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As our economic ship continues to spring leaks, the goldilocks crowd still
clings to the false belief that the Fed can easily keep us afloat with a few
more rate cuts. This comfort has sustained many upbeat forecasts despite overwhelming
evidence of an unfolding economic and monetary catastrophe of historic proportions.
On Monday we learned that Merrill Lynch, having just sold a $4.5 billion stake
to the Singapore government, is again passing around the hat, this time wooing
the Chinese and Saudi governments for badly needed funds. This of course follows
similar moves by U.S. investment houses Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and Bear
Stearns. These developments should be disconcerting on many levels, yet most
seem unperturbed.
In the first place, the fact that troubled firms need to look abroad for cash
provides startling evidence of the extent of the deterioration of America's
economic might. The reason we need to seek capital from abroad is that we squander
our own on consumption.
However, these foreign investments come at great cost; specifically preferred
shares that place new foreign shareholders in senior positions to existing
American shareholders and burden the latter with substantial dividend payments
(11% for Citigroup and 9% for Morgan Stanley). Of course, large dividend payments
to foreign shareholders will only worsen our nation's current account deficit,
putting more downward pressure on the dollar and the American standard of living.
Contrary to Wall Street's positive spin of foreigners "investing in America," such
acquisitions really amount to foreigners buying up America, as our creditors
take our assets in exchange for our debts.
On Wednesday we learned that the December ISM Manufacturing Index plunged
to 47.7, its lowest level in nearly five years. The news sent the dollar swooning,
gold and oil soaring, and pushed the Dow Jones to its largest point drop ever
on the first trading day of a new year (in percentage terms the second largest
drop since 1932). The report amounted to a stunning repudiation of the hope
that the U.S. will export its way out of a coming recession. If manufacturing
is at a five year low, how can exports be booming? After all, we can not export
what we do not make -- unless of course we simply export used goods, which
eventually we will be forced to do. However, selling used cars to the Chinese
will not create many new jobs here; as all that need be done is load the vehicles
on ships and wave goodbye. This is hardly the export boom Wall Street has championed
as our economic savior, offsetting the negatives of housing, financials and
the consumer.
Weakness in manufacturing was further confirmed today, with the release of
a very weak December jobs report that revealed a loss of another 31,000 manufacturing
jobs. Anemic job growth (over-all payrolls increased by only 18,000) coupled
with an increase in the unemployment rate to 5% sent stocks and the dollar
tumbling. The stagflation bell is ringing load and clear, if only Wall Street
had enough sense to listen.
Additionally, despite Wall Street's vehement denials, evidence of run-away
inflation continues to appear. The minutes of the Fed's December 11th meeting,
which discounted the risks of inflation, conveniently validated this misconception.
Wall Street of course denies the obvious that such forecasts merely reflect
the Fed's campaign to dampen inflation expectations and not an honest assessment
of actual inflation. Today on CNBC, Mark Zandi, the highly-respected chief
economist of Moody's Economy.com, proclaimed that the falling dollar "has nothing
to do with inflation". Since a weak dollar is the very essence of inflation,
this asinine statement is on par with the "permanent plateau" comment uttered
by Irving Fisher on the eve of the 1929 stock market crash.
Along those lines, Wall Street continues to buy into government propaganda
designed to confuse the public about the true cause of inflation. They dismiss
rising prices as resulting from economic growth and then minimize the impact
by relying on bogus CPI statistics. This completely misses the point that legitimate
economic growth causes prices to fall and not to rise. True economic growth
comes from increased production, which lowers consumer prices by increasing
supply, particularly for basic necessities such as food. The reality is that
despite some genuine economic growth abroad, governments are creating so much
inflation that food prices are raising anyway.
Finally, Wall Street takes solace in the fact that long-term interest rates
on U.S. Treasuries apparently reflect a benign outlook for future inflation
as well. However, today's high bond prices are more a function short-term bets
being placed by leveraged speculators and central bank buying, not the rational
expectations of long-term private investors. Rather than reflecting quiescent
inflation, low long-term interest rates result from a bubble in the bond market.
When it bursts, the true rate of inflation, as reflected in the relentless
run up in gold prices, will finally be priced in.
In the meantime, with $100 oil, $850 gold, and beans in the teens, Wall Street
still feels the Fed has the green light to keep cutting interest rates. Unfortunately
on this point they are right. Rather than raising rates on its own terms and
dealing with the consequences, the Fed will instead wait for a true financial
crisis to emerge, at which point it will be forced to raise rates on the much
more draconian terms imposed by our foreign creditors.
For a more in depth analysis of the inherent dangers facing the U.S. economy
and the implications for U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book "Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse." Click here to
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