Archive for August, 2008

Aug 28 2008

Fed & Treasury Emergency Policy is the Miracle of Eating One’s Seed Corn

Published by Johannes Ernharth under Economy

“The unprecedented success of Keynesianism is due to the fact that it provides an apparent justification for the “deficit spending” policies of contemporary governments. It is the pseudo-philosophy of those who can think of nothing else than to dissipate the capital accumulated by previous generations.

Yet no effusions of authors however brilliant and sophisticated can alter the perennial economic laws. They are and work and take care of themselves. Notwithstanding all the passionate fulminations of the spokesmen of governments, the inevitable consequences of inflationism and expansionism as depicted by the “orthodox” economists are coming to pass. And then, very late indeed, even simple people will discover that Keynes did not teach us how to perform the “miracle … of turning a stone into bread,” but the not at all miraculous procedure of eating the seed corn.”

Ludwig von Mises, “Lord Keynes and Say’s Law.

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Aug 28 2008

Economy far from out of the danger zone; Policy actions on path to worsen situation

Published by Johannes Ernharth under Economy

Below are a few articles with clips we think are worth a read.  Absolutely not!  The worst is far from past, and below are a few reasons why. If you can only read one, read the last one listed — the one on deleveraging and banks.  Written by Mises scholar and Chief Economist of Mann Global, Frank Shostak, it reveals once again the Rosetta Stone for this economy, explaining why current policy makers are on an unfortunate path to compounding the problems rather than fixing them — as if things needed to get worse!

The Real Cost of a Full Freddie and Fannie Bailout

The real cost of the bailouts will easily exceed $1.3 trillion. In fact, the real cost is likely to range between $1.3 trillion to $1.6 trillion, and is not unlikely to reach $2.5 trillion.

U.S. Says Banks on `Problem List’ Rose 30% in Quarter

“The U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said its “problem list” of banks increased 30 percent in the second quarter to the highest total in five years as more commercial real-estate loans were overdue.

The list had 117 banks as of June 30, up from 90 in the first quarter and the highest since mid-2003, the agency said today in its quarterly report without naming any institutions. FDIC-insured lenders reported net income of $4.96 billion, down 87 percent from $36.8 billion in the same quarter a year ago.”

Freddie, Fannie Failure Could Be World `Catastrophe

“If the U.S. government allows Fannie and Freddie to fail and international investors are not compensated adequately, the consequences will be catastrophic…  If it is not the end of the world, it is the end of the current international financial system.”

Is Deleveraging Bad for the Economy?

Is it true that if every bank were to attempt to “fix” its balance sheet, the collective outcome would be disastrous for the real economy? On the contrary, by adjusting their balance sheet to true conditions, banks would lay the foundation for a sustained economic recovery. After all, by trimming their lending, banks by implication also curtail the expansion of credit “out of thin air.” As we have seen, it is this type of credit that weakens wealth generators and hence leads to economic impoverishment. Contrary to the proponents of the “paradox of deleveraging” we can only conclude that if every bank were to aim at fixing its balance sheet, in the process curtailing the expansion of credit “out of thin air,” this would lay the foundation for a healthy economic recovery.

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Aug 21 2008

Odd Happenings in the Precious Metals Market

Published by Johannes Ernharth under Economy

We’ve been monitoring offline the unusual developments in the precious metals markets in recent weeks, particularly in respect to gold and silver. While prices have plummeted a good deal from their highs (gold into the $700s for the first time since blowing through them a while back on its way to over $1000 earlier this year), amid that fall the physical market is experiencing exceptional delays in actually getting metal delivered. Folks we know are having a heck of a time getting delivery of the metal in large amounts of small denominations. So, unless you want 400 ounce bars, you’re waiting 30 days plus!

Meanwhile, the story broke big-time this a.m. when, as we and others suspected it would be forced to, the U.S. Mint ended a 20 year tradition by suspending issuance of its Silver Eagle coin Noted the Treasury, “Due to the unprecedented demand…our inventories have been depleted.. We are therefore temporarily suspending all sales of these coins.”

So what gives with the price plummeting while the actual physical metal is in short supply? Well, primarily it is the paper market — futures and ETFs — that have experienced a sharp sell off as major investors rolled into action across both precious metals and commodity sectors. Paper traders don’t want physical delivery, and generally it’s pledged against 400 ounce bars, while many paper investors, you must remember, are not in the game for the fundamental reasons others might be who have expectations of growing inflation, dollar deterioration, and worsening economic structural problems. Momentum and technical investors simply look at the charts to determine what’s hot, then hop on the bandwagon and hope to get off at a higher level before the heard vacates ahead of them and prices drop.  And, they do so with lots of leverage. Combine that with record levels of shorts across the spectrum, well — after such a rapid rise in values over the prior 18-months, something had to give. And give it did. Continue Reading »

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Aug 16 2008

New Wall Street Feature Film on Crisis: The Spiral

Published by Johannes Ernharth under Economy

A little gallows humor for those who appreciate it: Another play on the movie Der Untergang (The Downfall). If only it didn’t ring so true to reality. Part II below. Continue Reading »

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Aug 11 2008

Dollar Strength or Dollar Bailout?

Published by Johannes Ernharth under Economy

While we know nothing goes straight up forever and that there are always corrections in any fundamental trend that develops, ala the inflationary one (which = dollar weakness), we were slightly taken aback that July 15 ended up being the starting point for the correction in the trend.   Mind you, that was within days of the implied insolvency problems over at Freddi and Fannie, and the announced support coming from the Fed and Treasury (after all, they must work together to create that cash from somewhere since the U.S. Treasury is running massive deficits already…).

So who on earth suddenly finds the implied inflationary consequences of this, the run on IndyMac bank, the reality that the FDIC has well over 100 banks on its insolvency watch list, the fact that Merrill is using qausi-Enron accounting to keep toxic waste off the books via Level III accounting gimmicks (a type of asset for which the regulators have repeatedly delayed “clean up” regulations form going into effect since the consequences would be so severe), etc. etc…

Well, who on earth is thinking this is somehow a good thing for the dollar?  Why would this imply a deflation of the loss of value vs. tangible assets that can’t be printed so easily?  Why, as colleague James Turk asks, has the Dollar Index suddenly and mysteriously reversed course?

Well, the truth is now seeping out.   The powers that be have delayed data several weeks (we suspect to provide some cover given the dire straights they’re in), but now the truth is seeping out.  There’s been absolutely no contraction of money supply as some suspect (the M’s are marching along, onward and upward) and the Fed clearly didn’t raise rates as some of its leaders threatened in order to fight the “commodities bubble”.  Interest rates for 1-year savings still remain well below even the official CPI figure we’ve long ago discounted as a laughable gauge for inflation.

So what is it?   In the face of ever worsening news, in recent weeks we’ve seen massive central bank action in support of the dollar, with the U.S. at the epicenter by dumping euros and buying dollars from its own reserve accounts — with U.S. paper in the Fed’s coffers jumping $52 billion in three short weeks –a 38.4% annualized rate!  That’s up from a prior annualized rate ending July 16th of 17.3%.  That doubling is going to give your currency a bounce, even if short-term!

This may have bought some time, but that’s about all.  Feel free to buy on the back of that intervention and the bump its caused. It has triggered and overdue correction in commodity prices, energy, and taken the wind out of a precious metal rebound. But the fundamental trend remains in place.

But, the U.S. is in the midst of a massive insolvency crisis thanks to gargantuan government / Fed-induced misappropriation of the finite stores of capital in the United States.  The withdrawal from such large misallocations will be severe, but there’s little to be gained by denying the addict to cheap and easily invented money and credit that he’s not got a problem, or that all will be OK by simply shooting up with more of the same junk that got him in such a bad way.

If you need proof,  consider that July was another month of record foreclosures for California.  Likewise, so far in the line of credit shoes yet to drop, we’ve only seen the system attempting to work (write) off the massive (and still developing) losses from subprime market.  Yet to come to an economy near you are problems with:

  • Near prime mortgages
  • Prime mortgages
  • Home equity loans
  • Commercial loans
  • Credit Cards
  • Auto loans
  • Student loans
  • Muni bonds
  • Corporate bonds
  • Derivatives
    • CDOs
    • CDSs
    • Who knows what else lurks beneath???

No. There’s far too much yet to unwind, especially as the consumer continues to experience ever more stress as the economy slows:  Eight months of  falling employment, production, income, retail sales, and GDP (which keeps getting downward revisions…) will continue to take a toll.

Besides, while gas prices have dropped, a $3.85 national average still ain’t something to write home about!

Stay Vigilant and Think it through.

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Aug 08 2008

Roubini: $ 2 trillion in losses, worst situation since Great Depression

Published by Johannes Ernharth under Economy

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Yesterday I arrived at my desk to find the most recent issue of the Investment News, the standard bearer weekly paper for those in the business of helping others with investments.  Glancing across the front page, relegated to box on the lower left titled “Inside” (this issue), and under the subject “Newsmakers,” I see the following:

Dr. Bear’s Diagnosis –  After Nouriel Roubini’s dire predictions came true, Wall Street stopped laughing and started to listen. Now he’s predicting the worst crisis since the Great Depression. Page 10.”

Needless to say, this same paper offered virtually no heads-up to the problems we’ve talked about here since our inception early in 2005 (and going back to 2002 among our clients), and like most any part of the news media, the coverage started only “post implosion” — when we started to get meaningful coverage on the subject from most all sources, and then mostly the same, standard summary stuff.   So, in our estimation, the fact that comparatively bearish Roubini is getting some mainstream coverage is a sign that the seriousness of the problem is reaching the masses in the broader investment community.  When that community finally starts to believe it’s all for real, that’s when we’ll see substantial shifts in the investment landscape — making what we’ve seen so far comparatively modest.

For those interested in hearing some of Roubini’s sound analysis, consider his video linked to the image above, where he suggests credit losses will bear close to $2 Trillion.  He explains why the recession is going to be deep and hard. And, listen to how those interviewing can’t seem to fathom what he’s saying.  They keep trying to defuse what he is saying.

Nonetheless, while Roubini can hit the nail on the head, he still wears a contemporary, neo-Keynesian economic cap .   Listen to the video, and you’ll hear a few gems that seem to expose, nonetheless, a fundamental misunderstanding regarding the cause of our problems, never mind that he’s summing up the likely consequences just around the bend very succinctly.

For example, he says policy makers won’t be printing money; they’ll be printing debt instead to fund the bailout.  Well, that’s muddling the issue, in my opinion.   Who will be buying the debt and with what money?  Absent printing cold cash for the bailout, the anchor of yet more debt being a go-to policy tool seems simply ridiculous.

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