They top when faith breaks. For now, faith remains disturbingly intact.
So much fake money:
We have never printed this much money. We have never normalized deficits of this scale. We have never openly subordinated market discipline to political convenience the way we do now. Expecting valuations to obey historical limits under these conditions is naïve. It is far more plausible that peak valuations overshoot anything previously recorded, not because fundamentals improved, but because money was debased beyond recognition. …
Sound money matters, but beware the liquidity event in the fake money:
The real takeaway is not that stocks are safe. It is that sound money still matters, regardless of what the equity market does next. Gold and silver could absolutely get crushed during a broader liquidation event. They probably will. Leverage unwinds indiscriminately. But those moments are not failures of the thesis. They are the opportunities. Assets that cannot be printed tend to matter most once confidence in printed ones finally cracks. …
Whether the market crashes tomorrow or levitates into even more absurd territory first is almost beside the point. The endgame has not changed. Only the path has become more distorted, more theatrical, and far more dangerous.
Fake news, fake money, fake vaccines, fake fear of carbon dioxide, … Just as well our media is so curious and honest.
In this era of paper money, unconstrained by physics, markets can never go down for political reasons. Stock markets can plummet, but only temporarily — buy the dip, because the market will be rescued, every single time, by central banks who conjure more paper money out of thin air.
Imagine the political turmoil if interest rates climb to +10% (like in the 1970s) and the housing market dropped 30%. Unthinkable! The ruling class would feel poor, so they would resort to the printing press if necessary to get the prices of their houses back up.
If markets cannot go down, then they must go up. But up against what? The money units, obviously.
So if markets cannot go down, the currency must become debased. Then, interest rates must go up to slow the debasement of the currency. This last happened in the 1970s. USA official rates peaked at 20% in 1979, under Volcker and Carter. The Aussie peak was only slightly lower.
If house prices tank, then houses becomes affordable for young people again. Yippee! Fertility roars back up, and the excuse for third world immigration goes away. Reset. Welcome to the next decade, when the SHTF for the current loose money system.
UPDATE: As I write, paper representing silver is at 99 USD per ounce, and gold is less than 1% below 5,000 USD per ounce. What do you think is going to happen next?
Gold equities are still priced for a long term gold price of around US$ 2,500/oz, and have not moved up commensurately with the gold price — yet. The disconnect between silver equities and the silver price is even more extreme. I’m the editor of GoldNerds so I’m biased, so do your own research.
UPDATE: Trump says what the politicians and media won’t say:
One of the most significant moments from the Trump Davos speech was when he said the quiet part out loud
You cannot lower housing costs for young people without destroying millions in wealth for boomers
“Every time you make it more affordable for somebody to own a house… pic.twitter.com/qndsZttHz9
— Boring_Business (@BoringBiz_) January 23, 2026
Notice he talked about mortgage repayments going up — implying he could crush housing prices by raising interest rates. A better way to lower housing prices would be to open up land and remove regulations on building new housing. Cities with few zoning restrictions in the US have much lower housing prices. From the comments:
Houses become more expensive for people because the government fails to develop new cities.
The youth has to fight for space in the same old city because there’s no new place with same facilities.
New people fighting for space in the old city.
This is how you kill the youth, forcing them to spend all their life to afford a place just to sleep. …
Our politicians are sacrificing people in their 20s and 30s for the prosperity of boomers.

