Altered State of the Union
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
This year,
you can hardly throw a stone in any direction without hitting an
economist who tells you why the dollar will continue to be strong.
Our advice: throw it good and hard.
We recall more
than a year ago or so, we thought the dollar should go down. What
bothered us was that so many other people thought so too.
We have never
seen a line of people we wanted to join. In the investment world,
crowds cause you to lose your money. In the rest of the world, they
cause you to lose your dignity, and occasionally, as illustrated
by the recent news from Mecca, your life.
The "crowded
trade" is one you want to avoid, because if it is too popular, the
profit has already been taken out by the people who go there before
you. They've bid up the price so you're no longer getting a bargain.
And if your side of the trade is crowded, who is left to take the
other side? If there are no fools ready to buy what you are selling,
or sell what you are buying, then you are the fool.
We remember
being bothered by the fact that too many people thought the dollar
would go down. Markets do not usually reward the crowd; they punish
it. But how could the crowd of people who thought the dollar would
go down be punished? The dollar was almost certain to go down, we
figured. Where was the surprise? What would happen that investors
did not expect, which caught most of them off guard?
Either the
dollar would not go down, we figured, or it would go down a lot
further and a lot faster than expected. In the first scenario, almost
everyone would be surprised including Warren Buffett, who was
short. In the second, those who expected a graceful decline in the
greenback would have been delighted and satisfied with a 10% drop.
They would have congratulated themselves and taken their profits;
then, the dollar might have slipped 10% more. One way or another,
there had to be a surprise coming.
There was.
And it surprised us. The dollar rallied. From under 130 to the euro,
the buck rose to over 120. (That is, you got fewer dollars per euro.)
It happened because the Fed was raising rates, and because the news
from Europe was discouraging; the euro bottomed out after the French
failed to ratify the new European constitution.
Now, the rate
increases are just about over (only another 25 basis points are
expected). The cars have stopped burning in France. The Germans
have a new person at the head of government. Europe has a positive
trade balance, and it isn't spending a trillion dollars trying to
bring the desert tribes under control.
And so, the
euro gains.
Meanwhile,
Japan finally seems on the mend after 15 years of collapsing asset
prices and consumer price deflation. Foreign investors are going
back into the Japanese market and pushing on the yen.
And, from America,
the news is worse than ever. The United States has the biggest trade
deficits ever, with a $1 trillion federal deficit projected, and
a soaring money supply. The world has never seen so much wonderful
money sloshing around, nor so many claims against it.
Once again,
the dollar seems sure to go down. But now, investors seem not to
notice. "Buffett was wrong," they say to one another. See, the big
dope isn't so smart after all. Buffett has always said, "You can
never make money betting against America."
The world is
full of surprises. In the financial world, there are so many of
them that we are surprised when we are not surprised. Last year,
investors were surprised when the dollar didn't fall. This year,
we may be surprised by how much it does.
While
the dollar rose against foreign currencies last year, it fell sharply
versus the "real money" against which all currencies are ultimately
measured: gold. Financial risks are inversely correlated to the
perception of them. When people see no clouds on the horizon, watch
out. It is sure to rain.
The average
investor's appreciation for risk seems to be at an epochal low.
He looks right. He looks left. Nowhere does he see anything to worry
about.
He must have
his eyes closed. For on both sides, as well as in front and behind,
are the biggest financial risks in history never has so much money
and credit gushed into the world financial system...including an
estimated $200 trillion in derivative contracts.
So far, only
gold seems to see the risks. The price has doubled since George
W. Bush became president. Our guess is that it will double again
before he leaves office.
Again, there
are always surprises. No one knows what gold will do, but all know
what it will not do. It will not disappear as a store of value.
We took
the train down from Paris last night. Then, we drove to the airport
in Limoges to pick up Maria and her friends. This weekend is Maria's
20th birthday. She wanted to come to the country in France to celebrate.
Driving down
to Limoges, the fog was so thick we could barely make out the car
in front of us. We were sure were wasting our time; the airport
would be closed. No pilot would land in this fog, we thought. Then,
when we arrived at the airport, gauzed as it was in dense fog, there
was barely a sign of life. It looked as though the whole place had
closed up and everyone had gone home.
The
airport is very small and very relaxed. There are no security announcements...and
no police patrolling with automatic weapons. There is not even a
parking guard. We pulled up in front of the terminal, turned off
the engine and walked inside. Almost everything was closed, but
there at the bar, we saw Maria's smiling face.
"How did the
plane land in all this fog?" we wanted to know.
"I
don't know, Daddy. I looked out the window and I thought we were
still up in the clouds. And then it banged down on the runway. We
couldn't even see the runway lights."
Ryanair. One
of Europe's upstart discount airlines: London to Limoges, roundtrip
for less than 40 pounds. Pray for them.
January
16, 2006
Bill
Bonner [send
him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial
Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st
Century and
Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis.
Copyright
© 2006 Bill Bonner
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