PDA

View Full Version : Deficits To Go Galactic, Sell in May and Run Away . . . Fast



sunshine05
22nd May 2010, 09:35 PM
Can't we all just find an island somewhere? It is not sounding good. We all know this. I just wish we could get away from it all.


Deficits To Go Galactic, Sell in May and Run Away . . . Fast
Stock-Markets / Financial Markets 2010 May 22, 2010 - 02:13 PM

By: Gary_North

Stock-Markets

Diamond Rated - Best Financial Markets Analysis Article There is an old phrase regarding stock market investing: "Sell in May and go away." Recent markets have reinforced that saying.

Stock markets all over the world are falling. The first market to begin falling was China's. It peaked in early August of 2009. It struggled back, though not to its August peak, but is now falling. The decline is accelerating. It is down by about 25% in 2010.

The American stock market has been hit hard this month. So have European stock markets. They are plummeting.

Commodity prices are falling – not like a stone, but falling. The peak was in the first week of January.

Consumer prices are falling, just barely, and only if you accept the CPI: down 0.1% in April. If you use the Median CPI, as I do, it was unchanged over the previous two months: flat. More important, the rate of price increases, year to year, is decelerating. In November and December, the Median CPI was up 1.2%. In January, it was up 1%. In April, it was up 0.5%. The figures are here.

Gold is down. Silver is down. Oil is down. The euro is down. Mortgage rates are down. Mortgage applications are down.

The main thing that is up is mortgage payment skipping. At least 10% of American households missed a monthly mortgage payment during the first three months of 2010. This is an all-time high in the post-World War II era. The rate was 9.1% in the first quarter of 2009. It rose to 9.5% in the final quarter. The trend is ominous. Americans will stop making payments on every other category of debt before they skip a mortgage payment. The fact that they are skipping mortgage payments indicates that they are in very tight straits.

What is happening? This is not consistent with Keynesianism. Keynesians did not predict the 2008–9 recession, either. The other schools of economic thought that also did not predict the recession cannot explain why these signs of a secondary recession are taking place today, despite a huge increase in both the monetary base and government deficits.

One school of opinion did predict the 2008–9 recession: the Austrian School. Can Austrian theory explain this new situation?

THE BUSINESS CYCLE

The Austrian theory of the business cycle, developed by Ludwig von Mises in 1912, teaches that when central banks inflate, in order to hold down interest rates, this creates false price signals. Specifically, it creates false signals regarding the price and availability of capital. This in turn leads entrepreneurs to borrow money and invest in new projects. When the central bank ceases to inflate, these projects are revealed as unprofitable ventures.

Around the world in late 2008, central banks inflated massively to save the financial structure. They bought government bonds. They loaned money to commercial banks. The Federal Reserve swapped assets with the largest banks, giving them T-bills at face value and taking back toxic assets without any market for them. This was like trading the family silver for crushed beer cans. Congress said nothing. Keynesian economists cheered Bernanke's brilliance.

The collapse of the largest banks was delayed. Their survival enabled them to swallow the busted giants like Wachovia. The central bank bought bad assets and time. The assets are still bad, and the clock is ticking.

Had commercial banks lent out the money they were legally allowed to lend, we would be in hyperinflation today. I define hyperinflation as price increases above 30% per annum. The FED doubled its balance sheet and therefore monetary base.

Commercial banks are legally allowed to double their loans, which would double the money supply. The bankers are so terrified of this economy that they have refused to lend. They have run up excess reserves at the FED of $1.2 trillion, thereby offsetting the FED's comparable run-up of the monetary base.

The deficits of all major nations are massive today. The governments are borrowing money to bail out their economies. But the money is being wasted. It is going for politically acceptable boondoggles and payoffs to special interests. It is not funding projects to meet consumer demand.

These policies of monetary inflation, government debt, and political boondoggles are the essence of Keynesianism. They are known politically as kick the can. The essence of Keynesianism is for governments to borrow massively in order to solve the problems created by previous less massive borrowing by governments, entrepreneurs, and consumers.

The economic recovery is based on the idea that it is productive to substitute government borrowing and spending for private borrowing and spending. The Keynesian believes that the private sector will not borrow until entrepreneurs perceive future customer demand. Keynesians believe that politicians are capable of restoring economic growth by spending money on pet projects.

Whenever entrepreneurs who have their own money or borrowed money on the line conclude that the likelihood of losing it is just too high until production goods and labor get cheaper, Keynesians call on government to borrow, central banks to inflate, and consumers to spend, spend, spend. Why? In order to keep production goods from getting cheaper and labor from get cheaper. Why? Because when production goods get cheaper, corporate donations to the opposition party's PACs increase. When labor gets cheaper, voters vote for the opposition party.

All over the world, politicians are using borrowed money and newly created money to keep the prices of production goods from falling. This worked until early January. It is no longer working. Commodity prices are falling. They will continue to fall. Why? Because commercial bankers are not lending, and businesses are not borrowing. The American labor market is still crippled. With unemployment in the 10% range, delayed mortgage payments are in the 10% range. Will wonders never cease?

JIM VS. JIM

Jim Rogers is bullish on China. Jim Chanos is bearish on China's real estate market. Jim Rogers is bullish on commodities. Jim Chanos has sold short companies that export to China's real estate sector.

Jim Rogers says he is no market timer. Jim Chanos is a supreme market timer, for he sells short. He sold Enron short.

I'm with Chanos. That's because I came to the same conclusion regarding China's real estate bubble before Chanos announced his position. Chanos agrees with me, so of course I'm with Chanos.

China's economy is the ultimate schizophrenic monster. It has free choice for individuals to buy and sell. People can move. It has a Communist elite, which is committed to maintaining power, no matter what. It has a central bank that is under the thumb of the central government, which inflates constantly. It has corruption on a massive scale at the local political level. It has a traditional family structure, despite Marxism/Maoism, whose members see the preservation of family capital as a central goal.

This has combined to create the mother of all real estate bubbles. Tiny condos in Beijing and Shanghai sell at $400 per square foot. Who is buying these condos? Newlyweds whose combined income is under $6,000 a year. How is this possible? Because newly rich parents and grandparents are putting up the money. These investments are senseless as third-party loans, but inside the families, these wealth transfers are considered rational.

All over China, there has been massive building of apartments and condos. The central bank lends money to banks, which in turn lend to politically favored developers at low rates. The municipal authorities sell land at high prices to developers.

This has created a bubble. This bubble is consistent with Austrian economic theory. Central bank inflation leads to commercial bank lending to fund uneconomic projects. Low interest rates lure in entrepreneurs. They invest capital.

This drives up the costs of construction. When the central bank finally ceases to expand the monetary base, the boom will turn into a bust. The fact that condo buyers do not borrow money from local banks is economically irrelevant. What matters is that developers borrow to build them. The newlyweds borrow from their families.

Investors are buying multiple condos. They then hold them off the market, on the assumption that a new condo will appreciate faster. So, these condos' pricing is not based on their ability to produce a stream of long-term revenue. They are purchased as pure speculations. The mania is in full force. This is the classic mark of the final stage of a real estate bubble. Those caught up in it cannot see that it cannot go on. They think this is the last train out. They borrow from their relatives to buy a ticket.

Chanos has seen that this cannot go on much longer.

RECOVERY OR ILLUSION?

The decline in commodity prices since January is consistent with the re-trenching of entrepreneurs. They are convinced that prices of final goods will hit a brick wall next year. They do not trust the economy. They see consumer prices going flat. They see that they will be trapped if they expand their operations.

The recovery in manufacturing in the United States is real. The producers are expanding output. But the fall in commodities indicates that this optimism is not worldwide. Commodity prices should be rising, as manufacturers around the world bid up prices in an attempt to secure greater quantities in order to convert them into final products. The opposite is happening. Commodity prices are falling.

Investors must decide. Should they buy commodities, as Jim Rogers recommends, or should they short them? Chanos has shorted some of them – those related to China's real estate boom.

I do not trust this recovery. That is why I did not recommend buying commodities in 2009. I think that until commercial bankers regain their confidence and begin lending, this recovery will hit a brick wall. This will be a wall of resistance by final buyers. I look at what has happened to consumer prices, and I conclude that my skepticism a year ago was correct.

There can be mass inflation. It is assured when commercial bankers pull their excess reserves out of the FED and begin to lend. The doubled monetary base will become a doubled M1 and a rising money multiplier. The FED in this sense has created a time bomb for the economy. It is still ticking, because of the pessimism of commercial bankers. They are not lending, especially to small businesses, which historically do most of the new hiring.

The decline in commodity prices is consistent with the decline of the rate of increase in the price indexes. Consumer prices have decelerated. The CPI and Median CPI are flat. The increase in commodity prices that took place in 2009 in expectation of a V-shaped recovery ended in early January. When you see this for the year, you can see when optimism collapsed.

The entrepreneurs who make their money by forecasting prices, and therefore final demand for the goods produced by commodities, decided in January that this recovery could not be trusted to provide increasing demand. They began selling commodity futures. At the margin, they decided that it was wiser to be short than long.

Maybe they were wrong. Maybe the worldwide recovery will continue. But if it does, it will be marked by low or no price inflation. It is not that the fall in commodity prices will create falling consumer prices. It is that falling commodity prices fell because entrepreneurs saw low or no price inflation coming in 2010. They quite bidding to buy.

CONCLUSION

The expansion of central bank money, used to buy bad assets and save companies that should have been allowed to fail, was a frantic response to a looming breakdown of large New York banks and financial institutions. The capital markets were vetoing central bank policies, and the central bank's bureaucrats fought back with fiat money.

The toxic debt has replaced Treasury debt on the FED's balance sheet. With a $1.5 trillion Federal deficit scheduled for this year, the FED has been content to stop inflating and let the private sector fund the deficit. This money could have gone into the private sector. That it did not is an indicator of the fragility of the recovery.

The world's capital markets are vetoing the central bankers' policies and the politicians' policies. This may change. Confidence may return. But the fiasco that is the Greek government has triggered the response of frantic and terrified politicians in the north of Europe. They did the Keynesian thing. They promised a huge bailout. It is clear that they will do it again if required. It will be required.

To call this recovery fragile is facing facts. This week, fear is dominant. What the central bankers and the politicians can do to restore confidence is not clear. Europe has shot its fiscal wad. Another round will send a message: "Bailouts forever." The same dilemma faces Bernanke.

Politicians play kick the can. Commercial bankers will force Bernanke's hand when they start lending. So far, markets say they won't. The experts are saying this recovery is unlikely to last. They are saying that consumers are tapped out. That is bad news for Keynesians. With tapped-out consumers, the Keynesians must recommend another round of huge deficits. I thought $1.5 trillion was a lot of annual deficit. Apparently, I'm too conservative.

Gary North [send him mail ] is the author of Mises on Money . Visit http://www.garynorth.com . He is also the author of a free 20-volume series, An Economic Commentary on the Bible .

http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article19708.html

Twisted Titan
23rd May 2010, 08:40 AM
At least 10% of American households missed a monthly mortgage payment during the first three months of 2010. This is an all-time high in the post-World War II era. The rate was 9.1% in the first quarter of 2009. It rose to 9.5% in the final quarter. The trend is ominous. Americans will stop making payments on every other category of debt before they skip a mortgage payment. The fact that they are skipping mortgage payments indicates that they are in very tight straits.


This is why you should prep like there is no tommorow

Get suppiles FIRST

Pay your debts LAST.

T

Defender
23rd May 2010, 11:15 AM
Americans will stop making payments on every other category of debt before they skip a mortgage payment. This has been turned around to some extent since the bankruptcy "reform" a few years ago. Now because the penalties are worse for not paying cc's than mortgages they get payment priority.

Also, with this whole housing debacle, people whose mortgages are underwater or whose payments reset higher have stopped paying the mortgage knowing they can live payment free for a year or more. They still pay the cc's to keep that part of the debt cycle going though.

Hypertiger
23rd May 2010, 01:26 PM
central banks do not inflate the money supply to manipulate interest rates.

consumer demand for money dictates rates.

yield rates are determined by the supply of bonds in relation to demand for them

A decrease in demand for bonds generally leads to a drop in price and a rise in yield while an increase in demand leads to an increase in price and a drop in yields.

the business cycle is driven by consumers.

When they are desperate for money they increase their demands for commercial banks to inflate the supply of money...this generally causes an increase in the demand for bonds as the new money flows through the system in search of yield causing a drop in yields...

When they are exhausted they decrease their demands for commercial banks to inflate the supply of money...this generally causes an decrease in the demand for bonds as the money flows through the system in search of yield shrink causing a rise in yields...

At the beginning of the desperation phase the central bankers claim they need to lower rates to fight deflation and at the end, but at the beginning of the exhaustion phase, they claim they need to raise rates to fight inflation.

And all those that have no clue what is going on see the rise and fall of yield rates as the central bankers claim and believe that central bankers are doing it.

It's ultimately a magic trick.

The central banks follow the market and it's the mass of consumers that power power the markets

The entire economic system was designed by the top who live off the yield from the bottom.

A central bank is basically an innovation created to make the yield acquisition operation by the top easier and more efficient.

but what if the mass of consumers become exhausted completely....

Meaning that they are desperate but because they have maxed out and can no longer request the commercial banking system to inflate the supply of money there is no way to escape the phase.

That's where this Government spending comes in...ultimately the governed population is exhausted so the Government is doing for the population what they refuse to or can no longer accomplish.

requesting more debt to be created.

public or governmental debt is different than what the general population can create.

The Government issues bonds and borrows money from the money supply...that's what the governments of the world do.

Issue bonds and borrow money from the money supply.

Consumers request commercial banks to inflate the supply of money.

The population of the USA for example owes 52 Trillion Dollars since the circulating money supply of the USA is composed entirely of debt that US consumers have over the past 65 years requested the commercial banking system within the USA to create whenever they ask for a loan.

In that same 65 year period the US Federal Government has issued 12.987 Trillion dollars worth of treasuries and "BORROWED" 12.987 Trillion Dollars of the 52 Trillion Dollar money supply that the consumers of the USA have requested the commercial baning system to create.

The FEDERAL Government has borrowed 25% of the money supply...

For perspective...in 1945 the US FEDERAL Government had borrowed 72% of the money supply.

Money supply in 1945 was 355 Billion Dollars and now it's 52.4 Trillion Dollars
Public debt in 1945 was 258.6 Billion Dollars and now it's 12.987 Trillion Dollars

The public debt was not paid down...from 1945 to now...the money supply was increased by US consumers requesting the commercial banking system to create more debt at a far greater rate than FEDERAL Government borrowing.

The above system is the same in every country (economic zone) on Earth.

Basically the general population has maxed out and the Governments of the world are picking up where the population has left off to basically buy more time.

The 1929-1933 debt deflationary collapse due to consumer exhaustion was followed by the 1933-1945 bankruptcy reorganization...

massive deficit spending, massive austerity measures, massive liquidation.

public debt can continue to be rolled over by issuing new bonds to replace the old...

The non public debt or private debt...the 52 Trillion the population of the USA owes...can not...it must be paid down or written off.

Galactic austerity, Galactic liquidation, Galactic deficits.

Quantum
23rd May 2010, 01:55 PM
The Master of Economic Disasters is back! Welcome Hypertiger!

Steal
23rd May 2010, 02:12 PM
The Master of Economic Disasters is back! Welcome Hypertiger!


make that a +1

Saul Mine
23rd May 2010, 03:36 PM
An essay at gold-eagle (http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_08/degraaf052010.html)

Conclusion:
"How about the investor who purchased gold at $260 (the first price visible in this essay) and held on for ten years to the current $1180! His or her profit is 353%. On an annual basis that works out to 35% per year! From this essay we draw the conclusion that investors make far more money (with very few exceptions) than do traders."

Horn
23rd May 2010, 03:50 PM
When they are desperate for money they increase their demands for commercial banks and government to inflate the supply of money.

Addendum provided free of charge.

Think of it as a door prize.

Fudup
23rd May 2010, 03:56 PM
central banks do not inflate the money supply to manipulate interest rates.

consumer demand for money dictates rates.

yield rates are determined by the supply of bonds in relation to demand for them

A decrease in demand for bonds generally leads to a drop in price and a rise in yield while an increase in demand leads to an increase in price and a drop in yields.

the business cycle is driven by consumers.

When they are desperate for money they increase their demands for commercial banks to inflate the supply of money...this generally causes an increase in the demand for bonds as the new money flows through the system in search of yield causing a drop in yields...

When they are exhausted they decrease their demands for commercial banks to inflate the supply of money...this generally causes an decrease in the demand for bonds as the money flows through the system in search of yield shrink causing a rise in yields...

At the beginning of the desperation phase the central bankers claim they need to lower rates to fight deflation and at the end, but at the beginning of the exhaustion phase, they claim they need to raise rates to fight inflation.

And all those that have no clue what is going on see the rise and fall of yield rates as the central bankers claim and believe that central bankers are doing it.

It's ultimately a magic trick.

The central banks follow the market and it's the mass of consumers that power power the markets

The entire economic system was designed by the top who live off the yield from the bottom.

A central bank is basically an innovation created to make the yield acquisition operation by the top easier and more efficient.

but what if the mass of consumers become exhausted completely....

Meaning that they are desperate but because they have maxed out and can no longer request the commercial banking system to inflate the supply of money there is no way to escape the phase.

That's where this Government spending comes in...ultimately the governed population is exhausted so the Government is doing for the population what they refuse to or can no longer accomplish.

requesting more debt to be created.

public or governmental debt is different than what the general population can create.

The Government issues bonds and borrows money from the money supply...that's what the governments of the world do.

Issue bonds and borrow money from the money supply.

Consumers request commercial banks to inflate the supply of money.

The population of the USA for example owes 52 Trillion Dollars since the circulating money supply of the USA is composed entirely of debt that US consumers have over the past 65 years requested the commercial banking system within the USA to create whenever they ask for a loan.

In that same 65 year period the US Federal Government has issued 12.987 Trillion dollars worth of treasuries and "BORROWED" 12.987 Trillion Dollars of the 52 Trillion Dollar money supply that the consumers of the USA have requested the commercial baning system to create.

The FEDERAL Government has borrowed 25% of the money supply...

For perspective...in 1945 the US FEDERAL Government had borrowed 72% of the money supply.

Money supply in 1945 was 355 Billion Dollars and now it's 52.4 Trillion Dollars
Public debt in 1945 was 258.6 Billion Dollars and now it's 12.987 Trillion Dollars

The public debt was not paid down...from 1945 to now...the money supply was increased by US consumers requesting the commercial banking system to create more debt at a far greater rate than FEDERAL Government borrowing.

The above system is the same in every country (economic zone) on Earth.

Basically the general population has maxed out and the Governments of the world are picking up where the population has left off to basically buy more time.

The 1929-1933 debt deflationary collapse due to consumer exhaustion was followed by the 1933-1945 bankruptcy reorganization...

massive deficit spending, massive austerity measures, massive liquidation.

public debt can continue to be rolled over by issuing new bonds to replace the old...

The non public debt or private debt...the 52 Trillion the population of the USA owes...can not...it must be paid down or written off.

Galactic austerity, Galactic liquidation, Galactic deficits.




Nice post, puts money supply and how it is borrowed against by the govt. in greater clarity in my mind than it did before I read it. thanks

Neuro
23rd May 2010, 04:00 PM
An essay at gold-eagle (http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_08/degraaf052010.html)

Conclusion:
"How about the investor who purchased gold at $260 (the first price visible in this essay) and held on for ten years to the current $1180! His or her profit is 353%. On an annual basis that works out to 35% per year! From this essay we draw the conclusion that investors make far more money (with very few exceptions) than do traders."
Actually the average growth in $ value/year would be around 16.3%, but it is compounded over 10 years to 353%...

Sparky
23rd May 2010, 06:16 PM
An essay at gold-eagle (http://www.gold-eagle.com/editorials_08/degraaf052010.html)

Conclusion:
"How about the investor who purchased gold at $260 (the first price visible in this essay) and held on for ten years to the current $1180! His or her profit is 353%. On an annual basis that works out to 35% per year! From this essay we draw the conclusion that investors make far more money (with very few exceptions) than do traders."

Of course, if you bought at $260, then sold at $730, then bought at $580, then sold at $1030, then bought at $720, then sold at $1250, you'd be up 550%.

oldmansmith
23rd May 2010, 06:19 PM
And if I knew the winning lottery numbers I would be retired now. So what? Buying and holding in a long-term bull is never bad investment advice. I bought a bunch at $620 and I'm not at all sorry about it.

FreeEnergy
28th May 2010, 08:35 AM
The non public debt or private debt...the 52 Trillion the population of the USA owes...can not...it must be paid down or written off.


or written off

The "non-public" i.e. private debt is what international bankers STOLE from the USA. How did they come up with this huge number to give in the first place? Did they have some magic stuff? Nope, they had computers and entered numbers there, or printed paper. The same thing THE GOVERNMENT is authorized to do any day, but doesn't do because of fear that it will be overthrown by its own people. Private Banksters, however, is a very convenient agreement.

The "private" "debt" can be destroyed (written off) tomorrow by a simple decree. AND NOTHING WILL HAPPEN (except for all around world war international banksters will start on USA).