The E-Z Money
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
This year will
be another year of "easy money," says AFP. Asian exporters want
to keep their currencies cheap to help exports. Europeans want cheap
money to lift employment. Oil exporters have so much money they
don't know what to do with it. (Venezuela is so desperate to get
rid of money, it is offering to lend to its neighbors. More below.)
And, of course, Americans are printing the stuff in bulk. If the
money supply in the United States were to continue expanding at
the current rate, it would add more new money in 18 months than
the current value of all the gold ever mined since the days of King
Midas.
Why so much
new money? The empire needs it.
Wars, floods,
bread, circuses an empire is an expensive business. The U.S.
federal deficit was more than $300 billion last year. This year
it is expected to rise to over $400 billion, perhaps even beating
the record set in 2004. Meanwhile, in external commerce, the nation
spends $700 billion more than it receives each year. Already, the
net external debt of the United States approaches $3 trillion.
The exact day
on which Alan Greenspan discovered easy money is recorded in our
first book, Financial Reckoning Day. It was in the mid 1990s, the
day after he made his famous "irrational exuberance" speech, in
which he worried about over-valuations in the stock market. Congress
called him in. "Do you know who pays your salary?" the pols asked
him. His job was to pump up asset prices, they reminded him, not
hold them down. The maestro stood up, waved his hands, and did what
he was told to do. He never looked back. America has been a land
of E-Z money ever since.
Richard Benson
explains:
"After Alan
Greenspan gave his famous 'irrational exuberance' speech about
the stock market, he stopped being rational and prudent, and became
rational and profligate. He discovered that the stock market bubble
fostered by too much easy credit made consumers
feel really wealthy. By letting money and credit run wild, the
economy roared, and rising stock market prices created such a
false sense of wealth that consumers stopped saving. By 2000,
Americans had hardly saved anything and domestic savings to recycle
didn't exist. Around this time, Mr. Greenspan declared that 'bubbles
should not be popped' but the Federal Reserve's job would be to
clean up the mess if the bubbles collapsed on their own. So, how
does a popped bubble get cleaned up? With easy money, of course!"
But easy money,
like easy virtue, has its time and place. A policy of E-Z money
all the time, soon leads to too much money.
Alan Greenspan's
response to the tech stock bubble was easier money. Interest rates
went to near zero...and stayed there for two years. The result was
a new, bigger and more dangerous bubble in housing.
"By 2004,
it was time to help another sitting president to get re-elected,"
Benson continues. "The housing market was booming and home equity
extraction added about $800 billion (a year) to spending, even
though this spending left a massive trail of debt." In looking
back now, you can't help but notice how the economic model has
changed. For decades, America had an economic model built around
recycling savings into investment. In a few short years, those
savings have simply vanished and our society has become comfortably
cavalier about borrowing far more than they earn."
But just as
you never know when a woman of easy virtue will join the church
choir, you never know when easy money will start playing hard to
get. A test of just how easy money will be in 2006 is coming in
the next 90 days, says Bloomberg. The United States is asking lenders
for $171 billion in U.S. Treasury notes and bonds. The most recent
auction of T-notes was a disappointment; there was surprisingly
little demand.
Maybe lenders,
mostly foreign, are getting tired of so much U.S. debt. If so, money
won't be as easy as everyone expects. Not that the dollar is likely
to become an honest currency, but it might not give itself away
so cheaply.
Uh oh...the
house-price boom seems to be over even in Hawaii. Yes, on
the island of Oahu, for example, the median house sold for $418,000
in November. That was 8% less than the year before.
"This is happening
all over the country," explains Dan Denning. "People's houses are
losing value all the time and they don't even realize it."
"Folks who
refinanced a year or two ago are finding out their homes are worth
less than the appraised value. All over the country, appraisals
have been inflated by lenders eager to make loans and real estate
agents eager to close the deal whatever it takes.
"I predict
that this appraisal scandal will explode soon in the mainstream
media. When this mess falls apart, the whole country will discover
how lenders and real estate agents have pressured appraisers to
overvalue homes."
Get the E-Z money while you can. That seems to be the chant of America's
upper management. Who cares about the shareholders! Stiff the creditors!
To heck with the employees! We read in yesterday's paper that UAL
executives will share out $115 million in a settlement with creditors,
as the airline comes out of bankruptcy. The new CEO will get $8
million in salary, signing bonus and various other emoluments looted
from their rightful owners. Plus, if we read it right, he will get
millions more in stock options.
Could
no one be found who would do the work for less? U.S. airlines tend
to go broke even when managed by the best industry professionals
money can buy. Why not save some money and let them go broke under
the direction of an honest mechanic?
January
20, 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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