So
Long, 2006
by
Bill Bonner
by Bill Bonner
DIGG THIS
The year is
winding down. Only a few precious days are left.
Here in France,
it is very cold...and very, very gray. We can barely see more than
50 yards in any direction; the fog is so thick.
"I woke
up this morning and I looked out my window...and it was just gray.
I couldn’t
see a thing," said our son, Jules.
So, we sit
in our little office...wondering. How does it all work? What is
going on? What’s it all about?
No man with
teenaged children can help but be a bit of a philosopher – it comes
with the job. He can’t help but wonder why people act the way they
do.
We have four
of our six children with us this Christmas. Our two oldest children
are otherwise engaged – one as a ski instructor, the other in Florida,
preparing to move house. But four is enough – combined with the
season – to put us in a reflective mood.
But, reflection
on personal matters we shall leave to late at night, dear reader....
During business
hours, we reflect on your behalf.
We begin today’s
reflection with sad news.
James Brown
didn’t "feel good" last week. He was hot in the ’60s...but
now, he’s as cold as yesterday’s hits. And poor Gerald Ford too.
The man seemed like a decent president. We don’t know of anyone
arrested on the Ford Act. We don’t remember any pre-emptive wars
that Gerald Ford got us into. Nor do we recall any major domestic
initiatives – no wars on poverty or drugs started by the man. As
near as we can remember, Gerald Ford left the nation no worse off
than he found it...something that few presidents could say.
Meanwhile,
in the financial world, we continue to wonder how and when the present
"good times" will pass away. A boom must die too, like
everything. Every period of tranquility and prosperity is followed
by a period of doom and gloom...especially when the prosperity is
based on a lie or on stealing from the future.
Today’s frothy
financial world bubbles on top of both lies and theft. The big lie
is that you can create "money" by printing up dollars
and other paper currencies. The theft comes from spending the money
now and pushing the bill into future years...onto future generations.
We don’t mind
using words like "theft" or "lies," but most
economists would regard our way of looking at things as "moralistic."
They imagine that they can just add up columns of numbers...and
tinker with the economy as though it were a motor. After all, when
a motor begins to malfunction, you don’t wonder what it did wrong
or why. You get out a screwdriver and a wrench and go to work on
it.
The modern
economist is Mr. Goodwrench. If the economy has a problem, he fixes
it. Just tighten up on interest rates. Or, unscrew the reserve requirements.
Turn that knob. Lift that lever.
If only the
machine would do what it’s supposed to do!
But, of course,
the economy is not a machine. It is not made up of hard metal parts...but
of soft human beings. And human beings do not react like copper
and steel. They react like people, which is to say they don’t always
do what you want them to do. Instead, they react to their own expectations,
their own hopes, their own illusions and prejudices.
For the moment,
investors are fat and happy. They have enjoyed the great boom of
the last quarter century. Now, they can imagine nothing else. But
somehow, sometime...the summer has to give way to the winter. The
day has to yield to the night. The good times have to be replaced
by bad ones. And people who "feel good" in the ’60s...have
to drop dead in the new century.
• Gold was
our investment choice for 2006. Fortunately, it has gone up 20%
during the year – substantially more than the S&P (up 13%).
The only stocks that have done as well as gold are (surprise, surprise)
defense companies. Weapons and finance are about the only industries
in America that are still profitable and growing. The people in
those industries are doing very well. Goldman Sachs, for example,
is scheduled to give out $16.5 billion in bonuses this year.
We know how
weapons companies make their money. And the weapons industry ought
to be one that can resist foreign competition, since the United
States is the world’s only super-power. It buys far more weapons
than any other nation. And it favors domestic manufacturers; for
the obvious reason that it wishes not only to have the best weapons
in the world, but to deny them to its competitors. Making weapons
of mass destruction should be a good business to be in...and should
remain a good business for many years.
But how does
Goldman make money? Mergers, acquisitions, finance, lending...this
too has been a good business. When the credit cycle expands phase,
lending money is a growth industry. But when the credit cycle turns
downward, lenders take losses. Not only are there fewer borrowers,
many of yesterday’s borrowers turn out to be worse credit risks
than the lenders imagined.
• And back
to our farm...
"I remember
when I was your age...well, maybe a little younger," continued
M. Tourraine, our game keeper, who had been reminiscing.
"Those
were the happiest years of my life. Whenever I had a free moment,
I’d get on my bicycle, or drive my old car down here. Because here
is where Michel lived. You know. You bought the property from his
widow.
"Michel
and I were close friends. And then, when his brother Edward came
back from the Navy...the three of us were almost inseparable. We
would go hunting all the time. Or we’d play cards. Or go fishing.
What a life it was. Those were good years in France, after the war.
The economy was strong. And it was before all the regulations and
taxes made it so difficult to live....
"You could
pretty much do what you wanted. So, we would work hard, but we managed
to have a lot of fun too....
"And
this is almost unbelievable – all of us got married to three sisters!
I married Anne-Marie, Michel married Clothilde, and Edward married
Catherine. We three couples all got along so well...what fun it
was...
"But
then, I was in Switzerland on vacation when I got a call. Michel
had died of a heart attack at the age of 42. Only two years later,
if I remember right, Edward, his brother, also died of exactly the
same heart attack. The two sisters – Clothilde and Catherine – were
only in their late 20s or early 30s, each of them with four or five
children. All of a sudden, life wasn’t so carefree for any of us.
Everything had changed. Naturally, I tried to do what I could for
them. Catherine was all right; she went on with life. But Clothilde
withdrew from the world. She felt like everyone was taking advantage
of her...and she didn’t want to see anyone. Even at Christmas and
Easter holidays, she kept her children and herself away from everyone.
For the next 12 years, I never set foot in this place.
"It was
sad...but that’s what happens. When someone dies, it can change
everything."
December
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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