General
Market vs. the Feds, the Fixers, and Their WMD
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
The battle
is on!
But lets
take a quick look at the combatants
and try to understand what
is really going on.
On the one
side is General Market. Hes a sly, unpredictable
some
would say unbeatable
foe. Hes also extremely
aggressive.
On the other
side, there are the feds
the fixers
the meddlers
the
central bankers and finance ministers. They have their ground troops,
their weapons of mass destruction, their defensive ramparts, and
their strategic theories. And many people believe they have the
ultimate weapon in this war the Nuclear Option
For the last
year and a half, General Market has been master of the field. Hes
rolled back the fixers everywhere. The worlds stock markets
have suffered defeat after defeat wiping out about half their
wealth, about $30 trillion worth. Even markets thought to be decoupled
with those of the Western world such as China and India
fell right over as soon as General Market attacked.
As to property
General
Market has already captured about 25% of the domestic real estate
in the United States
and who knows how much overseas.
In some places,
U.S. housing has suffered more damage than from a fire or a tornado.
In Lehigh Acres, near Fort Myers, Florida, the New York Times
says houses are selling 80% off their peaks. Fast food restaurants
are laying people off or closing. Crime is up, school enrollment
is down and one in four residents received food stamps in December,
nearly a fourfold increase since 2006.
Its back
to the 30s in Lee County, Florida:
The
organizations offering food in Lehigh Acres have seen demand increase
by as much as 75% in the last year. And the people being served
are no longer just the chronic poor. The line at Faith Lutheran
had a mix of ages, races, and former income levels.
Abandoned houses
are stripped of anything that can be sold
and used by drug
gangs.
And its
not just housing that is being abandoned. Ghost malls,
are coming soon, says one commentator. People without money dont
buy stuff. And so, malls are where they dont go. Malls become
abandoned
deserted
vandalized, taken over by gangs and
crazy people.
Hasnt
happened yet? Stay tuned
General Market
has done to world property values about what Sherman did to Atlanta.
Nobody knows the total loss, but it is probably near $15 trillion
And there are
huge losses in other areas too. Corporate bond prices especially
in the junk category have collapsed. Hedge funds,
banks and investment firms have lost billions in speculations. The
value of minerals and oil have fallen 50%75%.
Whats
the total damage? Rupert Murdoch says its around $50 trillion
which is probably not too far off the market.
But the feds
arent completely beaten. Theyre mobilizing all over
the world to fight the depression. Yes, the d word has
escaped the censors. Bill Gross of PIMCO says the US could be headed
for a mini-depression.” And over at MSN Money, Jon Markman
wonders if it isnt already too late to escape a depression?
We keep pointing
out that you can fight a recession with rate cuts and more public
spending, but you cant beat a depression using those tactics.
Still, the
feds are going to try! Todays news tells us that theyre
becoming more and more desperate.
Obama
rolls out his big guns, says the headline in the International
Herald Tribune. The big guns are blasting away in favor of the administrations
Boondogglization program:
Larry Summers
told Congress to pass Obamas stimulus bill as quickly
as possible, to contain what is a very damaging and potentially
deflationary spiral.
Obama himself
said we might be on the verge of catastrophe. And Summers
added, If there was ever a moment to transcend politics, this
is that moment.
But what good
is $1 trillion worth of boondoggle spending going to do? General
Market has just erased $50 trillion assets. All together, the feds
have probably been able to put back a couple trillion at
most. And most of what they are putting back is just taken from
some other front
it is not really a net increase in the feds
firepower.
There are
two main schools of thought on the bailouts.
1) they are
not targeted properly (the media spends a lot of ink debating whether
the bailouts should be loans, asset purchases, direct takeovers,
bad banks or other gimcrackery)
2) they are
not big enough
(which we will discuss in a minute)
And then, theres
our hooky school of thought too. If there is evidence or experience
to suggest that these bailout plans will work we havent heard
of it. In the two instances in which they were tried, they failed.
Plus, there is no theory that makes any sense to us explaining why
or how they SHOULD work. Bad bets dont get better when you
lend the bettor more money. They just become more expensive.
But no one
is interested in our analysis or our advice. We keep our Presidents
Hotline available. Obama can call anytime he wants. Well
even pay for the call. But no government has ever asked our counsel;
probably, none ever will.
So, lets
return to the advice that the feds are taking seriously:
The U.S. risks
falling into an economic abyss, says Nobel-prize winning
economist Paul Krugman. He says were on the edge of
catastrophe.
Hold on a minute.
Krugmans warning bell sounds for all the world like the one
we used to ring regularly. We used words like abyss
catastrophe
disaster
Armageddon.
We needed to yell like that to get readers attention. Most
ignored us anyway; they thought we were kooky alarmists. Besides,
they were sure everything was great and getting better all the time.
Now, we no
longer have to use words like apocalypse and armageddon.
Thank God. Words like that are hard to spell. Besides the facts
shout loudly enough. We dont need to get anyones attention.
Whats needed now is quiet reflection.
Krugman is
screaming because he thinks the U.S. bailout plan is not bold enough.
Hes right about that. Youre not going to offset General
Markets $50 trillion in damages with $1 trillion in boodoggles.
Krugman thinks you need to spend a lot more.
The aforementioned
Bill Gross of PIMCO agrees. He says trillions will have
to be spent.
And so, dear
reader, the war goes on.
And its
getting more and more expensive. General Market does his damage.
And the cost of fighting him mounts. Goldman Sachs says the U.S.
Treasury will borrow $2.5 trillion this fiscal year.
How are they
going to borrow that kind of money without driving up the price
of borrowed funds? Borrow from yourself, say the simpleton
advisors. Theyre urging the Fed to buy the Treasurys
paper itself. That way, America wont be beholden to foreign
lenders notably, the Chinese and bond yields wont
be forced up by the buying pressure.
But wait a
lil cotton pickin minute. Where does the Fed get trillions
of dollars to buy U.S. paper? Oh, we forgot
it just creates
it out of thin air.
Two and a half
trillion is nothing but a little 2 and a little 5
followed by 11 little zeros. Heck, the Fed has all the zeros you
could want. If not, it can always borrow some from Gideon Gono.
He just took 12 zeros off the Zimbabwe dollar; maybe well
be able to use them in the US.
More tomorrow
on
the feds counterattack
the lack of pricing power
and
the Nuclear Option
We were out
in Normandy over the weekend. It snowed all day Saturday. But we
made a fire in the fireplace and enjoyed a quiet evening.
On Sunday,
a reporter from the New York Times came to lunch.
Im
doing a piece on Americans who have bought these great houses in
France, she explained. Id like to tell your story
to our readers.
Its
a sad tale, we began. A tale of woe, hardship, and stupidity
worthy of a banker
The word
château, as perhaps you know, means money pit
in English. You throw your money into the pit, and the local people
and the tax collectors come and dig it out. You start out in good
shape
with a broken down chateau. You end up with a chateau
in good shape; and youre broken down. But its okay.
The balance of the worlds money system is maintained. Money
is redistributed from weak hands to stronger ones
its
all a part of the big picture.
Why didnt
you just sell the place? she asked.
Oh
it
doesnt really work that way. The world of money, I mean. People
dont do things because they make them richer. Money has to
circulate. If you dont have it, you need to get it. If you
have it, you need to get rid of it. Thats just the way things
work. Of course, you dont WANT to get rid of it. At least
not consciously. But you always have some weakness
some feeble
place in the dike that protects your New Orleans. And sooner or
later sooner, most likely the gods find your weak
spot. And that is where the flooding begins.
You
see, we made a little money in the boom, like everyone else. But
as a gloom and doom economist, we couldnt lose it like everyone
else in the bust. We knew stocks were going down. And even oil
we
knew it was a bubble. So, we couldnt hold stocks in Lehman
Bros. We couldnt invest in derivatives. We knew Madoff was
up to something
we didnt know what, of course.
Since
we spent so much time thinking about how dangerous and absurd the
financial markets were, we couldnt just sit with our money
fully invested on Wall Street. We would have felt like fools. We
had to find some more original way to part with it.
All the
easy avenues to losing money were blocked off to us. Any reasonable
person would have dumped this place long ago. Its cold. Its
hard work. Its one problem after another. But we needed it.
We come out here every weekend we can
we cut trees
we
paint windows
we fix walls and repair plumbing. And every day,
we get poorer. You see, the chateau plays a valuable role. We have
a weakness for old stones
old buildings
and old liquor.
The gods discovered it
and put this place in front of us
like
a bottle of Jim Beam in front of a dipsomaniac. You cant argue
with the gods. Besides, youve got to keep the great cycle
of money turning. We dont keep at it for ourselves, in other
words, but for the good of the human race.
Do you
see?
Uh
I
guess so
February
11, 2009
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 and
the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs,
Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
Copyright
© 2009 Bill Bonner
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