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Remember the moment. This is the moment our kids' future - at least as commonly
envisioned - went down the drain. Make no mistake, that future was already
swirling around in a whirlpool headed for the pipes, but at this moment all
pretense of sound macro policy management is falling away and the worst part
is, it is all the result of a macroeconomic game that rewarded short term players
and punished those who 'bought in' in any sincere way.
The President of the United States is touting the resiliency of the American
people while urgently calling together da boyz in da workin' group, the SecTres
parrots "a strong dollar is in the US interest" as yet another naughty player
- Bear Stearns - is bailed out no doubt in large part by you and me in the
final analysis. Carlisle Capital is imploding and amid all the currency-debasing
macro activity we have the big guys at the world's largest bond fund demanding
even easier policy, as if there is no risk involved as Uncle Sam tries to inflate
himself out of this mess. 'Bond vigilantes' is a quaint term that used to apply
to those investors who would drive up yields when the risk of inflation began
to get out of hand. Since the global economy has depended on one bubble or
another for some time now you could say the bubble in stupidity has been the
longest running one at thirty years and counting.
Are politicians giving in to the greedy interests of the Wall Street power
brokers simply to gain brownie points during election season or is there something
more powerful at work here like say, desperation? The kind of desperation that
can only come from being an insider to a short sighted - if you can call thirty
years of fiat paper wizardry short - game of 'shuffle that paper'.
It goes like this: We have a starting concept called the 'productivity
of the American people augmented by the sound policies of a long since retired
Fed chief (not Greenspan)'. The concept is quantified, marked up and
sold into the market as paper certificates of various denomination. This
paper representation of inherent value is then split up several times over
with each fraction again marked up and sold. This is all legal (and apparently moral)
and is just Wall Street doing business.
But the real fun begins when risk players enter the game. Here is where the
leverage and real financial innovation come into play. You see, systems have
a way of building in abstractions and cementing assumptions the bigger they
get and the longer they run. Hubris, denial, delusion... these are but a few
of the interesting aspects to the game. The art is to subdivide your "investments",
make new bets derived from old bets and talk a good game. Much like poker,
there is a lot of bluffing going on here - and this is a vital concept to a
winning strategy as well. Whereas in poker you try to show confidence in your
manner, in this game you baffle them with fancy lingo that you are pretty sure
they don't understand; you "baffle them with bull$hit" as the saying goes.
Do you know the rules or are you a pawn? Yes, there are plenty of pawns in
the game. In fact, they are vital to the entire concept. You see, someone needs
to be the offload receptacle.
These paper calls on productivity have been so deeply bastardized that they
are now not only worthless, they actually represent negative value,
as in liability in the $Trillions. They are worth less, much less than
zero. Whether or not you passively assumed some of this risk in your retirement
account or via your conventional financial advisor you, me, our kids... we
are all going to get the bill in the end. That's the inevitable outcome of
the game!
There are winners and losers, but we all get to share in the clean up of the
macro mess as politicians go the easy route in a short sighted effort to solve
the problem with more of what created it in the first place; namely, credit
and its shadow side, debt. Of course the winners - few though they may be -
who have long since cashed out via the golden parachute will help with the
clean up. But this is relative nickels and dimes to them and with a wink wink,
nudge nudge they do their duty along with the rest of us all the while thanking
their lucky stars for a system underpinned by so many naive pawns. The only
rule these would-be winners needed to keep in mind is the one in the fine print
at the bottom of the rule book:
* Don't forget, if you are the head of a major financial corporation - especially
a leveraged lending institution - you must show quarterly earnings growth
to keep the game going. This should be easy enough however as the pawns are
pawns for a reason; they will take the sound economic growth story hook, line
and sinker. Meanwhile you may string together a progression of strong quarters
and have your board vote you bonuses based on short term performance. If things
start to look dicey at any point and you have not yet implemented your exit
strategy a wise move is to activate a standard David
Lereah press release mechanism - pronto! Remember, most players do not
bother to look into the details as long as they are being shown an apparently
good economy and their stream of relative chump change remains intact.
And for heavens sake, don't get perp'd like these
men!

Angelo Mozilo, Countrywide Financial CEO - Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
photo
The above is not an exercise in sour grapes. It just is what it is; a look
at the games to which the masses are just now figuring out the rules. We will
get through this, but new rules are being made up right now and folks, you
had better be in tune with them this time. Most readers of this website have
long since cut their teeth in this line of thinking. They understand Austrian
economics, money backed by more than confidence and they understand Wall Street's
gamesmanship. But the great majority is just now waking up with a groggy "What
the....? I can't concentrate on American Idol with this economy $#!% going
on!" But there are positives happening out there as I mentioned in the most
recent letter. To find them one might revise one's commonly accepted assumptions
and expectations and look for pockets of productivity. The US manufacturing
base will only getting stronger relative to the paper edifice built during
a three decade long game of 'shuffle that paper'.
Our portfolios are up 3.7% thus far in 2008. Not stellar, but I will take
an annualized 15% considering the gore fest in progress in the markets and
the economy. To this point in 2008 the game has not been about capital appreciation
but rather preservation. With several markets - Euro and many commodities -
in blow off mode, we begin to look for trades and/or investments rooted in
productivity and value even as the public - so well informed by the fear stoked
media - pukes them up. Wash, rinse, repeat... the game continues.
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