Denial Confronts Illiteracy:
69 Mass Delusions
Jim Willie
CB
March 20, 2003
We live in dangerous times. But we also live in
times where delusional behavior is raising the risks and intensifying
the danger. An unchecked cancer is growing on our nation's consciousness,
fed by denial of degenerative hardship, grown from a layer of
ignorance, inhibiting its ability to perceive reality and to
properly make decisions for the future. The American public clings
to a scintilla of hope that all will be well, jobs secured, threats
eliminated, wealth restored, pensions returned to health. My
January article "Predictions
for the 2003 Year - Bear Claws" closed the preface with
an admonition on pervasive delusion within the American psyche:
A dangerous multi-faceted
delusion has caught our entire nation in its grip, characterized
by naïve perceptions and acceptance of economic disinformation,
fair stock values, safe haven in real estate, ultimate sanctuary
in Treasury bonds, imminent economic recovery, quick resolution
to Iraqi conflict, moderation of crude oil prices, and trust
in failed re-tread federal government (Keynesian) and Federal
Reserve (monetary) stimulus programs. Pervasive delusion breeds
a climate for further accidents, errors, and additional financial
losses. The new year will provide ample opportunity to toss much
more cold water of reality on our faces. This bear has only begun
to claw its way toward Main Street and Wall Street. A ray of
hope lies in new the new Bush economic package and the Fed's
willingness to forestall deflation. However, the harsh reality
calls for political squabbling, watering down its best elements,
and watching them fall short of accomplishing much more than
procrastinating the time of reckoning. (JW, January 2003)
If anything, the delusions
are becoming deeper, wider, more desperate, and departing farther
from reality in just the first three months of this new year.
A sense of profound denial lingers after the bust of the economic
miracle, irresponsibly founded upon the greatest debt-generated
speculative mania in human history. Could the New Economic miracle
have been a mirage? Won't our fabulous productivity pull us out
of the morass? Doesn't debt build wealth? Wasn't the business
cycle repealed? Can't the Fed save our skins as in the past?
Can't the federal government just print enough money to rescue
the economy? Didn't the strong USDollar produce the world's engine
of growth and prosperity? What in God's name went wrong? What
are we missing? In short, the answer lies in "Economics
101" at a fundamental level. Our entire economics community
supports a heretical system that produces apologists for perpetual
debt abuse.
I have been astounded and dismayed
by the pervasive level of delusion harbored within and widely
shared by the American public. Denial of the shattered American
Dream seems to be festering against a backdrop of alarming financial
illiteracy which saddles citizens and investors of this country.
We simply have no interest, nor ability, nor sources of learning,
in order to raise our collective intelligence on financial matters.
The end result has been the advancement of clinical delusion,
based largely on the belief that all will be well, as prosperity
is restored. Our empire will remain intact, as will our world
dominance. Is such a view based in reality? I think not, and
expect that a difficult transition is in progress as our nation
sees a significant cutback in its collective wealth, as adjustments
are forced upon our spending patterns at all levels, as the abusive
expansion of debts are dealt with in draconian fashion. In this
piece I hope to disabuse readers of many persistent delusions
in support of fallacious views. My list of delusions outlines
the neurotic condition of the American mindset.
World opinion and international
impressions of the United States are hard to monitor. The world's
eyes surely see a nation which offers unlimited opportunity for
individual success. They acknowledge a system which delivers
tremendous reward for good ideas and innovative, if not revolutionary,
approaches. They perceive a land where readily available credit
can be used to build businesses, true engines of wealth and jobs.
They observe a society which offers perhaps more economic fairness
to people of diverse color and creed, than anywhere else in the
world. They witness unnerving speed of change within our realm.
The enjoy our unique contributions to the arts, films, jazz,
and even our western cowboy genre. They benefit from and are
grateful for huge charity and aid throughout the world. They
detect incredible wealth in stark contrast to abject poverty,
in wonderment.
Perception has an opposite
side, sadly evident in recent years. The rest of the world is
now steeped in consternation, looking at us and wondering if
we have taken leave of our senses. They see a nation whose leaders
are either fools or criminals, often inexperienced but overseeing
large arsenals, thrusting the western world toward a dangerous
war. They are catching their breath after an historically unprecedented
speculative disaster struck within our financial markets. They
witness a world financial system wretch toward a probable recession
and possible depression, as failed discredited monetary and fiscal
policy is repeated in unknowing blind futility. They suffer a
nation with a superiority complex, stifling arrogance, and ignorance
of international culture. They observe a nation conduct politics
directed and motivated by big business and press photo opps.
They watch a people beset by parallel burdens. Careless abuse
of debt has hobbled our ability to maintain the current exalted
standard of living. Thoughtless abuse of food has created a ball
& chain to be dragged around, called obesity. They see a
younger set who learn from television and video games instead
of reading, take their fashion cues from the ghetto, and produce
music that lately sounds more like bad poetry put to an angry
beat. Yet we actually maintain the belief we are a shining beacon
to the world, not only in business, but with an emulated culture.
More delusion. Instead, we are increasingly the object of world
scorn. We are causing big problems. We have been infecting the
world with financial viruses which emanate from a debt-based
system founded upon hazardous currency and uncontrollable deficit
spending, whereby leverage and other gearing are employed in
every corner, magnifying the risks.
Below are 69 individual delusions,
each clearly identifiable and rampantly spreading. They start
with the war and economy, drifting
to the USDollar, Treasury debt
and banking, gold, stocks,
real estate, and miscellaneous
areas.
MIDDLE
EAST WAR FOOTING :
1. Iraq tensions obstruct capital investment, hiring, and consumer
spending
Sure, plenty of uncertainty looms on
the horizon. But the debt explosion of the 1990 decade together
with misread final demand led to a bust. Capital spending has
wound down since mid-2000, showing signs recently of extinction,
as SunMicro's CEO McNulty chooses to describe it. Industrial
capacity is roughly 35% greater than warranted by current demand.
Consumer spending is stretched from household debt exceeding
annual income in aggregate. Hiring is troubled from bleak prospects
of corporate profitability and flagging customer demand. As we
proceed down the path that has been marked by paper-based asset
writedowns, debt destruction, corporate insolvency, personal
bankruptcy, buffeted by seemingly endless new credit and lower
rates, realized through mortgage refinance, the economy continues
to struggle. A slide into recession now seems certain, which
will lead to an acceleration of negative influences likely to
deepen the recession, and possibly even flirt with depression.
No, Saddam Hussein is the scapegoat to our economic malaise,
the direct result of our own devilish handiwork.
2. Saudis and Kuwaitis will
compensate for any oil interruption
For starters, Kuwait has extremely
little excess capacity. Certainly good will is expressed against
a rising tide of fundamentalist power within its governing bodies.
Saudi oil production has legendary excess capacity, which has
already been running higher in response to the curtailment of
Venezuelan oil production. They can surely increase further.
But nothing can go wrong for Saudis to come to the rescue. No
terrorist hits on their oil terminals. . . no political obstacles
to save the American economy when Saudis are blamed for the World
Trade Center attack. . . no other disruptions to oil shipments
from Russia or Nigeria or Venezuela or (name 5 others). The entire
Saudi nation benefits from higher oil prices. Kuwait, hosting
US Military staging platforms, might sit as a primary target
for Saddam's SCUD missiles. No, when something goes awry, expect
a crude oil price spike toward $70/bbl if we attack and seize,
which would match the 1991 Gulf War peak.
3. expect the same fast
Iraqi war outcome, same immediate stock rally response
Almost no similarities exist between
the current war posturing and the Gulf War. I could name ten
differences. The biggest are that now Saddam and his regime are
entrenched on home soil, and the world is hardly aligned in support
of our aggression. The cost was shared in 1991, but now must
be borne by Americans alone. Hand-to-hand combat on Baghdad streets
will not conclude quickly. Confusion will reign as non-combatants
litter the battleground landscape. We cannot even clearly pinpoint
Saddam's location. Baghdad is a city of five million residents,
larger than Metro Boston. Expect total chaos if war is waged
on Iraq. Also, if 1991 is any indication, expect the war to become
a spectator sport, diverting our citizens from the shopping malls.
No, tensions might persist for many months even after the conflict
subsides within the borders of Iraq, which then ushers in the
nightmare of occupation, dealing with the complexity of the Kurdish
homeland, and putting out fires.
4. US occupation of Iraqi
oilfields will come without repercussion
From an Islamic or Arab perspective,
I cannot think of anything that would more enflame this collection
of one billion people into a worldwide frenzy. First of all,
restoration of Iraqi oil production would require between $2
and $5 billion, since they have undergone neglect. I believe
Saudi Arabia would be the target of violent reaction, for their
continued support of US Military forces, and their continued
hospitality for use of the Prince Sultan Airbase inside their
borders, defiling holy lands. Arabs are likely to stick together
when one of their own is attacked, or one of their nations is
occupied by infidels, far more than we expect. No, any rational
person would expect the nearby Arab Islamic world to absolutely
erupt in protest, in public demonstrations, in formal diplomatic
objection, culminating in outright violent retaliation.
5. US Military has bigger
weapons, which will bring quick victory
This denies the tragic events of September
11th in 2001. US F-16 fighter aircraft and state-of-the-art communications
systems failed to stop the attack. Large naval destroyers and
aircraft carriers failed to stop the deadly smaller attack on
the USS Cole in the Yemen port. We dictate the theatre of war
operations, but not the theatre for terrorist activities. Where
we isolate the enemy, we will have swift military victory, although
with messy collateral civilian casualties. We may prevail inside
Iraq, but what of retaliation outside Iraq? We will surely witness
counter attacks, not the least of which will be a boycott of
US financial markets and of the USDollar itself. Our stocks,
bonds, and currency represent our greatest vulnerability, which
our enemy realizes. No, our victories will be localized, while
our setbacks will be distributed across the globe in financial
markets and world sentiment.
6. war is good for our economy
as a stimulus
Since when is destruction good for
producing wealth, jobs, and prosperity? Diverting scarce capital
for the purpose of bombs and bullets has never paved a road to
riches. Instead, it greatly distorts elements within an economy,
while costing tremendous sums of money. Will the investment result
in a much better world, or spark new rounds of terrorism? The
trickle down within the defense industry contains only two to
three steps, and at exaggerated costs from longstanding relationships
that are milked to the hilt. The multiplier effect within the
private sector contains six to eight steps, as suppliers and
contractors combine to build industries, which actually produce
jobs and commercial benefits to an economy. No, war is unproductive.
7. democracy can be imposed
in the Arab world
The Iraq region has not seen democracy
in five thousand years. The Arab world has had a few episodes
of democratic leadership, but the assassinations of Nasser and
Sadat ended those examples in Egypt. Is Mubarak the leader of
a democratic land, or is he held ransom by a strong and vocal
Islamic community? Our plan to impose democracy steeps with arrogance,
hegemony, and naïveté. The Arab culture is inconsistent
with such a structure of government. A tribal culture that does
not value education or advancement of women's rights offers no
foundation for the active requirements of democratic representation
and leadership. Most Arab democracies have resulted in brutal
dictatorships. No, any attempt to promote a democratic leader
would be quickly seen as installation of an American puppet for
conducting our business and furthering our interests, inviting
a quick broad backlash.
8. Russia is our new friend
and ally
Since the fall of the Soviet Union
and the more concrete dismantling of the Berlin Wall, Russia
has stood as a curious wolf in sheep's clothing, in my opinion.
They have promised and delivered on crude oil and natural gas
supplies, offsetting and neutralizing the Saudi dominant position.
Energy agreements benefit both the USA and Russia. But many rigid
crusty ex-Soviet Army diehards remain in place. Supplying the
underworld of terrorist commerce with dangerous weapons, the
former KGB has become a menace. President Putin himself is ex-KGB,
and thus is a likely master at deception and diplomacy. Already,
longstanding NATO officials show concern and distrust. Secret
military codes and protocols are being shared with not only Russians,
but other eastern European nations that once lived under the
Soviet Bloc. The Soviet Union supplied arms for 30 years to enemies
of Israel and every terrorist state in the Middle East. Most
Iraqi military hardware was built in the old Soviet Union. Old
ties die slowly, while old habits die even more slowly. No, sooner
or later, Russia will betray the United States.
9. German, French, Russian
objections to Iraqi war center on humanitarian concerns
Business investment by German industries
involves chemical plants, where much money is owed by Iraq. Business
investment by French industries involves chemical plants, the
supply of helicopter parts, and of weapons-grade plutonium. Much
money is owed by Iraq. Business investment by Russian industries
(and former Soviet Union contracts) involves oilfield and military
equipment, where much money is owed by Iraq. All these debts
would have to be rewritten or renegotiated, if the USA occupies
Iraq and controls Iraqi industry. Controversy would arise on
fair treatment, especially after the nature of direct French
participation in weapons programs is revealed. No, these nations
are primarily disturbed about threats to industrial investments
with their Iraqi business partners, and might be embarrassed
when an occupation reveals their extent.
US
ECONOMY :
10. economic recovery will come in the 2nd half of this year
Like the chant of a mindless cult,
this refrain is trotted out each spring following the failure
of the recovery to arrive as predicted. Bear in mind that the
chant is written by those who want the retail investor to remain
fully invested for the long haul. Also important is avoiding
a consumer pause, waiting for cheaper future prices. Each year
this forecast becomes more laughable, as its fallacious framework
from the previous year is not adequately explained. In fact,
with each passing year, the justification for its next late arrival
becomes even more naïve, insulting, and ludicrous. No, this
incantation is getting old and might only work with imbeciles.
11. consumption can pull
the US out of its recession
This belief points out the depth of
ignorance when understanding how wealth is created at all. If
incomes are not growing, jobs are disappearing, debt is still
rising, and businesses are not investing in capital equipment,
how on earth can continued consumption promote growth to form
a strong foundation whereby the economy can grow? This absurd
premise has been promoted ever since our mfg base disappeared
and a service sector began to dominate. On several occasions,
our leaders have urged us to continue our spending, even to raid
our home equity to support spending. I believe we are caught
in a trap, one which was entered as a result of excessive consumption,
largely financed by debt. The economy is now slowing, as consumption
has slowed. So we are deluded into thinking that more consumption
can lead us out of the very same trap. Such twisted thinking
leads me to conclude that our economic design team (i.e. economists)
is so inept that they cannot properly discern the quagmire we
are in. No, our economy requires the opposite - savings and investment,
and a painful transition whereby excessive debt burdens are cleansed
by whatever means.
12. the 2001 recession was
little different from previous cycles
No resemblance whatsoever exists between
this recession and any since World War II. A long recession in
the 1970's occurred as VietNam war debts came due, OPEC quadrupled
oil prices, and price inflation hit our shores like a fierce
firestorm. We endured the stupidity of Nixon's "Wage Price
Freeze" whose only accomplishment was widespread shortage.
The recession in the early 1980's could be characterized as a
systemic reflex pullback following a monetary and fiscal stimulus
that succeeded in extracting us from the previous morass, only
a few years before. The recession during the Gulf War was from
an energy price shock. No, this recession has come after a decade
of debt explosion, a speculative mania, and an asset valuation
bust, in the face of worldwide excess capacity, overflowing product
surplus (with attendant liquidation) and wholly unrealistic expectations
for technological expansion and demand.
13. double-dip recessions
are unusual, and don't occur very often
Again, a bold statement that flies
in the face of history since World War II. Does anyone even study
history? Every recession in the past fifty years has been accompanied
by a follow-up recession, brought about by the economy's inability
to properly absorb the heightened stimulus required to extract
businesses and consumers from the drag of the prior recession.
Such beliefs seem to be almost as desperate as pathetic in nature.
In the challenging 1970 decade marred by VietNam War cost reconciliation,
OPEC price increases, and Watergate, we actually witnessed a
triple-dip recession. Instead of rationally accepting a reality,
we cling to false hope. Instead of accepting that we must reap
what we sow, we attempt to forestall natural consequences, thus
risking more dire outcomes. No, double-dip recessions are the
norm, not the exception.
14. real estate equity extractions
can sustain the economy
Alan Greenspan repeats this heretical
statement periodically. Sharply lower interest rates in 2001
induced and encouraged the stock bubble to migrate and develop
into a credit bubble. What resulted was yet another speculative
mania, this time in real estate and its mortgage finance. Now
the Master of Bubbles has seen fit to encourage homeowners to
continue and sustain their profligate spending patterns, to sustain
the consumption insanity, so as to keep the economy running on
fumes. He has actively encouraged people to tap into their most
stable and secure nestegg, which often serves as the basis of
retirement security. In the process, households will have fewer
resources to fall back on when the MAIN EVENT recession comes
next, many of those same homeowners lose their jobs, and distress
turns painful. If and when housing prices turn down, as they
did in the late 1980's, we will surely hear of negative home
equity. No, tapping home equity is temporary and finite, only
to leave people far more vulnerable on the next downturn, which
might be now.
15. China is a constructive
trade partner, lowering our costs
The transition continues that began
around 1980. The United States began to ship its mfg jobs offshore,
realizing lower labor costs. The jobs went to Japan and the Pacific
Rim. Later assembly jobs went to Mexico with the advent of NAFTA.
Now we see the next final stage, where China's vastly lower labor
costs severely undermine the entire Japanese economy and the
PacRim to boot. A valid argument can be made that our increase
in money supply is matched by increases in consumer debt, which
are equivalent in magnitude to increases in the Chinese trade
surplus with the USA. So we as a nation are hemorrhaging money,
and this money was created by a printing press. The same quantity
of money is being collected by China, which is building factories,
creating jobs, increasing its standard of living, and filling
its banks with gold and other sovereign bond reserves. Our prices
are indeed lower, but this is a trap for US consumers. Our jobs
continue to disappear, as do jobs among Asian export partners
competing against China. When international pressures are forced
upon Chinese leaders to honor commitments for entry into the
World Trade Organization, they will revalue upwards their yuan
currency, resulting in markedly higher prices for American consumers.
Then the real problems arrive for our Treasury Bonds and longterm
interest rates. No, China is rapidly gaining market share, and
in several years will be both positioning itself as our adversary
and competing for equal status on the world stage, where influence
is parceled out.
16. Japan's bust has almost
no similarity to the USA bust
Japan's bust is 90% similar to the
bust seen in the United States. Again, poor comprehension of
history. They modeled their economy after ours, from the mfg
foundation to the banking system. Their debt levels rose at a
dangerous pace, while their asset base (stocks and real estate)
appreciated into a speculative mania. Ditto for the USA. In fact,
where we indeed differ, the USA displays severe comparative weaknesses
that point to danger. We allow bankruptcies, and are seeing them
rise without obstacle. We are an importing nation, and are seeing
the stage set for rising import prices from dollar devaluation.
We are an indebted nation, and are now subject to K-Winter vicious
liquidation. We save inadequately, and cannot invest in capital
formation without stacking more debt atop debt. We have a bloated
overvalued currency, whose correction will wreak untold havoc
on our economy. I am sorry to report that we careen down the
Japanese path, but with more dangerous turns. The most recent
similar signal is our 0% rate promotions for car sales, which
is the current Japanese prevailing rate. Japan has gone so far
as to offer negative interest rates on loans, to encourage spending.
Is that what lies next for us? No, our bust is not only similar
to Japan's, but our differences point to dangerous additional
vulnerability.
17. recent evidence of inflation's
return is good, seen in rising commodity prices
Some naïve observers proclaim
early victory in the Fed's battle to turn back the forces of
deflation. We have seen early evidence of some price inflation,
which have encouraged only the deeply illiterate. The American
public is legion with ignorant and illiterate. We already have
been dealing with rising employment costs -- wages, health, insurance.
Now we are seeing higher producer prices for materials, as commodities
generally are rising in price. The coup de grace is the spike
in energy costs, both crude oil and natural gas. Production costs
for businesses are now rising, even as pricing power is nonexistent.
Household costs are now rising, even as job security is slowly
eroding. No, we are witnessing "bad inflation" which
leads to higher production costs and shrinking profit margins
and upcoming job layoffs, complemented by higher household costs
and shrinking budgets and reduced consumer spending.
18. capital investment can
lead a recovery, with consumer spending and hiring to follow
Again, reality ruins this wishful thinking
exercise. Instead, the evidence suggests that capital equipment
purchase and investment typically comes 8-12 months following
the pickup in spending by customers within that business sector.
Surely we need capex to increase, which would be a solid shot
of adrenalin to the economy. But that hardly suggests it will
happen without the accompanying justification for large capital
outlays by cash-strapped businesses. Demand must come first.
Furthermore, lenders are less willing to lend to distressed firms.
Abused in the last decade, secondary stock issuances are not
now available as a source of funding. The bottom line is that
mfg capacity utilization stands at 75%. Why would our business
sector risk failure overextending capex in the face of historically
high excess capacity? No, capex follows resumption of customer
demand, does not lead it, and will be very slow in returning.
19. evermore fiat money
is the prescription for the current economic condition
The United States economy is suffering
from several decades of excessive monetary and debt expansion.
This steady, relentless addition of money and debts created horrendous
imbalances among the consumption and investment communities.
We consumed to excess, thus creating large debts. We invested
in production capacity to excess with attached debts, thus creating
a surplus of goods. At the same time we neglected the messy and
more difficult business of producing commodities, while gearing
down their prices and burdening them with regulations. So we
have deflation in finished product prices, as debts are liquidated.
We have consumers exhausting themselves, as they run up debts
even faster than income, and refuse to change their engrained
lifestyles. We have inflation in materials costs, as their value
rises relative to the unbridled increase in paper-based securities
and money supplies. We maintain the heretical notion that a deep
recession (or worse) can be averted if only we prevent the spread
of illiquidity. The result would be the same if Jack Daniels
were steadily supplied to an alcoholic during detox. We do not
understand what plagues our economy. The inept economic advisors
who led us to this mess have no solutions besides more of the
same negligent defiance of nature. No, evermore printed money
only delays the inevitable, plants seeds for future price inflation,
and makes certain that the final recession is far more painful
when it arrives.
20. the stimulus of lower
interest rates will eventually succeed
Since January 2001, eleven interest
rates have failed to stimulate the economy. We find rates now
at the Fed Funds 1.25% target level. Yet economic activity remains
subdued and moribund. Debt levels are too high. Final demand
is extremely sluggish. Mfg capacity is still in excess. Asset
prices are still in retreat. Income sources are still at risk.
In fact, lower rates beget even lower rates as the economy slows,
the absolute opposite of what bungling economists preach. Twice
as much interest income is received as interest cost is paid
out. So consumer spending is slowing down from lower rates, not
stimulated. The income earners tend to be more docile grayhairs;
the debt payments are made by more vocal younger "go-go"
crowd. If lower rates were to succeed, they would have elicited
a strong response by now. The same path in a post-bubble environment
destroyed the economy in Japan, another fact denied by the incompetent
economist community. No, lower rates ensure we proceed down the
Liquidity Trap of zero interest with zero future and bank destruction,
just like Japan.
21. fiscal stimulus will
ensure recovery, whereas monetary stimulus so far has been sluggish
As the govt carries on with increased
deficit spending, they will aggravate an already risk-laden situation
with the USDollar and our Treasury debts. The trouble is overloaded
debt, excess capacity, and now rising materials cost. Besides,
the govt is likely to place the money in the hands of poor consumers,
rather than the rich who invest in business and jobs. This perpetuates
the consumption bubble that is bound eventually to dissipate.
The real horror story lies within state govt fiscal books, where
deficits are outright frightening. Hikes in state sales taxes,
state income taxes, and local property taxes will offset any
relief offered by the federal govt. So once more, the cure will
be fleeting, leaving us with greater govt debt and nothing fixed.
No, continued fiscal stimulus will raise the currency risk and
eventually lead to higher longterm interest rates, delaying ultimate
resolution by extending our unproductive consumption.
22. productivity increased
in 1990's, and is still strong
This is not so much a delusion as a
corruptly promoted myth. Productivity has increased at a steady
pace of 2% annually for many years. Under Greenspan and Clinton's
supervision, we now double and triple count capital investments,
thus greatly exaggerating productivity. The most recent ploy
is to move software investment into the capital equipment category,
which serves to amplify its effect through even more double counting.
Our govt uses the same corrupt accounting methods decried in
corporate fraud cases. Greenspan routinely relies on this productivity
miracle as justification for both high stock share prices and
expected economic revival, his alibi for failure. And the American
people accept it on face value, knowing no better. When overcapacity
drags on an economy, idle equipment will typically come into
service during upticks in business demand. So the recent perceived
(distorted) rise has come in the face of near-depression levels
of capacity utilization. Such is hardly a signal of economic
recovery. No, productivity is still around 2%, is steady, neither
weak nor strong, and is not changing.
23. federal deficits don't
matter, since we can grow out of them
When our economy grew in the 1990 decade,
our federal deficits grew from $4.5 trillion to $6 trillion.
The Keynesian model dictates that during the prosperous years,
government surpluses be drawn upon to pay down the debt. Instead,
we increased it, vastly expanding our socialist system. When
our economy falls into retreat during more challenging times
such as recessions, our federal deficits usually escalate in
dramatic fashion, as we are seeing now. Magnify those deficits
when security and wartime concerns dominate. We have shown no
discipline. Our deficits rise in good times, and rise faster
in bad times. And worse, they threaten our Treasury debt, our
longterm interest rates, and the viability of our dollar currency.
Worse still, our Treasury debt is 45% owned by foreigners. Eventually
our creditors will doubt our ability to repay at all. We advertise
to young television viewers that their drug purchases support
murder and other violent crimes against South American children.
Let's project the same phenomenon to a national level. Our
federal debts owned by foreign nations are now supporting Islamic
Fundamentalist movements, which finance world terrorism like
seen at the World Trade Center. No, we never have nor never
will grow out of federal deficits, which contribute to the spread
of world conflict.
24. trade gaps don't matter
either, since they are good for the world economy
Of course trade gaps and balance of
payments matter. When large, they register a dire signal, which
cannot be dismissed. The global economy has yet to be recognized
as a failed experiment. It will culminate in endless recession
for economies with higher wage structures and overvalued currencies,
most notably the USA. The message (largely ignored) is that we
do not build what we consume, and must address the imbalance.
Our largest export is debt. As a nation, we rely upon foreign
capital to maintain our entire economy. The financial market
response is designed to bring the system back into balance, by
means of a currency correction. In our case, the dollar decline
will be dangerous and vicious. We have for decades been creating
Asian jobs, building economies abroad, supporting developing
nations, while recklessly dismantling the entire US Economy and
suffocating ourselves to death with debt. No, trade gaps indicate
deep distress, which must be addressed with or without cooperation.
The consequences will be certainly grim, like endless recession.
25. jobless rate is holding
up well, still under 6.0%
The jobless rate is far higher than
6.0% since so many people are no longer even counted. If a worker
has exhausted his/her unemployment benefits, then not only is
that person out of subsistence income, but the govt prefers to
consider him/her a missing person in their Enron-style accounting
system. The Germans still count people whose jobless benefits
have run dry, criticizing our methods. We shove them into the
labor sewer, and out of the counting system. We do not even bother
to estimate the young minority adults who rank among the unemployed.
Experts in labor accounting estimate that our jobless rate is
around 9.0% and climbing. Further distortions center on counting
a person as "employed" even if he/she works only a
few hours per week. No, our jobless rate is much higher, since
we distort the reporting process in order to keep confidence
and foreign investment high.
26. blame game: 1999 Y2K,
2000 soft landing, 2001 WTC/Enron, 2002 Iraq
Americans simply cannot come to grips
with the reality of what ails us and what is failing in our system.
Giant cracks in the entire system are being exposed, from debt
structures to irresponsible central banking, to derivative gearing,
to asset speculation, to corrupt accounting, to embezzlement,
to distortions in economic reporting owing to govt vested interests.
So we blame the stock bubble of 1999 on the Y2K snafu that never
arrived. So we blame the tech/media /telecom/internet bust in
2000 on the healthy need for a Soft Landing. So we blame the
recession in 2001 on the World Trade Center attack, the Enron
fraud scandal, and general corporate malfeasance. And now we
blame the stalling economy on Iraqi tensions and war buildup.
This entire blame game is symptomatic of an addict in denial,
coupled with a national abdication of responsibility. The Weimar
Republik blamed their country's problems on the Jews and the
threat of a Zionist state. Have times really changed? Next year
will likely place blame on higher energy costs and Arab withdrawal
from our markets. No, the blame goes to our system, its designers,
its leaders, our Congress, all participants - US.
27. depression could never
happen again, since the system has designed counter-measures
After the Great Depression in the 1930's,
we installed safeguards and created institutions which were designed
to prevent calamity from occurring again. But did we avoid the
gratuitous granting of credit and usage of debt? Did we avoid
speculative mania in stock prices? Did we avoid vast over-expansion
in productive capacity? Did our govt leaders encourage the excesses?
Did our corporate leaders corrupt the system with their own fraud,
largesse, and embezzlement? In the 1930 decade, our Congress
passed legislation that erected a firewall among the banking,
brokerage, and insurance business. In 1997, Clinton's Congress
repealed the law, just in time for the bust, which is far from
over. Depressions occur to purge a system from widespread and
crippling excesses in debt, often coupled with irresponsible
expansion of the money supply. Since 2000, debts have actually
accelerated while the monetary base has expanded at an alarming
rate. No, a depression is far more likely than it was even two
years ago, since safeguards are removed and debts continue unabated.
By treating the systemic ills with more of what caused the sickness,
we put the nation at greater risk now of depression.
28. US capitalism prevails
over all other nations, the world's growth engine
Our version of capitalism might dominate,
but let's see if it prevails. Our type of capitalism unfortunately
allows uncontrollable expansion of debt and the limitless supply
of new money, together with unpunished large-scale fraud, not
to mention the drone of paid legislative influence. The sun might
be setting on Pax Americana. We will see; the jury is still out.
It is not clear we have capitalism at all - it is more like DEBTISM.
And this newfangled "financial engineering" is just
a façade to conceal the fraudulent management of leveraged
debt. Large institutions are not permitted to fail, provided
their roots are in New York City. No doubt we operate as the
growth engine. The world might for now continue to support us,
knowing their future will diminish if we fail. They are desperate
for us to snap out of it, and resume vigorous spending. However,
our abuse of this engine status is reaching criminal proportions.
Our dependence upon foreigners for their savings and capital
seriously brings into question whether we are indeed an "engine"
at all. Our chief export is clearly debt. Our national balance
sheet is showing extreme hemorrhage. No, if we are an engine,
we are a debt engine, and we can fail if the world cuts off our
credit line which we abuse for a hedonistic lifestyle and colonialist
foreign policy.
29. foreigners are taking
jobs away from our citizens
My last job at a national retail chain
was filled, after I departed, by an Iranian recent graduate.
My former manager claimed he saw few American qualified candidates.
Skilled technicians do not often emerge from American schools.
Nintendo players do, hiphop singers and dancers do, World Wide
Wrestling fans do, drunken college dropouts do, bankrupted college
graduates do, since our school systems too often merely advance
students instead of educating them. Heck, math is optional now
in high schools after the second year. Every German high school
exchange student I have known has jumped to the head of his class
when entering our less skilled student force. Our high technology
sector would never be so strong without skilled Indians and Taiwanese.
Their skill and leadership has created thousands of jobs for
Americans. Ignorance and hard times usually breed contempt for
foreigners. No, our economy desperately needs highly capable
foreigners, since our domestic workers are largely unskilled
and often have poor discipline.
30. US service sector is
bedrock, and will remain strong unlike the manufacturing sector
Clearly, the US economy is a service
giant with over 55% of the GDP devoted to service. But now intercontinental
telephone costs are low. But now the internet has provided zero
marginal costs for shipping service products. But now English
is widely spoken in lands which offer professional wages at a
fraction of ours. India, Hong Kong, and other countries are undercutting
our service sector, employing tens of thousands of highly trained
workers. Customer support centers, software development, product
testing, and other service enterprises are increasingly being
provided by foreign sources. India has become an emerging software
powerhouse, embarrassing Americans with better, more reliable
software. Standards facilitate competition from abroad, while
our overvalued currency and high labor costs constantly encourage
foreign outsourcing. Many jobs have been lost in recent years.
No, the trend has begun, whereby lower cost service businesses
are being managed by foreign firms, sometimes with higher quality.
USDOLLAR
:
31. USDollar will level off at equilibrium, stabilize, and not
overshoot
More wishful thinking that defies all
historical precedent. In almost every single case of currency
correction in the last few decades, an overshoot occurs. It not
only goes beyond the eventual equilibrium point, but can remain
beyond that point for several years before evidence arrives that
a correction has indeed been engineered amidst causal imbalances.
The pattern has been that a currency corrects until not only
the fundamentals behind the trade imbalance is rectified, but
also confidence in that nation's economy has hit a bottom. It
continues until a renewal is seen in foreign investment and business.
In the case of the USDollar, that point may never be reached.
Our economy has little mfg capacity inherent as an industrial
mechanism; outsourcing continues as a phenomenon in search of
lower cost. Our leaders seem hellbent on blocking the currency
correction by dismantling the monetary mechanism. They use the
Exchange Stabilization Fund to prevent longterm interest rates
from rising. No, the norm is for an overshoot in both price and
time, and by God, we will see it in full glory.
32. USDollar is invulnerable
to international backlash
Since the fall of the Soviet Union,
international sentiment has gone from an extreme love affair,
to an impasse, and soon to an actual falling out. The top in
the USDollar valuation came with the launch of the free euro
currency. Our leaders are engaging in diplomatic bully tactics
now, largely squandering the sympathetic capital stored up from
the WTC attack of 9/11. On the economic side we have functioned
as the engine of growth. Soon foreigners might believe we are
no longer present for their continued benefit, but instead we
require them to be a supplier of credit for our profligate style.
As we struggle, they struggle worse. Finally, our strong dollar
has begun to produce diverse backlash in resentment. We coerced
exporting nations such as the entire Asian continent and OPEC
oil producers to recycle their surpluses into US Treasurys and
Stocks. Their investments are at risk with the dollar devaluation
underway. With 75% of world banking reserves invested in dollar-based
USTBonds, their economies are at great risk. We may have led
the world economy down an unfortunately destructive path. No,
our abuse of the dominant role can quickly lead to international
anger, disgust, avoidance, and abandonment.
33. European disunity and
socialism obstruct the euro currency uptrend
Americans like to harp on European
disunity. The US govt is beholden to lobbyists, debts are ballooning,
spending is out of control, military complex is fostered, and
corruption is rampant. Which is worse? We like to point the finger
at European socialism, when our system is growing in socialist
underpinnings each year. Arab petro-dollars are finding a new
home in EuroBonds, in avoidance of our markets. European debt
levels are nowhere near as deadly large as ours. European deficit
spending is much less also. The EU boasts a trade surplus, in
direct contrast to the US trade hemorrhage. Consolidations will
come, but the new trend has just begun. No, the euro bull trend
has more legs, as US securities are shunned, while Asians and
Arabs alike will continue to diversify into European assets.
34. new USDollar is intended
and designed to thwart counterfeiting
That is the official line of bull cookies.
The last new dollar in 1999 with a metal filament and offset
large faces was intended to thwart counterfeiting. Saddam's revenge
following the humiliating Gulf War defeat was to counterfeit
with impunity at least $20 billion annually. The CIA is on record
that Iraq printed perhaps as much as $50 billion in a single
year. A credible argument can be made that we are in the early
planning stages for a "DUAL DOLLAR" which will create
a firewall to protect the domestic economy. We might be planning
to allow the external dollars to be written down severely, which
will have immense consequences to foreign-held Treasury debt.
We will likely use the boogeyman tactic to divert attention toward
drug cartels, crime syndicates, black markets, and rogue nations.
However, a strong conduit will never be cut between an external
dollar and a domestic dollar since each is backed by the US Govt,
and laundering facilities that cross the virtual border will
be a cinch. No, the Dept of Treasury used up that excuse with
the last new dollar, now raising suspicions of a protective moat
being constructed around our shores.
35. strong USDollar has
benefited the USA for 20 years
The strong dollar policy has resulted
in the impoverishment of the entire American economy, its workers,
and its institutions, raising to extreme levels our indebtedness.
We have displaced and hollowed out almost our entire mfg production.
We have coerced foreigners to operate as creditors. We have encouraged
consumption of cheap imported products beyond our means, resulting
in crippling household debt. We have created an unlevel playing
field for our corporations, resulting in the loss of American
jobs. Service sector jobs pay less than mfg jobs. We did have
a nice few years of benefits late in the 1990 decade, but that
was fleeting and may have caused more of a disaster than we can
admit. The last decade invited the world to participate in the
greatest speculative mania in the history of mankind, which cannot
be described in any other way. No, the strong dollar stripped
America of its wealth and the engines that produce wealth, replacing
it with colossal debts.
36. USDollar lower revaluation
benefits far outweigh risks
The dollar cannot arrive at a more
beneficial stable lower level without undergoing a painful transition
whereby it declines in value over a period of time. The very
dynamics of this process of change can unleash powerful forces
that damage both our economy and financial markets. A vicious
circle has begun, and will not end until the dollar undergoes
a monumental correction. But at what value is the dollar properly
adjusted? A declining dollar discourages foreign investors operating
with shorter horizons. It raises the cost of all things imported,
such as basic materials and energy supplies. It also raises the
cost of imported finished products and components. In short we
import "price inflation" just as inflation was exported
in the last decade. Worse still, foreign banking systems will
see leveraged damage to their loan portfolio capital requirements
as their reserves fall in value. The only benefit is greater
price competition among US exporting firms, except we don't manufacture
much in this country. Our chief export is debt, and eventually
that will suffer. No, the risks lie in an endless worldwide recession,
while the benefits are directed to a largely absent manufacturing
base.
37. lower USDollar will
close the trade gap, since our prices are coming down
If this were true, then the trade gap
would not have increased 15% since last spring, even as the dollar
declined 15% over the same time. Foreign economies weaken with
a falling dollar, and can ill afford purchases of our finished
goods. Farmers enjoy some benefits, to be sure. With a mfg base
that has been shifted to Asian and Mexican locations, we have
muted the currency translation benefit. Furthermore, ours is
an economy gone utterly insane with consumption. We purchase
finished goods and components from Asia, by and large. All govt
stimulus is intended and directed towards sustaining our consumption
trend, even with additional debt. So how would we close this
trade gap? If our foreign customers are much weaker than we are,
how can they lift their imports of our goods in a significant
manner? I truly believe the trade gap will wind down to zero
only if a world depression unfolds. No, a lower dollar will reduce
the trade gap in a minimal fashion, and frustrate both our govt
leaders and corporate executives, culminating in a USDollar freefall
!!!
38. sovereign currency requires
no collateral
Can you think of a single debt where
creditors do not demand collateral? I cannot. The United States
has probably sold off 60-65% of its gold reserves, which had
operated as collateral for our burgeoning federal debt. If the
dollar decline gathers momentum, as I expect, then we will see
rising longterm interest rates. Not at first. We simply import
too much. So as costs rise and import prices translate higher,
we will see a new price inflation cycle materialize. Our economy
will weaken precisely when our Treasury debt securities fall
in nominal value. Losses will be amplified by currency translation
when held in foreign hands. We do not "owe it to ourselves"
any longer. A weakened economy will undercut our ability to repay
our debts. No, collateral is not important in times of growth,
but as foreigners see our economy achieve downward momentum,
they might quickly object to the disappearance of our collateral.
39. Bank of Japan can suppress
the yen forever
For many years the Bank of Japan has
succeeded in keeping the yen currency at low levels, thus allowing
their vast array of exporters to remain competitive in the great
American supermarket shopping centers. The BoJ has debased the
yen all too effectively, sending their economy to near death,
as their banking system is now virtually worthless. Their federal
debt is now 140% of their annual GDP. Despite their horrid conditions,
and vampire-like kieretsus, powerful forces work in their favor.
On a bilateral basis with respect to the USA, their trade surplus
is 2.5% of GDP. This provides a capital flow that will be formidable
to paddle against. Japan already has entered the twilight zone
of accelerating money supply with no benefit to economic activity.
Since 1971, the world monetary system has operated on the "triangle"
made up by the dollar, the mark (now euro), and the yen. The
first round of dollar devaluation came at the expense of the
euro. Or is it gain? The next round will likely come versus the
yen, signaled by recent new Nikkei index lows. A currency surprise
is shaping up. No, with a weak dollar trend underway, and large
capital flows favoring a stronger yen, the next moves will be
toward a rising yen in the land of the rising sun.
TREASURY
DEBT & BANKING :
40. financial derivatives are under control, they reduce spread
and offload risk
Derivatives certainly contain and manage
systemic risk, but they do not eliminate it. Instead, they concentrate
risk within extremely leveraged pyramids of heightened risk.
Corporate entities that embrace the risk must realize their limits.
As counter-parties to the original contracts, they operate as
systemic seawalls to withstand storm fronts. Not only can the
derivative contracts be in danger of going bad from underlying
asset prices, but the foundation of supporting capital can rapidly
shrink from stock, bond, and insurance losses. Derivatives are
put in place in order to neutralize a firm's exposure to changing
conditions between the time the contract is written and the time
the contract is executed or expired. Large unexpected changes
have delivered serious blows to the stock market, corporate debt
market, and currency market. As a result, base capital has indeed
diminished to extremely dangerous levels. The risk is now concentrated
within a few elite counter-parties holding a massive number of
contracts. No, with such spectacular losses realized, future
surprises are more likely at some time to topple pillars of the
economy like giant dominoes.
41. foreigners will never
conceive of a default on United States Treasury debt
For decades foreigners have delighted
in American opportunity for investment and participation in the
great capitalism experiment. However, they are quickly discovering
that the experiment was not so much due to innovation and business
creation, as it was in debt explosion and currency saturation.
Now those unchecked debts are causing a reversal of fortune.
The back-pedaling has seen fit to crush the most risky debt securities
such as telecom debt first. Weak retailers, overextended lenders,
then airlines marched next into the debt inferno. Almost three
years into the process, we watch as consumer debt and mortgage
debt will soon come under scrutiny. As our nation's Treasury
debt kicks into high gear, many questions will be posed on payment
and continued floating of this historically unseen monster debt
load. The economy did not repay during good times. Foreigners
will inevitably question how we can repay during bad times that
seem not to end. No, the ebb and flow of foreign involvement
has seen its flow, and will soon see its ebb.
42. US Treasury Bonds are
safe, since guaranteed
The rush in the last two years by investors
into US Treasury debt has been impressive and robust. Money has
exited the stock market and higher risk corporate debt securities,
finding safe haven in Treasury bonds, as well as less protected
real estate and mortgage bonds. The powerful deflationary winds
have benefited govt debt issuances. Minor cracks from oversupply
have begun to chip away at residential housing, which has defied
the entire economy's poor health and general asset price declines.
Recent Fanny Mae concerns have been raised by Fed Governor Poole,
exposing mortgage finance's insufficient structural foundations.
As the USDollar continues its corrective descent, and as commodity
and imported price inflation shows its ugly head, our USTBond
yields on longterm securities will once again rise. If and when
dollar depreciation magnifies bond losses from simple rising
yields, investors will exit Trez bonds. Foreigners will exit
twice as fast. The stage is being set now for bond losses. No,
govt bonds are guaranteed, but they are not immune to either
damage or momentum declines.
43. Social Security Trust
Fund will remain solvent and viable
We as a people like to trust. If instead,
one examines the trend on Sochacurity funds and benefits, it
can be easily seen that benefits are gradually being cut while
new age limits slowly undercut younger workers. Soon enough,
benefits will be denied to those who lack need, those who have
means. Cost of living adjustments are kept deceitfully low from
false CPI calculations. Worst of all, the trust fund itself has
been raided by grubby Congressional spendthrifts, and accounted
for in a fashion resembling the Enron fraud. Senator Claude Pepper
of Florida had been its leading defender. His retirement and
death years ago signaled an end to that defense. The demographics
work detrimentally toward its solvency. I am somewhat protected
by fixed benefits, since my year of birth was before 1960. Not
so for many millions of other citizens stuck in contributing
into this black hole bottomless pit of govt fraud. No, as time
passes, younger contributors will see larger slices taken from
their paychecks (not tax deductible) and be promised progressively
smaller future benefits (taxable). The system will survive, but
the benefits will be reduced and narrowed.
44. money will always be
safe in a bank
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
was established in order to protect from depositors losing their
savings accounts and certificates in the event of a bank collapse.
The 1981 Savings & Loan debacle exposed and highlighted the
risk to savers. The original cost was over $800 billion from
govt bailouts, a figure reduced to under $300 billion by means
of the innovative Resolution Trust Company salvage efforts, expertly
directed by Bill Siedman. In the last twenty years, banks have
underwritten untold billions in loans for businesses and mortgages.
If we suffer a systemic slow bleed for a prolonged period of
time, which I expect, then banks will be left holding large portfolios
of bad loans. The same happened to Japan, whose collective banking
system is now worthless! In a wider series of bank failures,
the FDIC will require huge federal infusions, since this self-insured
protection has limits to coverage. No, FDIC will be overwhelmed
in future years, and savers will at best be left with frozen
accounts until govt insurance is resolved and fraud is investigated.
45. Greenspan is the greatest
central banker of the 20th century
I am reminded of the Sports Illustrated
cover effect, a sure sign of a career reaching its crest, or
a team hitting its peak, only to see a decline. Sir Alan Greenspan,
knighted before the Queen of England, after a tragic bust branded
by his own imprint !!! The title of "greatest central banker"
is given by Senator Phil Gramm, who strikes me as a "Economics
D-student lackey." But is he the greatest banker, or just
the most accommodative central banker bartender? He did close
his eyes to warning on "irrational exuberance" uttered
by his own lips. Did he produce prosperity through unrestricted
credit extension and mismanaged money supply? Did he ignore rising
asset prices, declaring victory over inflation, while focusing
too narrowly on the distorted hedonic CPI index? Did he build
a collapsing foundation for debt only to risk economic depression?
Time will tell. He reminds me of a drug dealer whose clientele
saw ruin in addiction. Surely, his style of communication is
hardly worthy of the word "communication." The economics
field is the province of the abstruse, and no doubt incomprehensible
to the illiterate unwashed masses. No, Greenspan will be vilified
as the economic recession proves endless, will be made a scapegoat
for the magnificent wealth destruction nowhere near completion,
and will see this upcoming calamity labeled "The Greenspan
Depression."
GOLD
:
46. gold & silver short positions can hover indefinitely
The futures contract world has never
seen anything like it. Short interest among gold futures now
sits at more than two years worth of world production, wholly
out of proportion with mining economics. The same can be said
for silver short interest. Many of these contracts are offset
by expected future gold and silver mine production, as mining
firms hedged unwisely, often selling to great excess their future
production. Some experts believed the shorts would witness calamity
when gold surpassed #330 last autumn. They did not. However,
shorts unfortunately either watch their portfolios dissolve completely
by standing idly by, or suffer chinese torture from stepwise
movement of critical lines in the sand. No, unprofitable shorts
eat at balance sheets, and contribute to mounting longterm debt,
eventually pressing for resolution.
47. USA monetary system
will never return to gold standard
The United States will never re-employ
a gold standard unless our country experiences desperation to
save its currency from implosion and collapse, or unless the
dollar's descent threatens the US or world economy. On its face,
this statement sound naïve, simplistic, and overly trusting.
Kondratiev Winter works its magical devastation in sequential
stages, in culling and cleansing the nation's economic and financial
landscape of excessive and abusive debt. The entire United States
economy, its sovereign debt, and its dollar currency will in
time be targeted by the K-Winter's judgment over irresponsible
debt. Unspeakable abuse of debt at every level has clearly exceeded
anything ever observed in human history. Our entire nation will
soon be subjected to ruthless debt liquidation, debt writedown,
business failure, and personal bankruptcy. It will occur in stages
though, not all at once, starting with the weakest indebted tree
limbs, gradually working to prune among the stronger limbs. Perceived
corrupt corporate governance during threats to debt default,
reduced cashflows in the weakening economy, massive federal deficits,
hemorrhaging trade gaps, incredible increases in required foreign
capital flows, and a war effort viewed as reckless, these all
contribute toward a potential abandonment of the USDollar. No,
the USDollar Decline Vicious Circle will month by month gather
momentum and almost surely reach crisis proportions ultimately,
at which time our government will have few options besides a
gold cover clause for our distressed currency.
48. Central Banks will never
actively purchase gold again
The 1990 decade paid witness to the
unrestrained drain of gold reserves from central banks led by
England, Germany, Japan, and the United States. The 1999 Washington
Agreement isolated the USA as the principal participant, as Europe's
bankers decided to retreat from this unwise process. Now the
USA is doing the lion's share of gold selling, and probably lending
other nations enough gold to continue the charade of balanced
overnight selling on the world market. Meanwhile, Asian central
banks (most notably China and Russia) are buying gold to accumulate
bank reserves. The deflation underway in Europe, Japan, and the
United States goes one foot after another with the irresponsible
extension of credit over decades inside their respective economies.
Insane selling of gold should be regarded as parting from collateral
to secure large sovereign debt. They also are running their printing
presses overtime, thus debasing their currencies further. The
debtor is running in both wrong directions simultaneously. An
Argentine presidential candidate proposed just in early March
a new gold-backed Peso. Gold convertibility can both prevent
calamity and rebuild after calamity. Centuries attest to its
stabilizing capability. The last 50 years attest to the instability
bred by its absence in the currency. No, the certain upcoming
world currency crisis will require and demand a gold backing
of ailing currencies.
49. gold even now has no
monetized role or function
Since 2000, debt has been defaulting,
and stocks have been revalued downward. Many stocks have succumbed
to 95% reductions. Even as capital has found sanctuary in guaranteed
government bonds, the returning yields have reached such low
levels that they no longer exceed price inflation levels. We
have now negative real returns on shorterm Treasury yields. Against
this backdrop, gold has come off its 20-yr bear trend and risen
30-40% off its low at $265/oz. Japanese citizens have found safety
in gold. Many of the world's wealthiest people have turned to
gold, eschewing meager bond yields and retreating from stocks.
As debts continue to be liquidated, as institutions continue
to be threatened, as paper-based securities continue to be priced
lower, gold will continue to be chased by those seeking safety
in real money. Such pursuit of sanctuary from so many diverse
asset classes speaks volumes about gold's monetary role. No,
gold is sound money and will see growing demand for at least
the next three years as economies falter and monetary systems
break down further. The next stage will see gold used to hedge
against actual price inflation, as Asian imports rise in price
following the inevitable upward revaluation in the Chinese yuan
currency, combining forces with the lagged effect of simply monumental
increases in our money supply since 2001.
50. higher gold prices will
unleash huge new supply
A paradox exists which testifies to
the inelastic supply for gold, at least in its initial stages
of rising price. Miner hedgebooks consist of vast forward sales
contracts for gold that went far beyond justification by the
economics of mining and prudent money management. They got greedy,
lured by leveraged profits under advisement by gold bullion bankers.
Now miners are caught in a vise. Since mid-2001 they have been
diverting valuable capital toward covering and buying back their
excessive forward contracts. Gold mining firms have become principal
buyers of gold on the world market! I find such a trend worthy
of extreme derision. Wall Street investment bankers cannot yet
assist the process with stock issuance, since the gold sector
is painted as a pariah still. No, money is being diverted from
operations and production toward the covering of losing forward
contracts, thus obstructing and inhibiting supply.
51. our US gold reserves
are safely vaulted in Fort Knox
We suffer from Enron-style accounting
of our gold reserves. In fact, Enron probably learned the methods
from the US Govt. Congress has shirked its responsibility in
tracking our nation's reserve wealth, placing total trust in
the Federal Reserve, which hides behind security clouds. The
IMF has promoted a type of accounting that recently saw confrontation
by Portugal. The IMF allows leased and sold gold to be counted
as vaulted gold on the books. Experts estimate that as much as
50-60% of United States gold reserves have been leased and sold,
mostly by elite Manhattan crooks, in collusion with gold miners,
in order to suppress the gold price and to satisfy greed. Their
collusion keeps the USDollar aloft. No, much of our nation's
gold is gone, setting the stage for the Mother of All Scandals.
52. Islamic Dinar is a meaningless
novelty
Such is claimed for any financial instrument
or vehicle during inception. The Dinar is ridiculed and belittled
in established circles as it undergoes birth pangs. So far, plans
are for the Dinar to be used in settling bilateral commerce in
the Islamic world on a quarterly basis. Efforts are underway
for six major Islamic nations to use the Dinar for wider commerce,
led by a credible Saudi Arabia. The stage is set for petro-dollars
to build a new currency in future years, one with enormous potential
and ramifications, in defiance of the western world's sickly,
debased, saturated currencies. The biggest effect of an emergent
Dinar might be to extend or accelerate a USDollar decline, by
diverting a major capital flow away from the dollar world and
toward the gold world. No, the Dinar might join the Dollar, Yen,
Euro, and Yuan later this decade as a major world currency.
53. reduced jewelry demand
at higher gold price will hurt the bull market in gold
No question about it - gold jewelry
demand slows when prices rise. However, a closer examination
of history indicates clearly that longterm gold bull markets
are based fundamentally on investment demand, not jewelry demand.
Every past gold uptrend saw reduced jewelry demand which did
nothing to forestall the growing mania for gold. At the depths
of gold bear markets, jewelry enjoys a revival in demand, naturally.
Gold bulls should revel in diminished jewelry demand, and tolerate
it after substantial gains in the price of gold. No, waning jewelry
demand is a positive signal for a growing gold bull market.
STOCKS
:
54. factor upcoming energy cost cut benefit into stock prices,
before recent cost hike
Recent increases in energy costs spell
trouble for both production costs in corporations and utility
& gasoline bills in households. The effect should be felt
soon with reduced profits squeezing the business sector, putting
more pressure to cut costs with job layoffs. On the household
side, budgets have been strained with doubled heating costs for
many homes, higher gasoline expenses, which undoubtedly will
crimp consumer spending. I see no factoring of these effects
into stock prices or economic stall forecasts. Instead, we see
attempts to justify factoring in the benefits of reduced energy
costs, on the expectation that prices for crude oil, heating
oil, gasoline, natural gas will all come down after a quick resolution
of tensions. No, investors cannot ignore the present ill effects,
and accept only the anticipated beneficial effects.
55. dividend tax will have
beneficial effect on stock prices
If dividends are miniscule, then the
benefit will be small. Microsoft announced less than a 1% dividend,
met with a yawn. Companies are strapped for cash, and will not
be able to issue hefty dividends anyway. Besides, if they were
able to pay dividends, the money must be diverted from profitable
operations. With stock share prices languishing, companies will
not be turning to the equity markets for new financing, such
as secondary issuances, nor supporting those prices with sizeable
dividends. This was a point made by Frank Modigliani, mentor
to Stephen Roach. No, the end result is that dividends will be
tiny since funds are scarce, and companies have little incentive
to bolster share prices during this horrible downtrend.
56. Enron/ WorldCom were
the end of accounting fraud and scandals
Neither Enron nor WorldCom have been
resolved. Offshore banks and special purpose entities continue
to contaminate the corporate accounting world. Some suspect that
many billions of former Enron capital are still hidden. Legislation
toward their disclosure continues to be blocked by special interest
groups. Enron was only the beginning, aptly labeled "the
canary in the financial coal mine." Frauds continue to be
exposed, but with much less attention given by the public. The
Dutch firm Ahold is a recent example. Bristol Myers restatement
of past years is another milder example. Earnings statements
continue to be chockfull of "one-time" charges. My
favorite is Ryder claiming that paint for their truck fleet is
a one-time charge. No, accounting fraud marches on with less
public attention or interest, having become part of the engrained
and accepted landscape.
57. stock investing Long
Term Buy & Hold strategy succeeds
From 1969 to 1982, stock returns were
nil. From 1994 to 2000, stock returns were significant, encouraging
individuals to remain invested through brief troubled times during
those 6-7 years. Once again, a lesson learned from a longterm
bull market is being transported into a bear market, with disastrous
results. Greenspan's Fed rescued the financial markets each time
trouble surfaced. Now, we may be watching the bad brew results
from numerous overrides in a bull market cycle, possibly creating
a giant bear market. The longterm cycle over the ages often contains
segments of time lasting years whereby the "paper"
side of the finance world experiences adjustment. We are now
knee-deep in such an adjustment period. Worse, a supercycle adjustment
might be underway, dealing mercilessly with excess debts. The
last one worked its natural magic from 1929 to 1932. No, LTBH
is the mantra that Wall Street sells to the inexperienced public.
58. stocks are cheap, with
attractively low valuations now
Cheap? Certainly stock prices are much
lower than in 2000. The word "cheap" implies low relative
to established norms. Standard & Poor published responsible
accounting reports on S&P500 earnings for 2002 which exposed
that real earnings were 20-30% lower than stated earnings. The
result was a Price-Earnings ratio in the neighborhood of 40 times,
using core earnings. This range is two to three times the norm.
Proper accounting should factor in both pension funding and stock
option dilution. Besides, if they are cheap, why are analyst
earnings downgrades so routine? No, stocks are more overpriced
now than before the Great Depression 1929 stock crash!
59. share buyback programs
are a good signal for a stock
Investors have been seduced into accepting
this as true. The immediate effect of corporations using treasury
funds to purchase their own stock is for a share price increase.
Closer scrutiny often exposes chicanery in the financing, with
dastardly techniques such as extending longterm debt. Someday
in the future, I expect to read about new stock issuance used
to finance share buybacks. Diversion of corporate funds away
from operations, away from investment in capital equipment, away
from investment in labor training and benefits, and away from
investment in Research & Development indicate neglect of
the corporation, its core business, and its charter. This neglect
usually takes a little time to bear poor fruit competitively.
No, share buybacks are usually a device for management to use
money unwisely in order to prop up the share price for future
insider stock sales after large stock option grants.
60. management stock options
provide an incentive to build the business
If handled with moderation, this might
be true. Management does indeed respond to positive incentive
and reinforcement. However, when debt is extended for share buybacks,
when deceptive accounting is used to bolster earnings reports,
when the size of management option packages are so huge, when
heavy dilution to outstanding share capitalization takes place,
when insider stock sales are executed quietly, one must question
in whose interest the option packages exist. Recall that management
controls the distribution of option packages, usually with rubber
stamp approval by the Board of Directors. The experience from
the last several years has been that poor competitive trends
and negative earnings trends left businesses leaders with a big
temptation to fleece shareholders via accounting fraud, in a
criminal exit strategy. No, the majority of cases demonstrate
that stock option packages invite corruption and abuse, from
their sheer magnitude and potential for lucrative gains.
REAL
ESTATE :
61. Real Estate is a tangible asset that will never lose you
money
Since the stock bust of 2000, real
estate has seen a massive influx of investment. Following the
Fed's numerous interest rate cuts, a mortgage finance bubble
has developed. Fanny Mae and Freddy Mac, Government Sponsored
Entities which support the mortgage finance industry, might be
in trouble. However, a valid argument can be made that real estate
property is not a hard asset, but rather a "hard asset impostor"
whose value is primarily based upon available mortgage finance
funding. The commercial niche has seen substantial value reductions
amidst historically high vacancy. For now, housing has served
well as a safe haven for capital. But cracks are showing, as
coastal cities (plus Denver) have seen large losses in the high
end. More importantly, across almost every single major city,
supply of residential property is sitting on the market unsold.
What is the value of an unsold home? We will find out. Mortgage
debt has been abused with dictated appraisals, lax income verification,
low down payment (high leverage), and widely reported abuse of
cashback at contract closing. And a final blow might come from
local govts, where fiscal distress has led to increases in property
tax. I know of a few people who have already or plan to sell
their homes in order to end their tax burden. The gap between
rising housing prices and gradual increases in rental costs indicates
a correction is near. At some point, job losses trigger such
a correction. No, real estate is ripe for giving off gas for
several years, since financing will soon become more difficult,
job losses will escalate further, and the tax burden will only
worsen.
62. FannyMae and FreddyMac
represent stable fund sources
These Government Sponsored Entities
are a house of cards built atop minimal capital foundations,
supported by false expectations of government guarantees and
willing naïve bond investors. I have never heard of Fanny
Mae rejecting a portfolio of mortgages. They accept them all,
good and bad, like a true burokracy, allowing only aggregate
audits. A fortuitous cycle has benefited GSE's. They purchase
mortgage portfolios after issuing debt, then they hedge against
these portfolios by purchasing 10-year Treasury securities. This
hedging is so massive that it has an effect on increasing the
TENS value and reducing the TENS yield. This in turn lowers mortgage
rates and has, up to recently, increased the FNM share price.
Now GSE's capital structures have been called into question,
with an underfunded base supporting a mountain of debt. A reversal
of this pattern might lead to the absence of TENS purchases from
Fanny hedges. Little if any regulation is in force to scrutinize
the finance operations of these cancerous giants holding over
$4 trillion in mortgage debt. An astounding figure was recently
reported -- GSE's accounted for fully 25% of the expansion in
the US MZM money supply in 2002. No, Fanny and Freddy are a marriage
destined for a stormy controversial divorce and bust from under-capitalization,
in a matter of time.
63. Real Estate and car
sectors are examples of the strength of our economy
In the majority of economic recoveries,
the housing and automobile sectors realize their pent-up demand
and lead the renewed spending cycle. Since 2000 however, extremely
low mortgage rates have led to a considerable bull market in
real estate. The refinance waves have contributed to the economy
by delivering spendable equity. Greenspan reported recently that
in three years, housing prices have surged over 30% in major
cities. This occurred against a backdrop of falling asset prices
and economic hardship! Housing prices have begun their long descent,
starting at the luxury end, mainly in major coastal markets.
The car sector has seen 0% financing with 0% down, essentially
giving the vehicles away for payment to principal, relieving
dealers of inventory, and keeping labor unions working. Now car
sales are seeing 25-35% sales declines. We have no latent pent-up
demand. Those who expect economic recovery are poor students
of past recoveries. No, the housing and car sectors show signs
of utter exhaustion, and will lead the economy into recession,
not recovery.
MISCELLANEOUS
:
64. press & news media are objective and unbiased
Surely, journalism is motivated to
report the news accurately and fairly. In recent years, anchors
find themselves celebrities, often basking in the limelight.
Certain reports can set off mass herd movements among the listening,
viewing, and investing audiences. Any normal human being would
see his/her ego boosted, considering such mass sway. However,
a strong controlling presence hangs over their business, influencing
the news reporting. Financial conglomerates now own many media
businesses, having long operated with banking and brokerage arms.
The motives here are less than noble. When any arm advertises
on a journal or channel, they can become angry if reported news
discourages investors from investing in the stocks that the brokerage
arm does investment banking business with. The same applies to
negative news on its banking arm. When enough advertisers come
from the same incestuous camp, pressure builds to bias the news
and unduly emphasize the optimistic viewpoints. No, the advertisers
have almost become partners, and now undercut objectivity, leading
to growing bias.
65. CNBC provides a valuable
news service, with both information and advice
I like to occasionally watch CNBC,
but much less so than in 1999 and 2000. I confess an unabashed
crush on Martha McCallum and especially Christy Musumeci. The
channel does report much news. They do allow a rich diversity
of guests to explain their views. But they have been very late
in warning of any and all busted sectors and reversing asset
groups. They almost never offer information about the torrent
of earnings downgrades, which permit companies to exceed expectations,
i.e. quietly lowered hurdles. Their enthusiasm is fast becoming
a contrary indicator for a top in localized sectors. Their series
on real estate last autumn indicated to me that a top was in
place. Their bias against gold is often boldly blatant. They
make no effort to conceal a positive slant, exposing clear intentions
of bias in not pursuing the unfavorable side to stories. When
JohnJ Murphy appeared in late February, his story of a gradual
dollar collapse met with zero follow through. No, CNBC has an
agenda, and has become as much a contrary indicator as an entertainment
source.
66. pension system will
deliver retirement income when called upon
The majority of American pension systems
now show clear evidence of decimation, with TIAA-CREF a notable
exception. Defined benefit plans within major corporations are
woefully underfunded, if not fraudulently accounted for, showing
annual losses but contributing toward quarterly earnings under
absurd ongoing assumptions. They have been raided for ten years!
Defined contribution plans are showing feeble expected payouts
in future years. New legislation might soon allow for corporations
to legally swap out of defined benefit formats, letting them
off the hook after years of pension fund theft. Personal 401k
and IRA accounts are worse than decimated, managed by amateurs
who never heard of bonds, and still do not know what they are.
No, our pensions will be nowhere near adequate, and together
with paltry Social Security income, Americans will simply have
to delay retirement or abandon the notion altogether.
67. shakeout of US airlines
is largely completed, following WTC attacks
United Airlines and USAir are the most
recent air carriers to enter bankruptcy protection proceedings.
Most national airlines are operating in the red. Much of the
blame can be placed upon the after-shocks of the World Trade
Center attack, and the resulting fear of flying. People are staying
closer to home, traveling less, with businesses resorting to
conference calls more. Recent fuel cost increases only stress
their finances further. The trend is for less travel, looking
forward. Regional airlines are faring better, possibly because
they choose to avoid unprofitable routes. No, we could very well
see every national airline except Southwest Airlines eventually
go bankrupt, inviting a national outcry for airline nationalization.
68. America (its capitalism,
leaders, culture, way of life) is admired throughout the world
The image of America has undergone
considerable change since the Clinton years, when we stole prosperity
and were the beneficiary of an approving world impression. I
believe the 1990 decade saw steady sales of our national gold
treasure, for the unspoken purpose of subsidizing longterm interest
rates to falsely generate economic prosperity and investment
mania. The last decade also saw credit abuse to support multiple
billions in malinvestment. Since 2000, our economy and financial
markets have shown the ravages of debt implosion. Our leaders
have been called into question for corruption. Our culture seems
focused on video games, wrestling aberrations, drugs, eating
disorders, sex, gambling, continued debt abuse, ghetto attire,
and endless good life. Our high school students test poorly versus
other industrialized nations, ranking last out of 17 nations
in recent national results. Many Americans prefer to party and
spend, rather than work and save. Our lifestyle is largely hedonistic,
demanding immediate gratification. Foreigners certainly flock
to our shores from Mexico, Ireland, South America, Eastern Europe,
India, Taiwan, and China. In contrast, the Islamic World, pockets
of Europe, and other corners of the globe are growing in enmity
toward us. Many nations criticize us even as a small exodus of
their citizens eagerly immigrate to the USA. The great bust has
exposed America to criticism, and justifiably. A clear disconnect
is developing, whereby we think the world admires us, when in
fact they feel increasing disgust and disrespect. No, the world
is more and more turning against the American ways, even as we
are slow in realizing this fact.
69. Americans are entitled
to perpetual wealth and good times
The "Ugly American" syndrome
is making a comeback. We have produced many spoiled brats, accustomed
to the good life, strong purchasing power, ample access to credit,
good paying jobs. We seem incapable of calling into question
the method and means for this wealth and party atmosphere. The
wellspring toward our illusory wealth has been the abusive extension
of debt and the simultaneous coercion of foreign economies to
bestow upon us their savings, as we accumulate endless debts.
We encourage Asian nations to serve as our manufacturing base,
benefit from outsized trade surpluses, but recycle the capital
back into our debt system. The game is finite and cannot last
forever. We do have considerable innovation, but our financial
violations of economic laws vetoes the benefits of innovation.
What we boast of "financial engineering" has been laid
bare as financial corruption, crazed leveraging, monetary exploitation,
and extortion of foreign economies. We might be nearing the end
of the Keynesian Monetarist bankruptcy game. No, Kondratiev Winter
has arrived, and its deep destructive force has only begun to
work on the greatest debt irresponsibility in the history of
mankind, the United States economy, its citizens, corporations,
states, and federal govt.
###
Jim Willie
CB
March 20, 2003
Jim
Willie CB is a pseudonym used since 1998 on Silicon Investor.
Jim works as a statistical analyst for a private consulting firm
engaged in consumer packaged goods marketing research. He holds
a Ph.D. in Statistics. His career has stretched over 22 years,
involving work at Digital Equipment Corp in manufacturing consulting
and marketing research, and work at Staples in retail forecasting
analysis. Visit his free website to read other articles and material,
as well as to enjoy light-hearted satire, under the name: "www.GoldenJackass.com." A low-priced
paid subscription service is in the planning stages, with focus
on a short list of Canadian Junior miner stocks. Many links appear
for significant articles written by a wide array of top flight
authors.
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321gold Inc Miami USA
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