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The
internet is alive with pessimists who warn that the stock market
will plummet from the current seriously overvalued levels, and
that an unprecedented housing bubble will soon explode into a
wave of panic selling. The Optimist, in contrast, hopes to offer
some positive perspective in a soothing overview of the
prospects for both major markets. As an essential disclosure,
the Optimist must confess that he has no credentials for
discussing either market, although he has in the past made a few
modest profits in both. As one might guess from reading the commentaries
by the Optimist, he focuses his investments within the precious
metals arena, so he is little affected by changing price levels
in either stocks or housing. Perceptive readers will recognize
the previous statements as affirming that the Optimist doesn’t
know what he is talking about, and he doesn’t have much
interest in it anyway. The Optimist hopes to build on that solid
foundation to provide some thought provoking viewpoints.
Stocks Are
Overvalued, and Housing Is in a Bubble. . .
After
reading what seems like millions of articles on our favorite
internet sites, the Optimist is persuaded that their unanimous
views are correct that the stock market price to earnings ratio
should be much lower and that massive speculation by overly
indebted purchasers have driven house prices much too high.
Readers of this commentary have also read all of the same
articles, and will be happy to learn that the Optimist won’t
repeat all the painful details that they have seen so often
before. It goes without saying, of course, that selected
individual stocks or houses will do better than the averages,
but finding those gems may become comparable to the search for a
needle in a haystack. The Optimist is as convinced as all the
readers of this commentary that the stock averages and the
median homes will be major disappointments to the bullish
investors who expect them to gush profits like an oil well.
. . . But
Stock Prices might not drop
Almost
all of the articles I read are intently looking for a repeat of
the October 1987 stock market crash, or the equivalent price
destruction in a collapse of the housing market. The Optimist
cautions that the future may hold a different path for stock and
housing prices. The good news from the Optimist is that stock
market prices could continue to rise for many years to come. If
the stock indices do continue to rise, then the bears will find
short sales to be an increasingly painful hobby. The primary
reason that the Optimist considers it possible for stocks to
continue to defy economic gravity and rise relentlessly is that
a mysterious buyer with very deep pockets consistently steps in
to purchase large quantities of stocks whenever the markets
appear to be in danger of sliding down a slippery slope. The
Optimist has no factual basis for identifying that mystery
buyer, but he can pass along gossip he has read in other
articles on the web. Those articles express a certainty that the
mysterious buyer is a Plunge Protection Team (PPT) which is
operated by the Treasury Department with actions that are
coordinated by the Fed. For the benefit of the handful of people
left in the financial universe who have not yet heard of the PPT,
a simple internet search for Plunge Protection Team provides
710,000+ relevant articles to browse through for background.
Let’s
assume that 710,001+ articles (now including this one) can’t
be all wrong, and that there really is a PPT with deep pockets
and with an intent on purchasing stock indexes when they show
weakness. The effects on short sellers would be devastating.
Bulls would begin to feel invincible and they would rush to buy
any short term decline. If a decline did seem to be getting out
of control, the PPT could simply step forward to absorb all the
selling pressure, so that the revitalized bulls could then push
the stock averages higher. The inevitable result of such action
by a PPT with very deep pockets would be to insure that short
sellers would become demoralized and would add more buying
pressure to the market as the bears exited their short positions
at a loss. The inevitable losses by the bears would further act
to lift the markets higher. Foreign investors would see the
bullish trend and conclude that the steadily rising stock market
is an excellent place to invest a few surplus dollars they may
accumulate.
The
Optimist understands that many readers will think he has only
proved how little he knows about the markets because a PPT
operation of that magnitude would require really deep pockets,
and because the buying pressure created by the PPT would reverse
when they had to sell. Once again, the Optimist is happy to ease
readers’ concerns by assuring them that the combination of the
Treasury Department and the Fed have very, very deep pockets. If
millions aren’t enough, then the Fed can add a few zeros to
their spreadsheet and produce billions with a few mouse clicks.
If billions still don’t get the job done, then adding a few
more zeros will let them click trillions. If the Fed wants to
buy more than short sellers want to sell, then my bet is that
the Fed will prevail and prices will go higher. Before the
skeptics persist by sending flaming emails to tell me that is
stupid because prices will just slump again when the PPT is
forced to sell, consider this question. Are you sure that the
PPT ever has to sell? Since the PPT is as secretive as the NSA
(which is an acronym for No Such Agency), they don’t exactly
issue annual reports on their activities or invite an audit of
their trading accounts. Maybe they take delivery of the stock
certificates from their purchases and pay a few thousand
technicians to shred the paper. Sounds like a great way to add
jobs to the employment report, and that process would alleviate
the need to eventually sell stock they were intent only on
purchasing.
If
a PPT exists and purchases whatever is necessary to prevent
stock market declines, then the only good news for shorts is
that persistent inflation will help them lose less value over
time by reducing the purchasing power of the dollars they must
lose in a stock market that is not permitted to decline.
Housing Prices
Could also be Protected
The
Optimist has not yet heard any rumors about house prices being
protected from declines, so he is happy to have this opportunity
to start one. Consider that refinancing mortgages to provide
cash back for spending is a major pillar on which the
consumers’ ability to spend rests. A serious problem with
consumers’ cash flow in this housing bubble could be
disastrous for the economy. Even a simple decline in house
prices could begin an avalanche of foreclosures because many
house buyers are drastically over extended. A significant
downturn in the prices of real estate would have a very damaging
effect on the economy. The fed is likely to exercise it’s
powers to protect the economy, even if that requires putting a
floor under real estate prices.
All
of the readers who agree completely with the Optimist are
certain that house prices have inflated a massive bubble. The
Optimist is not aware of any historical precedent for a housing
bubble of this magnitude, so he cannot show you the awful
results after a similar bubble encountered a sharp pinpoint. The
Optimist can, however, share with you the learning experience of
a lifetime he was fortunate enough to have survived in Houston.
More than 20 years ago, the Houston economy was as hot as a car
parked in the broiling summer sun at noon in Houston. An
abundance of jobs were begging to be filled, and thousands of
people were moving each week from parts north to Houston.
Housing prices were marked higher almost daily, and the Houston
real estate market may have been one of the fastest growing in
the nation. The price of crude oil was hovering at $30 per
barrel near record highs, and many people in the northern states
(which were in recession and had high unemployment) could afford
neither electricity nor heating oil. Many prosperous Houstonians
heeded the calls to share their abundant wealth with less
fortunate northerners, though a few scrooges were known to
grumble “Let them freeze in the dark!” Interest rates that
were higher than inflation provided us with an abundance of cash
flow from the profits on our silver and gold investments which
we closed out in 1980. Rapidly rising real estate prices ensured
our future wealth. The first half of the 1980s was the best of
times in Houston.
In
1986, crude oil fired a bullet through the Houston real estate
bubble. In a few short months, the price of crude oil plummeted
from $30 to $10. That may sound like good news (cheaper energy
and gasoline), but the reality for Houston was just the
opposite. A very high percentage of the Houston economy was
predicated on thousands of companies which specialized in oil
production, or oil transportation, or oil services, or oil
something else. By mid 1986, most of those companies sang their
final verse of “Turn out the lights, the party’s over,”
and they shut their doors forever. All of those jobs, and all of
the service sector jobs which supported them, had little
alternative but to move out of Houston. Motivated sellers of
real estate found that there were no willing buyers. People who
had put 20% down on the purchase of their dream home in 1985
were suddenly deep in the red only a few months later as house
prices in Houston plunged 50%. The word “foreclosure”
didn’t adequately describe the traumatic financial carnage as
people all across the city simply walked away from entire
neighborhoods of recently constructed homes. The economic pain
in Houston was excruciating, even as the rest of the nation was
enjoying a speedy recovery from the earlier recession.
It
is unimaginable that the Fed would permit a comparable economic
devastation throughout the entire nation if they have the means
to avoid it. Some pessimistic people may think that the Fed is
powerless to prevent the housing bubble from collapsing, and
thereby thrusting the nation into a deep depression. The
Optimist offers a more positive possibility. Consider that many
communities have housing bubbles because buyers who have lots of
credit card debts and no surplus cash flow are buying overpriced
houses with nothing down and 40 year interest only ARM
mortgages, with the interest rates likely to rise. That does
sound like a bit of a concern. Can the Fed come to their rescue?
“Of course not!” shout the pessimists. “Inflation is
rising so the Fed can only raise interest rates, and that will
drive more nails into the nation’s economic coffin, with the
house buyers locked inside!” Well, the Optimist suspects that
the Fed may not be quite so powerless in the face of potential
economic Armageddon. The Fed does, after all, preside over an
economic buffet which can dish out all the fiat dollars anyone
wants to eat. Within just the last few years, the Fed has
lowered short term rates below what any economist I know could
have predicted. Why can’t they do it again? The pessimists
might respond that lowering short term rates will only allow
increased inflation, which drives up long term rates, and
mortgage rates only respond to long term rates!
The
Optimist is quite content to agree that inflation must rise, and
that long term rates must eventually rise with inflation. When
rising long term rates begin to threaten the housing bubble,
however, the Optimist offers the positive view that the Fed,
working through its friendly subsidiary banks, will find new
ways to prevent the housing market from imploding. As an
unlikely example which is intended only to illustrate the range
of possibilities, banks could offer short term interest only
bridge loans, which could be renewed indefinitely for existing
homeowners who cannot pay the rising costs of their ARM
mortgages. Those short term loans would be for an amount
sufficient to pay off the more costly ARM mortgage loan, and
might even offer additional cash back to the homeowner. That
sounds far fetched at first glance because the interest rate on
long term mortgages has always been less expensive than the rate
on short term loans. Readers should keep an open mind, however,
and view this unusual possibility as yet another example of This
Time It Really Is Different. The Fed could persuade banks to
offer “No Risk” short term bridge loans with real estate as
collateral and at an interest rate which is only a little more
than the interest rate banks pay for CD deposits. Even though
rising inflation will push long term rates higher, the Fed
controls short term rates and can keep them low enough to ensure
survival of the economy. If it was possible to sell short the
housing market, the Optimist would cautiously advise against
doing so.
A
little good advice is that when you find yourself in a hole,
stop digging. At the same time the Fed is deploying creative
financing as a lifeline for existing homeowners, the Fed could
also begin to reduce the scope of the problem in the future by
encouraging banks to gently increase down payment requirements
for the purchase of a new home to maybe a few hundred dollars
per million dollars of house price. That type of old fashioned
restraint would help to slow the rampant new construction which
is adding too much supply to the bubble, and would help to
channel America’s dwindling supply of greater fools into
existing houses where they will help to keep the bubble
inflated.
Deflation Will
Not Be Permitted
Even
though the Optimist previously slayed the Worry
About Deflation dragon, that multi headed Hydra continues to
pop up in web sites everywhere. Those sites argue variations of
(A) there is already much too much debt (astoundingly true); (B)
the economy is weak from loss of solid manufacturing jobs (sadly
true); (C) low cost foreign labor will prevent the US economy
from adding the dependable jobs that are needed for sustained
growth (frustratingly true); (D) a perpetually weak economy
cannot afford to pay the escalating debt service costs
(frighteningly true); (E) the trade, current account, and budget
deficits all add crushing new debt at an ever faster rate
(unbelievably true); (F) the combined weight of all these
negatives makes a depression unavoidable (inevitably true); and
(G) therefore there will be deflation (probably false).
Those
who correctly foresee the coming depression persist in
remembering the Great Depression of the 1930s. That was a
dreadful time in America, and deflation acted to make the pain
far worse than it otherwise might have been. It was not possible
then to have a depression without deflation because legal tender
was gold and silver. Even after FDR confiscated gold from
Americans, the dollar was still convertible to gold overseas.
The linkage of the dollar to precious metals prevented the
fledging Fed from flooding the US economy with liquidity. As the
economy cascaded into deeper levels of depression, there was
insufficient money to meet the needs of people, so money became
scarce, and therefore more valuable, so that the dollar could
buy more stuff in the 1930s than it could in the 1920’s. The
Optimist’s definition of deflation is the dollar increasing in
value so that it has higher purchasing power. Because money in
the 1930s was gold and silver, deflation was an unpreventable
economic reaction to the financial excesses of the 1920s.
Compare
and contrast the 1930s with now. The comparison is easy. America
of today is deep in debt which is growing at an exponential
rate, and jobs are fleeing our nation at a frightening pace.
Cooking that recipe can result only in a depressionary stew, and
the Fed’s ability to control the process is limited to slowing
the rate at which the broth is simmered. The contrast is equally
easy. Legal tender is no longer gold or silver. Precious metals
no longer constrain the Fed from creating liquidity. Since the
Fed is capable of adding essentially unlimited amounts of fiat
money to the economy, they now have the ability to insure that a
debt snowball doesn’t roll and grow enough to transform into
an avalanche. Even though a depression is just as inevitable
over the coming years as it was 75 years ago, deflation is now
optional. Instead of being an economic necessity as in the
1930s, deflation is now determined by a political process.
Politicians and the Fed can choose whether to continue climbing
the ever steepening inflationary mountain, or falling off the
path into a deep deflationary ravine. The Optimist can offer no
guarantees, of course, but he is grateful that he has the
opportunity to bet that politicians will always opt for the
relatively easy and less painful path of inflation than the sure
political and economic death of falling into a deflationary
depression.
Those
who expect deflation to give their dollars greater buying power,
are likely to be disappointed as the value of those dollars
shrinks over time. The advocates of deflation make the mistake
of looking at today’s economic problems through a filter which
shows only the results when the laws of 1930s economics are
relevant. Instead of the 1930s as a model, we need to look
closely at how the economy performed 30 years ago. The
stagflation and rising misery index of the 1970’s will show
the direction in which our present economy will move into the
future.
The
immense amount of USA wealth that is owned by foreign nations
does represent a wildcard that even the Fed may not be in a
position to control. The Optimist is hopeful, however, that
foreign nations will continue to handle their international
financial dealings in a moderate and responsible manner.
Investment
Profits Are a Different Question
So
let’s recap so far. The Optimist has argued that the Fed will
not permit the stock market to suffer a sharp drop, will not
allow the housing bubble to collapse, and will not tolerate
deflation. Does that mean stocks and houses are good
investments? No! Even as the fires of inflation burn ever
hotter, the economy continues to cool as it slides toward
depression. The profit outlook for stocks is bleak. Without
growing profits, the rise in stock prices will be sluggish at
best. Similarly, as more Americans lose their jobs, the number
of greater fools who bid up house prices will dwindle. Stocks
and houses will also find it difficult to advance against the
strong headwinds of higher long term interest rates and rising
taxes. The Optimist guesses that the prices of stocks and houses
will rise over the next decade, but at a rate which is much less
than inflation. If that guess is correct, then a chart of the
inflation adjusted prices of stocks and houses should soon peak
and begin a slow descent into the future. That inflation
adjusted chart is where the proponents of deflation will find
what they seek. Even though the nominal prices will stay steady
or climb slowly, the true values will inexorably decline due to
the loss of purchasing power caused by inflation.
The
prices of precious metals, in contrast, will not only advance
with inflation, but will likely rise faster as the price
compression of the last two decades is released. The Optimist is
grateful that he has several ways he can invest his wealth in
precious metals.

© 2005 the Optimist
(AKA Jim Otis, is an author, active investor and retired engineer.)
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