
Do you want to know the primary reason why rapidly rising interest rates could  take down the entire global financial system?  Most people might think that it  would be because the U.S. government would have to pay much more interest on the  national debt. 
 And yes, if the average rate of interest on  U.S. government debt rose to just 6 percent (and it has actually been much  higher in the past), the federal government would be paying out about a trillion  dollars a year just in interest on the national debt.  But that isn't it.  Nor  does the primary reason have to do with the fact that rapidly rising interest  rates would impose massive losses on bond investors. 
 At this  point, it is being projected that if U.S. bond yields rise by an average of 3  percentage points, it will cause investors to lose a trillion dollars.  Yes,  that is a 1 with 12 zeroes after it ($1,000,000,000,000).  But that is not the  number one danger posed by rapidly rising interest rates either. 
 Rather, the number one reason why rapidly rising interest rates could cause  the entire global financial system to crash is because there are more than 441  TRILLION dollars worth of interest rate derivatives sitting out there.  This  number comes directly from the Bank for International Settlements - the central  bank of central banks. 
 In other words, more than  $441,000,000,000,000 has been bet on the movement of interest rates.  Normally  these bets do not cause a major problem because rates tend to move very slowly  and the system stays balanced.  But now rates are starting to skyrocket, and the  sophisticated financial models used by derivatives traders do not account for  this kind of movement.
 So what does all of this mean?
 It means that the global financial system is potentially heading for massive  amounts of trouble if interest rates continue to soar.
 Today, the  yield on 10 year U.S. Treasury bonds rocketed up to 2.66% before settling back  to 2.55%.  The chart posted below shows how dramatically the yield on 10 year  U.S. Treasuries has moved in recent days...
 10 Year Treasury  Yield
 Right now, the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries is about 30  percent above its 50 day moving average.  That is the most that it has been  above its 50 day moving average in 50 years.
 Like I mentioned  above, we are moving into uncharted territory and this data doesn't really fit  into the models used by derivatives traders.
 The yield on 5 year  U.S. Treasuries has been moving even more dramatically...
 5 Year  Treasury Yield
 Last week, the yield on 5 year U.S. Treasuries rose  by an astounding 37 percent.  That was the largest increase in 50 years.
 Once again, this is uncharted territory.
 If rates continue to  shoot up, there are going to be some financial institutions out there that are  going to start losing absolutely massive amounts of money on interest rate  derivative contracts.
 So exactly what is an interest rate  derivative?
 The following is how Investopedia defines interest rate  derivatives...
 A financial instrument based on an underlying  financial security whose value is affected by changes in interest rates.  Interest-rate derivatives are hedges used by institutional investors such as  banks to combat the changes in market interest rates. Individual investors are  more likely to use interest-rate derivatives as a speculative tool - they hope  to profit from their guesses about which direction market interest rates will  move.
 They can be very complicated, but I prefer to think of them  in very simple terms.  Just imagine walking into a casino and placing a bet that  the yield on 10 year U.S. Treasuries will hit 2.75% in July.  If it does reach  that level, you win.  If it doesn't, you lose.  That is a very simplistic  example, but I think that it is a helpful one.  At the heart of it, the 441  TRILLION dollar derivatives market is just a bunch of people making bets about  which way interest rates will go.
 And normally the betting stays  very balanced and our financial system is not threatened.  The people that run  this betting use models that are far more sophisticated than anything that Las  Vegas uses.  But all models are based on human assumptions, and wild swings in  interest rates could break their models and potentially start causing financial  losses on a scale that our financial system has never seen before.
 We are potentially talking about a financial collapse far worse than anything  that we saw back in 2008.
 Remember, the U.S. national debt is just  now approaching 17 trillion dollars.  So when you are talking about 441 trillion  dollars you are talking about an amount of money that is almost  unimaginable.
 Meanwhile, China appears to be on the verge of  another financial crisis as well.  The following is from a recent article by  Graham Summers...
 China is on the verge of a “Lehman” moment as its  shadow banking system implodes. China had pumped roughly $1.6 trillion in new  credit (that’s 21% of GDP) into its economy in the last two quarters… and China  GDP growth is in fact slowing.
 This is what a credit bubble  bursting looks like: the pumping becomes more and more frantic with less and  less returns.
 And Chinese stocks just experienced their largest  decline since 2009.  The second largest economy on earth is starting to have  significant financial problems at the same time that our markets are starting to  crumble.
 Not good.
 And don't forget about Europe.   European stocks have had a very, very rough month so far...
 The  narrow EuroStoxx 50 index is now at its lowest in over seven months (-5.4%  year-to-date and -12.5% from its highs in May) and the broader EuroStoxx 600 is  also flailing lower. The European bank stocks pushed down to their lowest in  almost 10 months and are now in bear market territory - down 22.5% from their  highs. Spain and Italy are now testing their lowest level in 9 months.
 So are the central banks of the world going to swoop in and rescue the  financial markets from the brink of disaster?
 At this point it does  not appear likely.
 As I have written about previously, the Bank for  International Settlements is the central bank for central banks, and it has a  tremendous amount of influence over central bank policy all over the  planet.
 The other day, the general manager of the Bank for  International Settlements, Jaime Caruana, gave a speech entitled "Making the  most of borrowed time".  In that speech, he made it clear that the era of  extraordinary central bank intervention was coming to an end.  The following is  one short excerpt from that speech...
 "Ours is a call for acting  responsibly now to strengthen growth and avoid even costlier adjustment down the  road. And it is a call for recognizing that returning to stability and  prosperity is a shared responsibility. Monetary policy has done its part.  Recovery now calls for a different policy mix – with more emphasis on  strengthening economic flexibility and dynamism and stabilizing public  finances."
 Monetary policy has done its part?
 That  sounds pretty firm.
 And if you read the entire speech, you will see  that Caruana makes it clear that he believes that it is time for the financial  markets to stand on their own.
 But will they be able to?
 As I wrote about yesterday, the U.S. financial system is a massive Ponzi  scheme that is on the verge of imploding.  Unprecedented intervention by the  Federal Reserve has helped to prop it up for the last couple of years, and there  is a lot of fear in the financial world about what is going to happen once that  unprecedented intervention is gone.
 So what happens next?
 Well, nobody knows for sure, but one thing seems certain.  The last half of  2013 is shaping up to be very, very interesting.