World
Economy: Negative Growth or Positive Collapse?
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Negative
growth, says todays paper.
Yes, dear reader.
Stocks are advancing to the rear
and economies are growing
smaller.
How we love these oxymorons! If only we could age negatively
and
eat all we wanted and gain minus pounds!
The commentators
have it all wrong. Look on the bright side. The world economy is
not in a period of negative growth. Its in a period of positive
collapse! Thats why the Great Depression was so great, after
all. Whats positive about this depression is that it is clearing
away a generations worth of mistakes, misallocations of resources
and misplaced confidence.
Stocks are
down more than 20% this year. The U.S. economy is retreating at
more than 6% per year. Britain is walking backwards at a 2% pace.
And Japan? Wow
when it comes to negative growth, the Japanese
are experts. Their economy is growing negatively at more than 12%
per year. If this keeps up, by the time the next bull market comes
along, there wont be any Japanese economy left.
The Asian Development
Bank says the losses so far have cost the world $50 trillion.
The Financial
Times reports:
The
ADBs estimates take into account falling stock market valuations
and losses in the value of bonds supported by mortgages and other
assets, though not financial derivatives. About a fifth of the
losses in dollar terms arise from the depreciation of many currencies
against the dollar.
The last estimate
of the total worlds wealth we saw was $100 trillion. If these
estimates are correct, the planet has lost about half its value.
But who bids for planet earth?
Just about
everything that existed the real wealth of the world
still exists. What disappeared were the fantasy financial evaluations.
A truck is a truck is a truck. It doesnt become less of a
truck just because the world has entered a period of financial contraction.
It is just as serviceable now as it was two years ago. And the poor
guy who had a trucking company keeps on trucking
But now he
has a whole lot less trucking to do than he did before. The stores
arent moving as much merchandise
so no need to deliver
so much. And so the value of his truck in terms of how much
revenue it can produce has gone down. So too has the value
of his trucking company. Maybe he should never have bought that
truck in the first place
The Dow is
down near 6,500. Only 1,500 points to go. At least, that was our
guess a few years ago. We figured that the Dow would have to go
to 5,000 in order to get down to real bottom prices.
Will the bear
market finally be over then? Nope. Thats just where you can
begin looking for a bottom. Remember, markets tend to overshoot.
So far, the
Dow has wiped out 43 years of gains. Adjusted for inflation, it
was at this level back when the Beach Boys and the Beatles were
just starting out. Actually, we dont remember when the Beach
Boys and the Beatles began
but it must have been in the mid-60s.
Back in 66,
the Dow hit a high for the cycle. It had been going up since the
bottom in 1949. After the peak in 66, it retreated
and
then staged another attack on the summit two years later. But inflation
was getting pumped up too
and in real terms, the 68 high
failed to better the peak of 66.
From 66
to 82 it was down, down, down. Then, Business Week
threw in the towel: The Death of Equities said the cover
story. Then, it was up, up, up
until
well, you remember
the rest.
We only bring
this up to warn readers: these major cycles take time. So far, the
Dow has only gotten down to the 66 TOP. Now, it has to get
to the 82 BOTTOM
adjusted for inflation. Where would
that be?
Well
.as
we recall, the Dow was barely at 1,000 when the bull market began.
And if adjust that to consumer price inflation, we come to a 2,0003,000.
Will it get
there? Who knows?
The Dow gained
32 points on Friday
a slight bounce up at the end of a dismal
week. Oil rose to $45. And gold, which seems to have finished its
correction, ended the week at $942.
Have
you bought your gold and silver yet? writes our intrepid correspondent
Byron King.
You ought
to have 510% of your portfolio in gold and silver, and I mean
the real, physical stuff.
Oh, you
havent gotten around to buying any gold or silver yet? Let
me quote Rudyard Kipling, from his poem Gunga Din. You
need to put some juldee in it. Quick! Go and get some
precious metals! Dont make me say I told you so, because I
will.
Indeed,
I told you so. Or we told you so. Buy gold and silver. If you follow
almost any of the publications from Agora Financial, you ought to
know that in one way or another, for about 10 years, Agora has been
advising people (this means you) to buy precious metals. Back then,
in the good old days of Y2K, gold was selling for well under $300
per ounce. Silver was going at $23 per ounce. Lately, gold
has been selling in the $900 range, with an excursion over $1,000
about two weeks ago. Silver is trading in the $1214 range.
Starting
in 1999, Bill Bonner told you to buy gold. Bill even helpfully labeled
it The trade of the decade. Over the years, Agora Financial
published countless essays about gold from the Mogambo Guru, who
was never subtle about it. Buy freaking gold, said Mogambo.
Or if you dont buy gold, buy silver, he said.
You could look it up.
Many
other Agora editors and contributors told you to buy gold and silver.
Addison Wiggin, Eric Fry and Dan Denning told you to buy it. Agora
Financial published guest articles from the likes of Gary North,
Doug Casey, Marc Faber and many others about buying precious metals.
Ive been writing about gold in Agora Financial publications
since 2003, when I was a mere unpaid correspondent in Pittsburgh
composing occasional notes for The Daily Reckoning. When
all else fails (and it will), I said, own gold.
The company
that Thomas Edison started cut its dividend for the first time in
71 years. Some analysts think GE, too, could default thanks
to the companys move into the financial sector.
Hotels are
going into foreclosure too, says USA Today.
Dow Chemical
is trading at a 24-year low.
And the Great
Red Hope the idea that China will pull the entire world
economy out of a depression is pure fantasy,
writes William Pesek.
China relies
on exports. And the export business sucks. It will be lucky to get
through this downturn without a revolution.
An Economist
headline: Are Investors Still too Optimistic?
Our guess:
yes. Most of the action on the stock markets is professional buying
and selling. The amateurs seem to be largely sitting on the sidelines,
waiting for a rebound to get back in.
They
still havent gotten the message. This isnt a recession.
There wont be a quick recovery. And the bailout/stimulus plans
wont work.
This is depression.
It will take years to restructure the economy. And bailout/stimulus
plans just slow down the process.
Looking back
at the Dow
if you take the market peak of January 2000 as the
long-term cyclical top
you might expect an eventual bottom
1020 years later
and then a new bull market that would
return prices to their peak highs 1020 after that. Between
the high of 29 and the next major high in 66 was 37
years. Between the 66 high and the 00 high was 34 years.
So
sit back. Relax. Most likely, well see stock prices much lower
for
much longer. Look for a return to 00 highs in 2035.
Learn to make
a correction your friend. Remember, this is a positive collapse,
not negative growth. It is correcting the stupid growth
of the bubble years. What really grew during that period was consumer
spending in the United States and Britain. And it grew far beyond
the ability of Anglo-Americans to pay for it. Because they were
spending too much, the whole world economy bent to sell them too
much. The Chinese built too many factories. The shippers built too
many vessels. The truckers bought too many trucks. The homebuilders
put up too many hovels. The retailers expanded too much
the
malls were overbuilt
etc. etc. etc.
Now, in this
period of positive collapse, all that surplus capacity is being
marked down to what it is really worth
liquidated
and
restructured.
Give it time,
dear reader. Let Mr. Market do his work.
March
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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