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The
Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:
Money is like a perpetual child. It needs to be cared for and worried
about; otherwise it can get out of control. This week, Bill Bonner
reminds us of a time when people still worried about things like trade
deficits and money supplies, and how a current carefree attitude toward
these things might lead to our downfall. Read on...
From
care-worn, to carefree, to careless...sic transit gloria money.
With
spring right around the corner, we’ve been in as dewy-eyed and
sentimental a state of mind as we ever get these days.
We
remembered happier times - when we walked arm-in-arm along the banks of
the Thames, when a pound and a dollar were almost the same price, and
when we could buy shares at five times earnings.
We
were younger then, but far from carefree. In fact, a young man frets a
lot more than an older one. He has more to fret about. As a man ages, he
realizes that the fretting is largely a waste of time; that most things
don’t really matter...and that he can’t do much about those that do
matter, anyway.
But
money is a special case. As the years go by, most of the cares people
once had about financial matters cease to matter to them. Then, all of a
sudden, they start to matter again.
In
the early 1980s, you could buy a nice apartment in central London for
$200,000. That’s dollars, dear reader - American dollars! That was
before the dollar headed down against sterling...and before London
property took flight.
When
the dollar fell after 1985, investors were alarmed...then resigned.
After the initial panic at the falling greenback, Americans got used to
it. Now, with the dollar worth only about half as many pounds as it was
a quarter of a century ago, no one worries about it. It doesn’t seem
to matter.
But
mattering matters. Worrying is under-valued.
On
Monday of this week came news that the U.S. trade deficit hit a new
record last year - $763.6 billion. But did it matter? It didn’t seem
to. People have become accustomed to record trade deficits. Each year
brings another one, like a new calendar. Nobody thinks anything of it.
It
used to be that the trade deficit numbers would set off alarms - like
the buildup of carbon monoxide in a mine shaft. Investors would have
heard the whistle and rushed up for fresh air. They would have sold off
the high-deficit currency in favor of one that was safer, the one with a
trade surplus. The result? The trade imbalance would right itself
automatically. But now, people pay no attention. All the carbon monoxide
in the air simply makes them drowsy. And the deficits keep mounting up.
But
the less we care about things, the more we will eventually have to care
about. Had investors panicked on news of last year’s trade deficit,
they wouldn’t have so much to panic about this year. Today, the trade
deficit is $47 billion higher. And still they don’t panic.
Among
the many panic-free things are the money supply figures. A little blip
up used to send the bond market into fits of hysteria. Investors (the
so-called ‘bond vigilantes’) would dump their bonds, sending yields
upwards. Higher yields chilled economic activity, which had the effect
of reducing both money supply increases and consumer price inflation.
Problem solved.
But
who pays any attention to money supply numbers any more? No one.
They’re as irrelevant as a monk at a mobster’s convention. But
simply because they don’t seem to matter anymore, they matter more
than ever. All over the world, the traditional measures of money are
increasing two to three times faster than the economies they feed. New
forms of money - supplied by the financial intermediaries - are
increasing even faster. All this unchecked new money makes each unit of
old money just a little shakier.
Take
family finances, for instance. We learned recently that the average
person in Britain had debt equal to 1.4 times his income - or a total of
1.3 trillion pounds worth. Last year, there were 17,000 repossessions in
the country...and currently 400 people go broke every day. One estimate
told us that more than half the nation would be out of cash less than
three weeks after losing a job. These figures are even worse in America,
where private debt to private income just reached a new record high of
1.75 times.
It
wasn’t always so. As recently as the 1980s, people still cared about
how much debt they carried. As the bills mounted up, bill-payers
reacted. They cut back spending and increased savings. As if by magic,
the problem corrected itself. Less spending led to less debt.
What
people took for absurd in a more levelheaded era, they now take for
assured. They go from being care-worn, to being carefree, to becoming
careless. Last week, we reported on the latest U.S. government budget.
We remember when Republican politicians could hardly show their mugs in
public after allowing a budget deficit. They felt personally responsible
for it. They looked upon it as a stain on the national credit record...a
blemish on the nation’s escutcheon. Deficits were a burden on the
taxpayers...a threat to the dollar.
Now,
a Republican president proposes the most insouciant spending in history
and who objects? ‘Deficits don’t matter,’ is the accepted math.
You might as well howl up a rainspout in Azerbaijan as deny that solemn
truth.
In
the old days, when deficits still mattered, the old knees jerked up
against them. Senators railed. Congressmen ranted. Every dime of deficit
spending was yielded up as if it were a foot of no-man’s land; every
conservative imagined himself Petain holding Verdun against the Huns.
And as long as they still had a little deficit-fighting fire in their
bellies, deficits weren’t allowed to sprout, let alone grow.
People
used to worry about paying too much for stocks, too. A quarter century
ago, you could have bought almost any stock listed in New York or London
for less than 10 times earnings. Now, you struggle to find one that is
less than 20 times earnings. When the price of shares still mattered,
investors bucked and bridled as shares rose. They had seen what had
happened to stocks in the 1970s. They didn’t want to be saddled with
over-priced shares again. But the longer shares rose without serious
interruption, the less high prices bothered them. They stopped thinking
that stocks might fall; instead, they couldn’t stop thinking about how
much they would rise. And now there’s only more to think about. The
Dow represents much more capital at 12,000 than it did at 1,200.
We
see the same spirit in the property market. Just this week, the Gherkin
Building - a landmark architectural masterpiece, shaped like a bullet -
set a new record for London, selling for $1.2 billion.
As
recently as seven years ago, people still bought REIT’s for yield. Sam
Zell’s empire, Equity Office Properties, for example, sold at only
half its current price. At that price, investors could get a yield over
7%. But in the great real estate boom of the 2000-2007 period, even a 7%
yield began to seem paltry. Property itself was going up by 20% per
year...even more in many areas. London and New York - the two big rock
candy mountains of the financial industry - hit record after
record.
As
prices rose, worries receded. People do not pay to worry. And if
they’re going to worry they’re not going to pay. Just look at the
prices; property investors must be more carefree than ever.
EOP
enjoyed a net operating income of $2.04 billion in 2006. If the final
deal cost Blackstone $40 billion, the ‘cap rate’ of the business
would be very near to 5% - or the equivalent of 20 times earnings. But
however good it is in 2007, it was twice as good in 2000. EOP was twice
as expensive in ‘07 as it was in ‘00. Its yield today is barely a
third of what it was back then.
If
investors still fretted, they’d worry that paying twice as much would
cut the returns in half. Or worse. Then again, if they still
fretted...they never would have done the deal; and they wouldn’t have
so much more to fret about in the future.
Regards,
Bill
Bonner
The Daily Reckoning

© 2007 Bill Bonner
The
Daily Reckoning Archives
www.dailyreckoning.com
Bill
Bonner is the founder and editor of The Daily Reckoning. He is also the
author, with Addison Wiggin, of The Wall Street Journal best seller
Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st
Century (John Wiley & Sons).
In
Bonner and Wiggin’s follow-up book, Empire of Debt: The Rise of an
Epic Financial Crisis, they wield their sardonic brand of humor to
expose the nation for what it really is - an empire built on delusions.
Daily Reckoning readers can buy their copy of Empire of Debt - now
available in paperback - just click on the link below:
The
Most Feared Book in Washington! http://www.dailyreckoning.com/empireofdebt.html
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