Don’t
Put Your Money on a US Recovery
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
On the
Evidence, Stimulus Programs Aren’t Working
The future
cometh
Cash for bankers!
Cash for Detroits clunkers! From one scam to the next
But first,
let us turn to the latest market update.
The Dow rose
again yesterday up 33 points, to close at 9,320. We set 10,000+
as our objective for this bounce. Well stick with it for a
while longer.
Make no mistake
though. No one knows how long this rally will last certainly
no one here at The Daily Reckoning vacation headquarters. It will
continue until it runs out of gas. That could be tomorrow. It could
be months from now.
It will run
out of gas sooner or later, and probably this fall. A real, durable
bull market would require an economic boom a genuine recovery.
We dont see that happening
But people
must think it is happening
There
are signs of a recovery in the US
was a popular line
at last nights cocktail party. Several friends mentioned it.
Each time, we had the same reply we wouldnt bet on
it.
Yesterday,
the price of oil rose; it ended the day at $71. And the dollar stayed
where it was at $1.44 per euro. Investors are betting on
recovery despite our advice.
And when the
recovery turns out to be a clunker, theyll probably put these
trades into reverse. Oil will go down; the dollar will go up.
You want to
speculate, dear reader? Sell oil
buy the dollar. Wait for another
crash this autumn.
Why will there
be another crash?
Because people
believe something that isnt true. People believe that there
is a recovery
and that it is the result of stimulus efforts
by the feds. The results from the second quarter show the economy
still contracting
but at a slower pace, just 1% annually,
rather than the 6.4% recorded in the first quarter. This is
heralded throughout the world as proof that the crisis is receding.
It if
werent for stimulus spending, the contraction [in the 2nd
quarter] would have been closer to 4%, says the editorial
in the International Herald Tribune. The stimulus is
helping
and more stimulus would help even more.
Oh? Would it?
Lets look at stimulus-in-action:
Cash
for Clunkers is a hare-brained scheme
but that doesnt
make it unpopular. The idea is to stimulate demand by, well, giving
people money. But instead of just giving them money and letting
them choose what to do with it, the feds decide they need a new
car. In order to the get the money, people have to buy one.
According to
the press reports, the program has been a great success wherever
it has been put in place in France and Germany, as well as
in the United States.
If so, why
not apply the concept elsewhere? How about cash for houses? Cash
for liquor? Cash for newspapers? Cash for trips to Europe?
Whats
so special about autos, in other words? And why is it a good thing
for people to buy cars?
Oh cmon,
dear reader
dont pretend you dont know. The auto
industry is huge
with many lobbyists and many organized groups
interested in its well-being. It is an old and well-established
industry with plenty of political clout.
Tomorrows
industries, by contrast, have no lobbyists
no organized labor
no
pet congressmen
no political action committees. So who gets
the money?
Heres
the problem: the meddlers are not only up against tomorrows
industries
theyre up against tomorrow itself. Its
not as if Americans needed cars. Not at all. Theyve got plenty
of wheels already. Three car households are typical. And theyre
fairly new cars. Americans were on a buying spree during the bubble
era, 20012007; they bought new cars along with everything
else.
So, the goal
of the “Cash for Clunkers” scheme is not to increase the size of
the US auto fleet, its to make it newer. People dont
need more cars. They only need to replace cars that get worn out.
If they bought a car five years ago, they may be ready to buy another
one. Or, they could probably wait until next year. Along come the
feds with cash
and the buyer decides to replace his car this
year rather than next.
This is heralded
as a success. The feds have stimulated demand. But what about next
year?
Well
have more to say about this on Friday
but the auto example
helps us see what a scam these stimulus schemes really are. They
claim to boost demand. But they cant really increase demand.
All they can do is roll next years buying into the present
year.
Sound familiar?
Thats the very thing that has been happening for the last
two generations. Consumers didnt want to wait until theyd
made the money to take their vacations or buy their houses. They
turned to credit. They borrowed against future earnings. They spent
money they hadnt earned yet
thus bringing forward purchases
that should have been made in the future. Thats why we have
a depression; now, were in the future!
It had to come
sooner or later. After drawing consumption forward for decades,
Americans had to stop. Time had to catch-up. Homeowners had to pay
down debt. Ken Rogoff, Harvard professor of economics, believes
it will take them 68 years to do so.
But consumers
spent more than they could reasonably be expected to pay back. They
out-spent the future! They bought a ticket to somewhere beyond the
future
to a place where they would never actually arrive. In
many cases especially in the housing market lenders
discovered they couldnt get their money back, which is what
led to the credit crunch and the collapse of Wall Street. Of the
big five Bear, Lehman, Goldman, JPMorgan and Merrill
only two survived intact. And we know now that Goldman only survived
because Henry Paulson, former CEO of Goldman, then Treasury Secretary,
arranged a hidden bailout. He had the government step in to save
AIG, which owed Goldman $13 billion.
From one scam
to another
thats the way the feds do it. From bailing
out Wall Street they now turn to bailing out the entire world economy
in a similarly fraudulent way. Tim Geithner told the Chinese
last week that the United States would revive thanks to increased
private demand. But the feds cannot really increase demand in the
private sector. Increasing real demand would mean increasing real
wages. And theres no sign of that. To the contrary, incomes
are going down.
Yesterdays
news tells us that personal incomes went down 1.3% in June. Incomes
had gone up in May, by precisely the same amount 1.3%, thanks
to stimulus payments. Then, too, commentators saw it as a sign of
recovery. But what the feds gave in May was taken away in June.
The future caught up with the Obama administrations stimulus
efforts within 30 days. Net result = zero.
The
June number reflected the biggest drop in income in four years.
It is not surprising. Were in a depression, remember? Salaries
and wages fell 0.4% in June
the 9th drop in the last 10 months.
It looks
like there are finally some signs of recovery in the US, said
more than one person we talked to last night.
The occasion
was a cocktail party
held on the grounds of a stately chateau.
The summer social season is underway in Poitou. We are attending
dinners, plays, cocktail receptions, barbecues and weddings.
Last night,
waiters in tuxedos passed out champagne, foie gras canapés,
and desserts while hundreds of guests milled about and talked.
You might
want to hedge your bets on this recovery, we told one reader.
Its probably not going to work out.
But Im
confused about something, he continued. Youve
been urging me to buy gold for years. And now you seem to be changing
your mind.
No
no
not
at all. Im still a gold bug. Its just that I expect
this rebound to end
and for stocks to go down, possibly down
a lot. The dollar is what people want when they are frightened.
The dollar is going down now because they think theres no
longer anything to be frightened about. But when this recovery disappoints
them, investors are going to be more frightened than ever. Because
theyll realize that were faced with a depression
and
that the feds cant do anything about it. Theyre going
to rush to the safety of dollars
at least for a while. Probably
long enough to shake out a lot of gold buyers.
August
7,
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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