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As I have mentioned in previous articles, I have the most informed, intelligent
and savvy subscribers one could ask for. One of them, Lorimer Wilson, previously
wrote me with his insights on "Our
Worst Nightmare - the Puncture of the Current US Housing Bubble." It was
very well received when published by me recently and he has just sent me more
information which I think you will find timely and of particular interest.
Together we have compiled a remarkable summary of the ominous warnings, dire
predictions and perceived devastating consequences that the vast majority of
economists, financial analysts, economic research firms and financial commentators
are saying about our current economic situation and what is most likely to
unfold in the months and years ahead. It is a must read to more clearly understand
and appreciate the financial state of the union, the impact it will likely
have on various investments, and how better to allocate ones assets.
Nobody has a crystal ball, but to just ignore the following warning signs
and hope that everything will turn out okay would simply be foolish.
Below is Part 2 of our 6-part article.
Ominous Warnings and Dire Predictions of World's Financial Experts - Part
2
by Dudley Baker and Lorimer Wilson
Widening Global Imbalances
Rodrigo de Rato, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund at a
recent speech at the University of California at Berkeley, stated that "while
global current account imbalances have been widening, the fact that they have
been financed easily thus far seems to be inducing a sense of complacency among
policy makers. I think they should be more concerned. This is not to say that
the risk of a disorderly adjustment is imminent, but the problem is growing,
and if a disorderly adjustment does take place, it will be very costly and
disruptive to the world economy.
The most visible aspect of the global imbalances problem is a very large deficit
in the current account of the balance of payments of the United States - amounting
to about 6.25% of GDP. The main problem is that in the United States savings
are too low. These global imbalances could unwind quickly, and in a
very disruptive way, with either an abrupt fall in the rate of consumption
growth (i.e. increased savings) in the United States which is holding up the
world economy or by investors abroad becoming unwilling to hold increasing
amounts of U.S. financial asset, and demand higher interest rates and a depreciation
of the U.S. dollar, which in turn forces U.S. domestic demand to contract."
Economic Pain
Timothy Adams, Undersecretary of Treasury for International Affairs, stated
recently that "the world economy is dangerously imbalanced and the U.S.
current account deficit is now at levels that many experts fear could trigger
a run on the dollar, soaring interest rates, and global economic pain."
Severe Consequences
Robert E. Rubin, director of Citigroup Inc. and former Secretary of the Treasury;
Peter Orszag, Senior Fellow at Brookings Institution; and Allen Sinai, Chief
Global Economist at Decision Economics Inc., made a presentation to a joint
session of the American Economic Foundation and the North American Economics
and Finance Association recently.
They stated that "the scale of the nation's projected budgetary imbalances
is now so large that the risk of severe consequences must be taken very seriously.
Continued substantial deficits could cause a fundamental shift in market
expectations and a related loss of confidence both at home and abroad. This,
in turn, could cause investors and creditors to reallocate funds away from
dollar-based investments, causing a depreciation of the exchange rate, and
to demand sharply higher interest rates on U.S. government debt. The increase
of interest rates, depreciation of the exchange rate, and the decline in
confidence could reduce stock prices and household wealth, raise the
cost of financing to business, and reduce private-sector domestic spending."
Wild Ride
Paul Kasriel, Director of Economic Research at Northern Trust and co-author
of the book 'Seven Indicators That Move markets', has stated that "If foreign
creditors should question our ability and willingness to repay them without
resorting to the currency printing press, there could be a run on the dollar,
which would lead to sharply higher U.S. interest rates, which would do great
harm to household finances and the housing market, which would put a crimp
in consumer spending, which would increase unemployment, which would result
in a spike in mortgage defaults, which would likely cripple the banking system
given that a record 61% of total bank credit is mortgage related, which would,
in turn, render future Fed interest rate cuts - expected on or about September
20th, 2006 - less potent in reviving the economy.
We have the most highly leveraged economy in the postwar period and the Fed
is still raising rates and in the past 30 years or so, whenever the Fed has
raised interest rates, we have usually had financial accidents. Our federal
government is spending like a drunken sailor so my advice is to put on your
safety harness as it is going to be a wild ride. My bet is that we are going
to end up on the rocks."
Category 6 Fiscal Storm
Isabel V. Sawhill, Vice President and Director and Alice M. Rivlin,
Senior Fellow of Economic Studies at the Brookings Institution have said that "the
federal budget deficits pose grave risks - a category 6 fiscal storm
- to the U.S. economy. The current course is simply not sustainable. Promises
to the elderly, especially about medical care, cannot be kept unless taxes
are raised to levels that are unprecedented or other activities of the government
are slashed. Postponing such action would be reckless and short-sighted. Massive
amounts of capital have flowed in from around the world, financing much of
America's federal deficit, as well as its international (or current account)
deficit. While this inflow of foreign capital has kept investment in the American
economy strong it means that Americans are accumulating obligations to service
these debts and repay foreigners out of their future income. As a result, the
future income available to Americans will be lower than it would have been
without the government deficits. Foreign borrowing also makes the United
States vulnerable to the changing whims of foreign investors. There is a risk
that Asian central banks, or other large purchasers of dollar securities, will
lose confidence in the ability of the United States to manage its fiscal affairs
prudently and shift their purchases to euros or other currencies. Such a shift
could precipitate a sharp fall in the value of the dollar, which could cause
a spike in interest rates, a plunge in the stock and bond markets, and possibly
a severe recession. The risk of such a meltdown is unknown, but it seems
foolish to run the risk in order to perpetuate large fiscal deficits, which
will ultimately reduce Americans' standard of living."
Drastic Fall
Sebastian Edwards, the Henry Ford ll Professor of International Business
Economics at UCLA's Anderson School of Management and a research associate
of the National Bureau of Economic Research and has been a consultant to the
Inter-American Development Bank, the World Bank, the OECD and a number of national
and international corporations, has stated that "The future of the U.S. current
account - and thus of the dollar - depend on whether foreign investors will
continue to add U.S. assets to their investment dollars. Any major reduction
in the USA's ability to obtain sufficient foreign financing would causethe
dollar to fall by 21% to 28% during the first three years of any adjustment
period, cause a deep GDP growth reduction, and push the USA into recession."
Substantial Macroeconomic Consequences
Ian Morris, Chief US Economist at HSBC, has said that "about half
the US housing market may be overvalued by as much as 35-40%. When these
housing bubbles begin to deflate, it is likely to have a substantial macroeconomic
consequence."
Serious Collapse
Ian Shepherdson, Chief US Economist for High Frequency Economics, has
warned that "house price increases are going to slow much further dragging
down expectations for future price gains and therefore raising real mortgage
rates. This, in turn, will be the trigger for a serious collapse in home sales. The
housing market is a bubble, and it will burst."
Economic Earthquake
Robert R. Prechter, President of Elliott Wave International and author
of 'At the Crest of the Tidal Wave' and 'Conquer the Crash,' calls for "a slow
motion economic earthquake that will register 11 on the financial Richter
scale.
The Great Asset Mania of recent years is in its final euphoric months and the
next event will be a sharp decline of historic proportion in stock prices
- the Dow should fall to below the starting point of its mania which was 777
in August 1982 and probably below 400 by no later than 2008 - resulting in
a deep economic depression lasting until about 2011. If an across-the-board
deflation occurs, which has a substantial probability, then real estate, commodities
and all bonds issued by other than those rated AAA will fall in value as well.
That we are in the midst, and apparently near the end, of the greatest debt
build-up in world history suggests that the resulting deflation and depression
will be the biggest deflation in history by a huge margin. A corollary
of deflation will be a soaring value for the U.S. dollar, contrary to virtually
all current expectations. Credit expansion is a major reason why stocks
have kept rising and the dollar has kept falling but when the bubble begins
to deflate, the investment markets will go down and the dollar will start up. The
period after the market crash will be the most vulnerable in terms of the potential
for hyperinflation. The ultimate result will be the destruction of any value
remaining in bonds and the wipe-out of all dollar-denominated paper assets."
Giant Speculative Bubble
Ravi Batra, Professor of Economics at Southern Methodist University,
in his book 'The Crash of the Millennium' foresees not a deflationary depression
but an inflationary one. He sees "the giant speculative bubble that we are
currently in bursting, the stock market crashing and then the U.S. dollar collapsing
almost immediately followed by a rise in interest rates and plunging bond prices
culminating in a depression made doubly damaging by rising inflation through
the early part of this decade. In spite of the inflationary nature of the
coming depression, property values will tumble in most parts of the United
States. In the long run, home prices will probably continue to climb but
in the short run, however, they could sink and sink hard."
Systemic Banking Crisis
Richard Duncan, a former consultant for the International Monetary
Fund, current Financial Sector Specialist (Asia) at the World Bank and author
of the book, 'The Dollar Crisis', writes that "the United States' net indebtedness
to the rest of the world, already at record highs, will continue to increase
every year into the future until a sharp fall in the value of the dollar against
the currencies of all its major trading partners puts an end to the gapping
US current account deficit or until the United States is so heavily indebted
to the rest of the world that it become incapable of servicing the interest
on its multi-trillion dollar debt. In the meantime, as long as the US current
account deficit continues to flood the world with US dollar liquidity, new
asset price bubbles are likely to inflate and implode; more systemic banking
crises can be expected to occur; and intensifying deflationary pressure can
be anticipated as low interest rates and easy credit result in excess industrial
capacity and falling prices (i.e. deflation)."
The above comments are from some of the best minds in the business and what
they have said about our current financial situation and what is in store for
us in the years ahead. We advise investors to listen, to learn and to recognize
the need to be strategically positioned in a wide variety of assets including
precious metals, mining shares and long-term warrants. Nothing like taking
what the experts say to heart and investing accordingly.
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