
How much is 1,000,000,000,000,000 yen worth?  Well, a quadrillion yen is worth  approximately 10.5 trillion dollars.  It is an amount of money that is larger  than the "the economies of Germany, France and the U.K. combined".  It is such  an astounding amount of debt that it is hard to even get your mind around  it. 
 The government debt to GDP ratio in Japan will reach 247  percent this year, and the Japanese currently spend about 50 percent of all  central government tax revenue on debt service.  Realistically, there are only  two ways out of this overwhelming debt trap for the Japanese.  Either they  default or they try to inflate the debt away. 
 At this point,  the Japanese have chosen to try to inflate the debt away.  They have initiated  the greatest quantitative easing experiment that a major industrialized nation  has attempted since the days of the Weimar Republic.  Over the next two years,  the Bank of Japan plans to zap 60 trillion yen into existence out of thin air  and use it to buy government bonds. 
 By the time this program  is over, the monetary base in Japan will have approximately doubled.  But  authorities in Japan are desperate.  They know that the Japanese debt bomb could  set off global panic at any time, and they are trying to find a way out that  will not cause too much pain.
 Unfortunately, the only way that  this bizarre quantitative easing program will work is if investors in Japanese  bonds act very, very irrationally.  You see, the only way that Japan has been  able to pile up this much debt in the first place is because they have been able  to borrow gigantic piles of money at super low interest rates.
 Right now, the yield on 10 year Japanese bonds is sitting at an absurdly low  0.76%.  But even with such ridiculously low interest rates, the central  government of Japan is still spending about half of all tax revenue on debt  service.
 If interest rates go up, the game is over.
 But now that the Japanese government has announced that it plans to double the  monetary base, it would be extremely irrational for investors not to demand  higher rates on Japanese government debt.  After all, why would you want to loan  money to the Japanese government for less than one percent a year when the  purchasing power of your money could potentially be halved over the next two  years?
 Amazingly, this is exactly what the Japanese government is  counting on.  They are counting on being able to wildly print up money and  monetize debt, but also keep yields on Japanese bonds at insanely low levels at  the same time.
 For the moment, it is actually working.  Investors  in Japanese bonds are behaving very, very irrationally.
 But if that  changes at some point, we could potentially be looking at the greatest Asian  economic crisis of all time.
 And there are some very sharp minds  out there that believe that is exactly what is going to happen.
 For  example, the founder of Hayman Capital Management, Kyle Bass, has been sounding  the alarm about Japan for a long time.  He correctly predicted the subprime  mortgage meltdown, and in the process he made hundreds of millions of dollars  for his clients.  Now he believes that the next major crash is going to be in  Japan.
 According to Bass, the bond bubble in Japan is so large that  once it begins to implode fear is going to start spreading like  wildfire...
 Remember, Japanese banks in general have 900% of their  tangible assets invested in JGBs that are the most negatively convex instrument  you can put into a portfolio. Assume for instance that a bank holds a 10 year  bond yielding 80 basis points. A 100 basis point move will cost the JGB investor  about 10 years of expected interest payments.
 Think about the  psychology of all the players and financial implications if rates do move 100  basis points. Think about the solvency of a nation which currently spends 50% of  its central government tax revenues on debt service, half of which earns the  lowest yields of any country in the world.
 You can’t look at this  as a simple question. You need to think about this as a multivariate equation.  You have to think about the incentives and the fears of all the participants.  And you need to think about the fiscal sustainability of the government.
 If rates even rise by a full percentage point, it could start a stampede  toward the exits that nobody in the entire world would be able to  control...
 I ran a survey of 1,009 Japanese investors where we  asked: “If rates were to move up 100 basis points, would that engender more  confidence and make you want to buy more JGBs?” or, “Would you take your money  elsewhere, even if it were hamstringing your government’s ability to operate?” 8  – 9% of respondents that said that they would buy more bonds and almost 80% said  they would run, not walk the other way.
 And of course Japan is not  the only "debt bomb" that could potentially go off over in Asia.  As I mentioned  in another article, the major problem over in China is the level of private  debt...
 In China, the big problem is the absolutely stunning growth  of private domestic debt.  According to a recent World Bank report, the total  amount of credit in China has risen from 9 trillion dollars in 2008 to 23  trillion dollars today.
 That increase is roughly equivalent to the  entire U.S. commercial banking system.
 There is simply way, way too  much debt in our world today.  Never before has there been so much red ink all  over the planet at the same time.
 Many in the mainstream media  insist that this party can go on indefinitely.
 But that is what  they said about the housing bubble too.
 Sadly, the truth is that  every financial bubble eventually bursts, and this global debt bubble will be no  exception.