Resistance…Denial…Debt
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
We Americans
are a people in revolt against fate. Wealth and power are migrating
from West to East…our empire is peaking out…our dollar is doomed if only we could take it more gracefully. Instead, politicians,
central bankers and ordinary consumers want to dispute it, as if
they could stop the tides of history, like Xerxes’s troops doing
battle with the waves.
Just listen
to the mindless rants coming from Congress: The Arabs want to take
over our ports; the Chinese are taking over our oil companies! What
do they think this is…a free country? Last year, 96 American companies
were bought by firms from emerging markets. Those transactions were
worth about $14 billion and were hardly noticed. But when a big
offer makes the headlines, you can count on resistance, indignation,
and dissembling.
Who do these
Chinese think they are? How dare they try to stabilize their economy
by tying their currency to that of their largest trading partner?
Don’t they know they’re supposed to let their paper money rise so
ours can fall?
Meanwhile,
the Financial Times reports on "How China is Winning
the Resources and the Loyalties of Africa." China needs resources;
Africa has a lot of them. So far, they seem to be going after them
honestly with smiles and cash, both of which they have in abundance.
Back in the
homeland, consumers spend more than they earn, borrowing the shortfall
from Asia. And why not? They deny that there is any problem at all.
If there is a problem, they’re sure it can be solved with more debt.
Have real hourly wages gone down? They don’t seem to have noticed.
Don’t they already owe a lot of money to a lot of people? It doesn’t
seem to bother them. And, isn’t most of the growth since 2001 simply
a by-product of a booming housing market? It never seems to occur
to them that there is anything wrong with it.
Investors,
too, deny that there is a problem. They buy stocks at an average
of 20 times earnings with a dividend yield below 2%. How do they
expect to make any money? And over in the bond market, at current
yields, after taxes and inflation, an investor is practically guaranteed
to lose money. How could he miss it? The math is so simple: a 4.5%
yield…less inflation of 4% (being optimistic about it)…leaves only
half a percentage point to pay taxes. There is no way that will
work.
But, Americans
have been told that they have the world’s most dynamic and flexible
economy, and they believe it.
What they really
have is a mature, shopworn economy struggling to appear young. What
can it do but dye its hair, pin back its face, and lie?
Around the world, people are beginning to notice the signs. While
no maturing economy can avoid some sag, bulges and lines, it is
the resistance, denial and debt that produce the real problems.
The Russian
newspaper, Pravda, reports:
"The United
States is heading to financial crisis at top speed. That is correct,
America will default on its foreign debt sooner or later if the
actual trends remain unchanged. Consequently, the whole dollar-based
world (including savings in U.S. currency) may crumble. The picture
looks pretty grim this time around. Several factors will have an
extremely detrimental effect on the dollar, according to U.S. Secretary
of the Treasury John Snow who forwarded a letter full of ominous
predictions to 21 members of U.S. Congress. The letter was made
public after the markets had been closed for Christmas and New Year's
holidays – a rather appropriate precautionary move in terms of the
international foreign exchange market, which is extremely sensitive
to any sound produced by U.S. bureaucrats.
"Besides,
the U.S. Federal Reserve is going to stop publishing the so-called
‘M 3 aggregate’ reports i.e., data on increase rates in money supply.
Given the New Year's predictions by John Snow, the Fed's intentions
look pretty suspicious. In other words, the international community
will have no tool for measuring a real value of the dollar…
"The Fed
is going to pull the plug on the data in March this year. Several
events should occur in different countries more or less at the same
time and thus damage credibility of the U.S. securities. Risk-averse
investors get rid of speculative securities e.g., the dollar securities
under the circumstances.
"All in
all, the situation is quite alarming though it looks like a play
being staged on purpose."
What
purpose?
Peter Schiff:
"The Fed distracts the audience with short-term rate hikes,
while behind its back it monetizes long-term government bonds. It
creates the illusion of its being an inflation fighter, while in
reality it is an inflation creator. No wonder it wants to further
cover its tracks by no longer reporting M3!
"My
guess is that the Fed’s goal is to keep long-term interest rates
low long enough to allow millions of homeowners to refinance their
adjustable rate mortgages into 40 or 50 year fixed-rate loans, and
to create enough inflation to cause nominal incomes to rise sufficiently
in order to enable homeowners to make higher debt payments and prevent
nominal home prices from collapsing."
February
28, 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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