Whole Lot of 'Flation Going On...
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
Something
awful is afoot, we think. But what?
In
almost every direction we look, we see people going about their
business as if nothing were wrong. And yet, they say and do such
strange things.
One
of the things that makes us feel like a very minor character in
a very bad movie is the Fed's "emergency" 1% lending rate. Fed governors
admit to no emergency. There is nothing to worry about, they say
so often it makes us wonder. Inflation is no threat. Deflation is
no problem. And yet, there must be some kind of 'flation somewhere.
Why else would the Fed allow the money supply (M3) to increase at
the astounding rate of $1 trillion per year?
And
why else would it lend money at less than the quoted rate at which
it loses value? The CPI rose 1.7% last year even by the government's
own, fishy way of calculating it. Even in the best of circumstances,
the Fed could not hope to get its money back...that is, unless things
went really bad...and inflation sunk below zero.
But
this week brought news that inflation was headed in the opposite
direction. Last month saw a .5% increase in consumer prices. Annualized,
inflation is running at about 6 times the fed funds rate.
"Specter
of inflation reappears in the U.S.," warned the International Herald
Tribune yesterday:
"We
are nearing the end of a benign, unusual period of faster growth
and lower inflation and moving into a period of slower growth and
higher inflation,’ said John Makin, resident scholar at the American
Enterprise Institute in Washington."
How
Mr. Makin knows these things is anyone's guess. After repeated,
embarrassing efforts here at the Daily Reckoning, we have given
up pretending that we know anything at all, let alone anything about
the future. But the folks at the American Enterprise Institute have
flated out their opinions as if they were facts; in the gassy world
of 2004, they think they know everything or everything they need
to know.
Mr.
Makin might be right about the direction of inflation. Then again,
he might not. One guess is as good as another. There's nothing unusual
about people claiming to know what they cannot. The editorial pages
are full of such pretenders. What is extraordinary is that they
are so confident about their claims. On the basis of a guess, they
are willing to do things that in the past have almost always turned
out to be ruinous.
The
Fed's 1% lending rate is a curiosity. It is extremely rare; a normal,
sentient homo sapiens sapiens would consider it a mistake to bet
the farm on it.
But
that is what people do. On the advice of the nation's leading mortgage
advisor, Alan 'Bubbles' Greenspan, they refinance their homes at
adjustable rates. Maybe rates will go up...maybe they won't. Our
only point is that 1% is extraordinary, and it takes an extraordinarily
confident investor to believe that extraordinary circumstances will
last forever.
A
chart of short-term rates in Grant’s Interest Rate Observer
shows how extraordinary 1% is. Looking back to 1831, a 1% rate has
been reached only two times first in the 1930s...and again
now. There is something unnatural about it, we conclude; it only
happens when there is a crisis on the scale of the Great Depression.
Surely, some crisis must be at hand, or afoot. But what?
Looking
casually at the chart, one sees that that short-term rates are usually
around 5% except in periods of crisis or inflation, when they
can spike up as high as 35%, as they did in the Panic of 1837.
Another
thing you notice is that the pattern of short rates after the establishment
of the Federal Reserve in 1913 is very different from the pattern
pre-Fed. Before the Fed came into being, lenders must have expected
to get back money of about the same value as the money they lent.
There was no upward slope to the yield curve. In fact, rates more
often tended to go down as the length of the loan increased.
Investors
who lent long-term during and after the depression...and right up
to 1981...lost money. They lost much more money than stock market
investors in the crash of '29 or, relatively, in the still-unfinished
bear market of 20002002. Anyone who had offered a 30-year
mortgage, for example, in the early '70s at 6% was practically wiped
out a few years later by inflation. By 1981, short rates had risen
to 16.3%. Long bonds and long mortgages, bought a few years earlier,
were the subject of ridicule.
Money
was made by investors who lent at 16% in 1981. That too, was an
extraordinary year...and hasn't been repeated since. Instead, rates
went down for the next 22 years. At 16%, lenders had a lot to look
forward to high yields and capital gains, too. At 1%, there is
little room on the downside for rates and little upside left for
lenders.
At
today's rates, a person lending for 30 years is making an extraordinary
gamble. The lending rate is lower than last month's inflation figure,
annualized. If nothing changes, the reward he will get for letting
out his money until 2034 will be substantially less than nothing.
Who would take such a bet? Who would make a guess about something
so far in the future and then stake his money on it? Only someone
whose judgment has been flated by the heady vapors of the present.
Still,
the wicked thing coming our way could take rates lower...as happened
in America in the '30s...and as happened in Japan in the '90s...and
leave them there for a long time.
The
inflation people think they see coming could dally a long time before
showing up.
"Inflation
looks to be next import from China," the International Herald
Tribune follows up its inflation story today. China, growing
at 9% per year, is gobbling up the world's resources and primary
products steel and oil, notably.
The
people who think they know what direction inflation will take also
think they know what direction China's economy will take. They could
be right. Or, they could be wrong.
A
letter to a colleague suggests that China's booming growth could
come to a halt tomorrow:
"I
have been a resident of Tokyo since 1989 and although I'm not personally
involved in business here, I teach at a college, I think you may
be interested in my experiences as I lived through the tail end
of Japan’s bubble economy and of course through the prolonged decline.
"Firstly
I'd like to compare Tokyo in '89 with Shanghai in ‘03. On a visit
to Shanghai last year the atmosphere felt curiously similar to how
Tokyo felt in its bubble. This is a purely subjective opinion I
hasten to add, but the air of optimism bordering on invincibility
is almost exactly the same. I noticed a similar feeling in Thailand
in '96'97, where previously helpful people treated the passing
tourist with disdain.
"To
return to Shanghai the trip from the airport to downtown has to
be seen to be believed. The levels of construction projects are
truly outrageous. To reiterate, this is purely a subjective opinion,
but I sold all my Chinese investments shortly after returning, as
the parallels to what I had witnessed in Tokyo were to me ominous."
Now,
we have nearly come back to where we began in the 1930s with short
rates near zero. If we were guessing, we would guess that the downwards
trend still has a way to go.
Today's
ebullient world could collapse in a heap. China could blow up. The
shortage of primary commodities could quickly turn into a glut.
The Fed could cut rates, rather than hike them.
We
don't know. But at least we know it.
P.S.
The American Enterprise Institute must aspire to divinity. Its scholars
claim to know things that mortals never could know before. Not merely
the future of inflation rates...but the future of the entire world.
The 'think tank' thinkers think they can read not only tomorrow's
headlines, but those a half-century ahead. In a remarkable work,
Charles Krauthammer tells us:
"At
the dawn of the twenty-first century, we can see clearly the two
great geopolitical challenges on the horizon: the inexorable rise
of China and the coming demographic collapse of Europe, both of
which will irrevocably disequilibrate the international system.
But those problems come later. They are for mid-century. They are
for the next generation. And that generation will not even get to
these problems unless we first deal with our problem. And our problem
is 9/11 and the roots of Arab-Islamic nihilism."
Mr.
Krauthammer may have views on the fed funds rate in 2054, too. We
don't know. He is entitled to believe any goofy thing he wants.
And if he wants to bet his own money on his guesswork, so much the
better. But what is really remarkable about today's 'flationary
period is that people not only believe they can look into the future,
but they are also so sure they can get what they expect, they are
perfectly willing to kill people to make sure.
April
19, 2004
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
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