Adrian
Ash, Bullion Vault
Today's bubble in novelty and complexity is sure to blow up – if not
in 2007, then all in good time. You might like to hold gold as
insurance. For the "barbarous relic" – so beloved of
apparently naive investors in the booming economies of India, China and
the Middle East – is the ultimate antidote to "financial
innovation". Nobody's promise, gold is also no one's to create.
Richard
Daughty, Mogambo Guru
But
while Bartlett’s ignored me completely, I notice that they had plenty
of room for quite a few quotes from John Maynard Keynes, and, as is
usual with crackpots, he sounds so good. He perfectly describes the
state of affairs in the USA back when he was writing, vis-à-vis
politics and the economic havoc they cause. The quote is that
"Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any
intellectual influences, are usually the slaves of some defunct
economist. Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are
distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years
back."
You
can almost hear the contempt and sarcasm in his voice, echoing my own.
Now, fast-forward to today. It is, unbelievably, even worse! Much
worse! It is so bad (Audience shouts out "How bad, Mogambo?")
that the chairman of the Federal Reserve himself IS a defunct academic
scribbler! And the worst kind, too, as he was the head of the
economics department of Princeton University, but nevertheless seems to
have the insouciant opinion that the horrendous 18-year run of the
disastrous, precedent-setting, unfettered monetary policies of the
accursed Alan Greenspan is to be faulted only, I guess, in its
restraint! Hahaha!
Antal
Fekete, Intermountain Institute
The life-span of the regime of
irredeemable currency may be extended through machinations such as the
artificial stifling of demand for gold, or trying to satisfy this demand
with paper gold. Other stratagems serving the same end are: the
manipulation of interest rates in order to boost demand for bonds
artificially; the manipulation of interest-rate spreads to offer
risk-free profit to the carry trade; allowing the derivative markets on
bonds to grow beyond any conceivable limit. These manipulations,
machinations and stratagems can certainly put off the day of reckoning.
However, there is a cost: it makes the inevitable credit collapse,
whenever it may come, a great deal more painful, and recovery ever more
protracted. The one certain result is that the ‘sudden death
syndrome’ will hit the currency when it is most vulnerable and
disaster is least expected.
We
should remember that every experiment in history with irredeemable
currency has ended in a cataclysm unless the currency was stabilized in
time by making it convertible into gold. The managers of the present
experiment betray extreme conceit when they pretend to know something
that their predecessors, the managers of the continental currency, of
the assignats, mandats, or of the Reichsmark did not know. The only
difference between the present experiment and its historical precedents
is a more highly refined web of disinformation.
Martin
Hutchinson, Great Conservatives
This is the ugly secret about B rated bonds: if monetary conditions
remain easy, then increased investor appetite allows potential
defaulters to refinance instead of defaulting, which in turn keeps
default rates low and increases investor appetite. This has particularly
been the case in the last few years, when hedge funds have been able to
raise almost unlimited capital from foolish institutional investors,
leverage themselves to the hilt, possibly in yen, from foolish banks and
then invest the gigantic proceeds in junk bonds, for their modest
additional yield above U.S. Treasuries.
Provided
the junk bond market doesn’t crash, so refinancing of all but the
worst rubbish is still readily available, hedge funds can in any given
year achieve with almost complete certainty a satisfactory return, at
least 20% of which will flow to the hedge fund managers personally. Thus
the normal corrective mechanism of rising default rates ceases to work,
and the market spirals towards bond-market nirvana. Essentially the
safety valve on the engine of speculative financing has been jammed
shut.
This
is even more the case internationally. The only thing that ever causes
countries to default is a refusal by the bond markets to finance their
deficits. Since in an easy money period, with generally declining
spreads, the bond market is open to all borrowers, no defaults ever
occur. That’s why there has not been a sovereign default since
Argentina went in December 2001. The IMF and World Bank and the Bush
administration can hold conference after conference congratulating
themselves on their superb management of the international financial
system, which has caused the world to be free from “crises” for half
a decade. In reality the lack of crises is nothing whatever to do with
good management, but is simply a function of excess liquidity.
The
perverse incentives in emerging market junk bonds can be illustrated by
the case of Argentina. Having defaulted on its international debt,
forcing tens of thousands of middle class Italian savers (the main
buyers of its bonds, presumably because of family connections) to accept
only 30 cents on the dollar, having stiffed several foreign banks with
local operations and a number of foreign utility companies foolish
enough to invest there, Argentina is now living high on the hog. Four
years of rapid economic growth, temporarily freed from onerous foreign
obligations have produced a real estate boom so extreme that the
government has ceased issuing construction permits, and have made the
country one of the world’s most attractive markets for luxury goods
retailers.
This
is the difference between corporate and national credits. If Enron had
been a country, “Enronia, Queen of the Pampas” lenders and investors
would be showering money on it today, and Jeff Skilling, rather than
facing a 24 year jail sentence, would be seen, blonde on each arm,
happily campaigning for triumphant re-election.
The
market for emerging market bonds is as distorted as any market in
history. Both spreads and interest rates are low, so that the J.P.
Morgan EMBI+ emerging market bond index yields well under 2% above
Treasuries, thus providing investors in some of the world’s dodgier
credits with returns of a princely 6% or so. Oddly enough, emerging
market stocks are not particularly overvalued; the Morgan Stanley
Capital International Emerging Markets Index is on a price/earnings
ratio of about 14.
Moreover
a portfolio of emerging market stocks that matches the MSCI Index gets
you largely Asia, with particular concentrations in the rapidly growing
economies of South Korea and Taiwan. Conversely an EMBI+ portfolio of
emerging markets bonds dumps more than half your assets in the dodgy
kleptocracies of Latin America, with another sixth subjected to the
tender mercies of Vladimir Putin’s Russia. If ever a market was
subject to extraordinary popular delusions and the madness of hedge fund
crowds, it’s this one.
One
day, the Fed will notice that inflation hasn’t disappeared, and will
raise the Federal Funds rate, probably by a wimpy ¼%. At that point,
panic will ensue in the junk bond markets, domestic and international.
With higher interest rates and tighter money, junk borrowers will find
all their comforting arithmetic thrown out of whack, as their cash
drains increase in size, and the bond markets begin to close for them.
At
this point, a wave of defaults worse than we have ever seen will sweep
over these markets. It will probably be worse than the 1930s in terms of
percentage defaulting, even if any economic downturn is initially mild.
The worst classes of 1930s debt issuance, those of 1930-32, lost 4.72%
of principal for AAA credits and 12.25% of principal for AA. However
this time very few of the defaulters will be AA credits, let alone AAA.
The actual loss rates on the 42% of companies with B ratings, or even
the 25% with BB ratings is likely to be a substantial multiple of
12.25%, in the B case possibly more than half.
Doug
Noland, PrudentBear
Credit Insurance: As much as the markets are determined to reckon
otherwise, Credit losses are not insurable risks. Losses are
categorically non-random and non-independent (as opposed to auto and
fire accidents). By their very nature, they come and go in waves, and
that infrequent Tidal Wave of Destruction can be expected to come
precisely when it is least expected. Boom-time exuberance, with its
intoxicating run of inflated financial profits and minimal Credit
problems, propagates the crescendo, reversal and dismal downside of the
Credit Cycle. The current Credit Derivatives Mania is putting the
finishing touches on a Credit system and economy distorted to the point
where there is no applicable history that might offer guidance as to
downside cycle risks and expected Credit losses. Certainly, forecasting
future losses based upon recent (cycle “blow-off”) Credit
performance – as derivative models do – lays the foundation for some
very ugly surprises when the cycle reverses (recall the lesson not
learned: CDO losses from telecom debt defaults).
I
simply have a difficult time
getting on board with the view that our housing markets will be this
year’s major Issue. And, actually, I’ll be surprised if the U.S.,
Chinese or the global economy takes center stage. When it comes to
Issues 2007, I fully expect developments in and around finance and the
financial markets to overshadow economic issues, concerns and risks.
I’ll even go out on the analytical limb and predict it will be one
captivating, historic and, likely, fateful year – and very much All
About Finance.
Michael
Nystrom, Bull! Not Bull
Take a look at
this quote, which can be found all over the internet:
If the American people
ever allow private banks to control the issuance of their currency,
first by inflation and then by deflation, the banks and corporations
that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all their
property until their children will wake up homeless on the continent
their fathers conquered.
This
quote is attributed to Thomas Jefferson, though it is most certainly
apocryphal. However I use it because it is instructive in many ways.
First, don't believe anything just because you read it, even if you've
read it many times. You can find this quote on a hundred web pages
attributed to Jefferson. Second, even though Jefferson didn't say it,
there is still wisdom in whoever did: "First by inflation, and then
by deflation..."
As I
already pointed out, we've already had the inflation.
Most everyone is in debt up to his eyeballs, and the dollar has been
inflated to within 5% of its life. There's not much more room to go
before it is completely dead. These are hard times for many individuals,
corporations,
and the government
itself. Ben Bernanke even told the government so recently -- that this
is the "calm
before the financial storm."
But
pretend for a moment that YOU are a Federal Reserve bank, and all these
entities owe YOU the money. When you look at the problem from this point
of view, something quite amazing happens. Why, there is no problem at
all! Those poor consumers, businesses and the Federal government have
all gone and gotten themselves into debt, haven't they? Well now they
are just going to have to pay it all back. End of story. What is the
problem now?
As
the Bank, your power comes from 1) your monopoly on the issuance of
legal tender, 2) your ability to create it out of thin air and 3) your
willingness to loan it out and charge interest on it. In fact, deflation
wouldn't be such a bad thing at all, since it increases the value the
currency you have a monopoly on creating. During deflation it is best to
have a mountain of cash and a positive cash flow to ride it out. The
only problem is if folks start defaulting on you. But
that has already been taken care of with the Bankruptcy Reform Act of
2005. That law was written by the credit card companies, i.e. the
banks, i.e Federal Reserve members, to keep working people on a
treadmill of perpetual debt.
This
reminds me of the stories of economic colonialism John Perkins told in
his book, Confessions
of an Economic Hit Man. First the World Bank would go to some
natural-resource-rich third world country and offer it a fat loan to
"develop" its resources. The loan would be bigger than
necessary, and certainly more than the country could ever afford to pay
back - but the bank would say, "with your new
refinery/mine/port/whatever, you'll have enough revenue to pay it
back." When the country eventually did default, the IMF would sweep
in with "fiscal austerity measures" for the people and the
government. All the revenue from the new development would be siphoned
to the banks in order to pay off the huge loan. Tsk tsk.
Sound
familiar? Anyone who bought a house in the last five years knows that
mortgage bankers rarely advocated financial prudence when buying a
house, but instead pushed the idea to "buy as much house as you can
(or can't) afford!" And now with prices coming down, many of those
buyers are stuck right where those third world countries got stuck.
Looks like a fiscal austerity plan is coming down the pike for many
consumers so they can stay on the financial treadmill while the
productive fruits their life - their labor - are siphoned off by the
bank. Because the banks still know that as much money as they make
trading and manipulating paper and financial "products," there
is still only one true source of wealth, and that is human labor.
No,
the Fed is not stupid. Not stupid at all. There will always be booms and
busts, and the best way to position oneself is to take advantage of both
sides of the trade. Or as one responder
to my last article put it so eloquently:
I am fascinated by the
common perception that the Federal Reserve is a proven non-stop
inflation machine. Inherently, the Federal Reserve uses inflation and
deflation to whipsaw the average bystander out of their savings. I don't
see how one economic machination is more favored over the other when the
goal is to ensure that the public's savings ends up in the accounts of
the shareholders of the Federal Reserve System.
I
couldn't have said it better myself. Don't count deflation out just yet.
Ron
Paul, Texas Congressman
As the war in Iraq surges forward, and the administration
ponders military action against Iran, it's important to ask ourselves an
overlooked question: Can we really afford it? If every American taxpayer
had to submit an extra five or ten thousand dollars to the IRS this
April to pay for the war, I'm quite certain it would end very quickly.
The problem is that government finances war by borrowing and printing
money, rather than presenting a bill directly in the form of higher
taxes. When the costs are obscured, the question of whether any war is
worth it becomes distorted.
Congress and the Federal Reserve Bank
have a cozy, unspoken arrangement that makes war easier to finance.
Congress has an insatiable appetite for new spending, but raising taxes
is politically unpopular. The Federal Reserve, however, is happy to
accommodate deficit spending by creating new money through the Treasury
Department. In exchange, Congress leaves the Fed alone to operate free
of pesky oversight and free of political scrutiny. Monetary policy is
utterly ignored in Washington, even though the Federal Reserve system is
a creation of Congress.
The result of this arrangement is
inflation. And inflation finances war.
Jim
Puplava, Financial Sense
This year complacency reigns
everywhere. You can see it in the rise in margin debt, the takeover of
mortgage sub prime lenders by investment banks, and the narrowing of
premiums on credit default swaps and the VIX. The effects of the one-off
events that seemed to give strength to the economy last year I believe
will soon fade. Rising complacency, low volatility and obliviousness to
all forms of risk are usually the status quo right at the time when some
catalyzing event appears out of nowhere to take the markets by surprise.
The
assumption that oil prices will continue to fall at a time when
geo-political tensions with oil-producing countries are rising and major
oil fields are peaking indicates that these negative factors are being
completely ignored by markets all around the globe.
There
is some degree of speculation that the
reason the oil markets have been attacked the way they have since the
latter part of December is a prelude to an attack [on Iran] coming in
late spring. We know the markets and the economy can handle $80 oil. Oil
at $100 is another story. Clearly the recent drop in oil goes beyond
weather.
Some
may think the talk of attack is nothing other than conspiracy. However,
I regard the markets to be far too complacent on this issue. It is not
as if we haven’t been warned by both warring factions. Iran has
stepped up its violence in Iraq as we witness the bombings of the last
few days. President Ahmadinejad has provoked Israel by his repeated
speeches threatening to annihilate the country as soon as it is able.
The U.S. is escalating economic pressure on Iran as well as building up
its military forces in the region. The Middle East is clearly the most
volatile and unstable part of the world. It is the world’s largest gas
station where you have madmen running around lighting matches. Given the
sequence of recent events and the increase in provocation by both sides
the markets could be in for a major shock.
Steve
Saville, Speculative Investor
The rapid simultaneous
devaluation of all fiat currencies via inflation improves the long-term
investment case for gold. Gold will eventually become widely recognized
for what it already is: the only viable alternative to the dollar.
Mike
Shedlock, Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis
In Kondratieff Autumn,
cash is trash and gold (like all currencies) is of little use. Asset
prices like stocks and houses soar and everyone is spending every cent
they have and then some, as fast as they can. A similar thing happened
in the Roaring 20's and probably every other crack-up boom in history as
well.
In the credit crunch of
Winter deflation, gold and currencies are hoarded and the purchasing
power of both rises. If anything, the CPI adjusted price during the
Great Depression does not really do justice to the mammoth increase in
assets such as land or stocks that gold could buy. Instead it reflects
purchasing power on a general basket of goods and services. The same
thing is likely to happen again.
Sam
Zell, CEO Equity Office Properties
To the tune of
“Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head”
Capital is raining on my head
everything is liquid, we’re awash with cash to spend
the flood has drowned returns
because assets keep liquefying, monetizing, raining…
So I just did me some Econ 101
seems like we’ve gotten out of equilibrium
liquidity abounds
but relative yields keep falling as more capital keeps raining
What lies ahead: we’re old
the western world is aging, we’ll need income
from our pension funds
where’s it coming from?
the yields we see won’t fuel no party
Tho’ capital is raining on my head
interest and inflation rates are narrowing their spread
to half what textbooks said.
the ratios that we’re used to
have been squeezed by so much cash flow
The world is monetizing faster every
day
illiquid assets alchemized
to currency in play
competing for return
black gold prices rising, still more money chasing assets…
And there’s one thing I know
to get things back to normal
it’s a long haul
that’s global
yields won’t improve ’til growth soaks up this liquid freefall
Capital keeps raining on my head
so much is out there that the world is out of whack
when will we see balance back?
it’s gonna be a long time ’til returns meet expectations
We need to be
prepared for slim annuities….

© 2007 John Rubino
DollarCollapse.com | Financial
Sense Editorial Archive
John
Rubino is
the author of The
Coming Collapse of the Dollar (co-written with James Turk), How
to Profit From the Coming Real Estate Bust (Rodale, 2003), and Main Street, Not Wall Street (William Morrow, 1998). A former Wall
Street financial analyst and columnist with theStreet.com, he
currently writes for Fidelity Magazine and CFA Magazine He lives in Moscow,
Idaho. Contact by Email.
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