|

INDEPENDENCE
DAY IS HERE,
BUT NOT FOR MANY
AMERICANS
by
Richard Benson
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
July 3, 2007
America may be referred to as the “Home of the Brave” because when
the bills arrive it takes a lot of courage to open them up, especially
when you must turn around and face your wife and kids with a straight
face. When it comes to paying bills these days, America just doesn’t
feel like the land of the free any longer. To be truly free you must be
debt-free; if you’re not, your creditors own you.
Americans
now owe a staggering $16 trillion dollars ($2.4 Trillion in personal
loans, and $13.6 trillion borrowed from their house). Yet, as a society,
we just can’t seem to get away from accumulating debt, and have become
nothing short of debt slaves. The American consumer continues to abuse
credit that has been offered to them, and pay incredibly high interest
charges every month, without blinking an eye. To maintain a certain
lifestyle that would ordinarily be unattainable with their current
income levels, our nation of consumers is slowly but surely being eaten
alive by our own conspicuous consumption.
In
May, Personal Savings ranked in at a negative 1.4 percent of income (or
a minus $140 billion annually). Consumers are still not saving enough
and continue using credit to offset any shortfall in income just to keep
up with normal expenses like a mortgage, groceries, and gas because they
have chosen to live extravagantly. One major cause of our country’s
need to import massive amounts of foreign capital to keep our economy
afloat stems from a weary American consumer struggling to live and pay
the rent, but behaving like they’re rich.
The
United States might be the only superpower but we still owe Japan and
China each about a trillion dollars. (We
owe even more to the Gulf Arabs.) With no savings, America continues
to run an $800 billion dollar trade deficit. We are effectively giving
America away to our creditors and if we continue to give more and more
away, we will lose the ability and the will to take back control and
ownership of our own economy. Not only are Americans, individually,
becoming debt slaves, but the country on a national level is losing its
independence this 4th of July, one manufacturing job and one
container shipment at a time, as jobs continue to go overseas.
Even
though our elected officials know that letting Japan and China
manipulate their currencies will undercut American manufacturers and
workers, our national policy still caters to them. Our government may
feel they have no choice but to look the other way because when you owe
$2 trillion dollars, you have to remember the golden rule: China
and Japan have the gold so they make the rules. The White House
knows that if we annoy our largest creditors, they could very easily
sell the dollar. If that happened, interest rates would be forced up and
the stock market would crash. The joke, of course, is that it is
Americans borrowing against their houses and buying foreign goods that
gives Japan and China our money and puts our nation in their debt. But I
can’t help but wonder how long the United States will remain the
superpower it is if we continue to give other nations so much power over
us?
With
the White House losing power and credibility, it’s becoming more
likely that Congress will start calling the shots. A key reason the
Democrats won The House and Senate is that they actually wanted to do
something about jobs going overseas, and to address the issue of unfair
currency manipulation by Japan and China which is subsidizing exports to
America. However, if Congress starts to force the currency manipulation
issue, the likely outcome has “1987 stock market crash” written all
over it. Why? If America “sticks it” to Japan and China, the Yen
carry trade will collapse and China will start taking their money out of
the dollar. This could have dire consequences! Who then is left for
America to borrow from? The Gulf Arabs want to diversify away from the
dollar, and Russia, which wisely prefers the Euro, has told us to take a
hike.
The
international front for the dollar and dollar investments is already
precarious. One by one, countries are showing less love for the dollar,
and are unwilling to hold all investments in U.S. Treasuries and Agency
Securities. Even Kuwait – the country we went to war to save – is
diversifying from the dollar. The big trade surplus countries are
setting up separate investment funds to diversify away from U.S.
Treasury debt. This new trend does not bode well for keeping long-term
U.S. interest rates low, or preventing the dollar from spiraling
downward. Currency realignment is inevitable, but forcing the issues
offers great risk to owners of dollar assets, such as stocks and
bonds.
It
looks more and more like some major economic trends, that looked like
they could go on forever, are reaching the point where they just
can’t. The biggest trend is the American consumer who is relentless
and refuses to surrender to the splurge urge. However, looking at the
average American worker, and the poor souls with sub-prime mortgages,
it’s clear they can’t go on living on credit. The time has come for
lenders to tighten their lending practices. Mortgage lending has already
tightened up big time, and the bank regulators are enforcing rules that
require loans to be underwritten with a view that they can actually be
paid back! Americans may have the will to spend, but they may no longer
have the ability to do so. I believe we are at the beginning of the
consumer slowdown, not the end.
Even
if no one loses their job, three million Americans will be forced to
stiff their credit card companies while trying desperately to stay in a
house they will inevitably lose to foreclosure or auction. The consumer
economy has already transitioned from half-full to half-empty and if job
losses pick up, a serious consumer recession could be on the
horizon.
July
4th is Independence Day so I’m taking a reflective break.
It’s time to get out of debt and live small, not large. Own only what
you need, not what you want so you can save. Invest in beautiful things
you will enjoy for years, rather than fancy dinners that only leave your
stomach bloated and your wallet empty. Build up savings in tangible
assets that will hold their value regardless of the rate of inflation.
America the beautiful is still a rich country. On July 4th we
should be celebrating our financial independence because without it,
there is no freedom.

©
2007 Richard Benson
Specialty Finance Group
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
Editorial Archive l www.sfgroup.org
|