You don’t want to be around when that bill comes due! 
                            Well, as a quasi-government organization 
with the authority to suck  down your hard-earned money through the act 
of inflation, the U.S. Federal  Reserve is “that guy,” and you could be 
the responsible one left with its bill.
                            Did you know that the Fed has been 
inflating the supply of dollars at a  stunning 33% annual rate over the 
past five years? Or that it plans to continue  inflating the supply of 
dollars at least into 2014 and has kept open the  possibility that it 
will do so indefinitely?
                            When the Fed’s party is over, who do you think will be left with the  bill?
                            Not the Wall Street bankers! We’ve learned that lesson already.
                            It’s Main Street investors like you who get the bill.
                            But you can protect yourself  -- though your window of safety is closing rapidly.
                            Robert Prechter, market forecaster and 
leading opponent of the Federal  Reserve, has just released a report 
that that will help you understand the  risks of deflation that most 
mainstream sources cannot see because they are  blinded by decades of 
inflationary Fed policy.
                            At just 8  pages, "How to Protect Your 
Money When the U.S. Debt Bill Comes Due"  is a quick read -- well worth 
any independent investor’s time.
                            
Follow this link to download your free deflation-protection report now >> 
                            Report Excerpt: 
                            The Federal Reserve's efforts to rescue 
the economy have been historically aggressive, starting with the initial
 round of quantitative easing in 2008 and continuing through 2013. 
                            The central bank's assets have 
skyrocketed due to the Fed's bond purchases, which you can see clearly 
in this eye-opening report that Robert Prechter presented to the Market 
Technicians Association and his Elliott Wave Theorist subscribers. 
                            
                              The main reason investors are expecting
 runaway inflation is  illustrated in [the chart above], which shows the
 value of assets held at the  Federal Reserve. The Fed has been 
inflating the supply of dollars at a stunning 33% annual rate over the past five years. ... [N]o wonder investors  expect inflation and have aggressively positioned for it.
                              Look just about anywhere else, however, 
and you  will see subtle evidence of deflationary pressures. Given 
knowledge only of the  Fed’s inflating, many people would expect the 
Producer and Consumer Price  Indexes to be rising at a rate of 33% 
annually. But, as you can see in Figure  2, the PPI’s annual rate of 
change is stuck at zero and the CPI has been rising  at only a 2% rate. 

 
In an interview  at the recent San 
Francisco Money Show with financial author Jim Mosquera,  EWI's Chief 
Market Analyst Steven Hochberg explains why the Fed has gotten so  
little in return from its stimulus programs. Here's a brief excerpt from
 the  interview published on Aug. 18 on the Examiner.com website.
                            
                              
Question: The Fed 
wizards have been  pushing buttons and pulling levers rather furiously 
since 2008. The discount  rate is rock bottom, and the Fed balance sheet
 has swelled to the tune of  trillions. What button is left for them to 
push?
                              
Steve Hochberg: That 
is a really  interesting question the way you phrased it because the 
fact that they have  been pushing buttons and have gotten very little in
 return tells us … that the  Fed is not in control. The Fed does not 
control the markets, and it doesn’t  control the economy. Both are 
bigger than the Fed.
                              You say they have been doing this 
furiously. They have been doing  this historically! Yet if you look at 
inflationary measures, such as the  Personal Consumption Expenditures, 
which is the Fed's favorite way of measuring  inflation, it's bumping 
along at 1%.
                              We have had historic fiscal and 
monetary stimulus and yet no  inflation. Why? The forces of deflation 
are overwhelming the forces of  inflation. The Fed dropped interest 
rates in 2000 to 2002 and that did not stop  the Nasdaq from dropping 
78%. The Fed dropped rates from 2007 to 2009 and it  did not stop the 
Dow from going down 59%. There is historical evidence that the  Fed does
 not control the markets but that the markets control the Fed.
                              As the next leg of the bear market 
starts unfolding, they are  going to do more unconventional things. 
Things will accelerate to the downside  when the public realizes the 
central banks aren't in control.
                                For a limited time, you can  read Robert
 Prechter’s 6-page report to prepare for what EWI sees ahead. In  this 
report you'll learn why the risk of deflation is mounting and how you 
can  see it coming in the prices of gold, gas, real estate, crude oil 
and other  markets.
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article42863.html