Still
Searching for a Recovery
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Paris,
France The mobs are forming
Give the sans-culottes
a chance
and theyll turn violent. So far, two bosses
have been held hostage in France. Employees wanted something the
bosses either couldnt or wouldnt give.
In England,
the yahoos attacked poor Sir Fred Goodwins house. Fred ran
the Royal Bank of Scotland into the ground; youd think the
rabble would be delighted.
In America,
meanwhile, they organize bus tours to gawk at AIG executives
houses
and howl for blood. Apologize, resign
or commit
suicide, suggested Senator Grassley.
The corporate
security business is booming, says the International Herald
Tribune.
Until now,
the whole bonus/executive pay/bailout spectacle was just an amusing
diversion diverting the publics attention with a trifling
few million dollars, while the feds picked their pockets for trillions.
But now, its turning ugly.
Our guess is
that the blood will flow
but later. Its still fairly
early in the correction. Investors have lost money lots of
it. Homeowners have lost their homes. Working stiffs and Wall Street
sharpies have both lost their jobs. But the violence-prone yahoos
still expect something for nothing. The bailout plans will work,
they believe. The government will step in and save them. They havent
figured out that the governments bailouts are just making
their situation worse.
Todays
International Herald Tribune tells that shanty-towns
are beginning to appear throughout the United States. People are
setting up tent communities
shacks
and Rio-style favelas
in America. The paper shows a photo of a group of tents under
a California freeway. Its not hard to understand why. Many
families live paycheck to paycheck
just one week ahead of the
rent payments. If the paychecks stop even for a short time
theyre in trouble.
When credit
is expanding, jobs are plentiful and credit is willing. Lose a job
and you can always get another. And you can fill in the gap in your
budget with credit cards. But that was then
this is now. Advertise
a job opening now and youre likely to get hundreds of applicants.
And not only is it harder to get a job
its harder to
get a line of credit too. And even people who still have credit
are more reluctant to use it. They know where that leads; many would
prefer to live under a highway than to run up more debt.
A big change
in attitude has taken place. People used to think that whatever
they needed, they could get it just in time.” Thats
why we have 24-7 liquor stores, all-night convenience shops and
cash machines on every street corner. But something has gone wrong
with the just in time system. The cash machines arent
as yielding as they used to be. Neither is the housing market. Or
the job market. Sometimes, they just say no.
Now, people
want a little cash in their pocket
just in case.
But what do
we know? We missed the whole credit cycle. When we were young and
in need of credit, the banks were still smart enough not to lend
to us. When we got older, we were smart enough not to borrow.
But pity people
about 20 years younger than we are. They were just starting out
having
children
buying houses
at a time when the banks had lost
their minds. Credit was as easy to get as a social disease. Now,
the debt is even harder to get rid of. Old people
and young
people
tend to have little debt. Its the people in between
who are hurting.
But enough
rambling
Everyones
looking for the recovery. The commentators think they see signs
of it everywhere. Commodities are rising. Stocks are going up. Even
houses are said to be selling better than they were a few weeks
ago.
Risk
appetite grows on hope US is near bottom, says the FT
today.
The Dow rose
174 points yesterday. Oil, the dollar, and gold moved little.
Maybe you should
stop reading here
before we get to the rest of the story”
But first,
we turn to Ian in Baltimore for more news:
On the
housing front, we see a ray of hope, writes Ian in todays
issue of The 5
Min. Forecast.
According
to this chart, the precipitous fall in home prices might start to
ease up soon:

The current
crisis has finally wiped out the bubble in home prices, continues
Ian. Adjusted for inflation, the price of median single family
home has plunged 33% from its 2005 high. Now at pre-mania levels,
an average of $165,000, home prices have a reason to at least slow
down their rapid decay.
Ouch
sorry
if you bought your home during the height of the housing boom in
the 1979. The median, inflation adjusted return over the last 30
years is negative 1.6%.
Each weekday,
Ian and Addison bring readers the The 5 Min Forecast, an
executive series e-letter that provides a quick and dirty analysis
of daily economic and financial developments in five minutes
or less.
And now, as
Paul Harvey used to say, the rest of the story:
GM says 7,500
hourly workers have left the company. Jobless claims sent another
record the 9th one in a row. There are now more people getting
benefits than any time since 1967.
And whats
going on in the bond market?
Weak
demand at Treasury auction gives Wall Street pause, says an
article at the New York Times.
And in England,
an auction of government bonds failed buyers
didnt show up.
If the government
cant finance its debt, how will it pay for its bailouts? Oh,
never mind
we forgot; the Fed will lend the government the
money. Where will the Fed get the money? Oh, never mind
Meanwhile,
the corporate bond market is still expecting a Great Depression
Investment
grade corporate bond indices are [still] priced for default rates
of 38% in Europe; 40% in the US; and 51% in the UK all worse
than the Depression, writes John Authers in todays Financial
Times. Bank lending is the target of all these recent operations,
he points out.
Stocks are
going up. But corporate debt is still priced on the assumption
of absolute disaster, says Authers. Someones got to
be wrong: either stock market investors
or the bond market.
Either the credit market is so illiquid that these numbers
bear no relation to the outcomes that investors expect; or we are
in for a re-run of the Depression.
Naturally,
we dont know which it is. We are incurable optimists. Let
the markets work
theyll straighten things out. In the
meantime, we keep our Crash Alert flags unfurled
just in case.
And
finally, Alan Greenspan is in the news today. He has a major work
of obfuscation in todays Financial Times, the gist
of which is the same as his previous pieces. Its not
my fault, is the message.
In a sense,
he is right. The free markets are full of boom and bust, sturm and
drang, yin and yang. Free markets also create prosperity, he points
out. And if bubbles are the price we pay, well
its worth
it.
I do
not recall bubbles emerging in the former Soviet Union, he
says.
Yes, bubbles
will always be with us, dear reader. But that is no excuse for a
Federal Reserve chairman who pumped extra air into the already bubbling
economy.
Poor Dr. Greenspan.
The more he tries to defend himself
the more guilty he appears.
And now he must shuffle out the end of his days
an empty coat
upon a stick
with the curse of the biggest financial crisis
in history upon his wrinkly, old head.
March
30, 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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