The
Last Bear
by
Bill Bonner
by
Bill Bonner
Recently by Bill Bonner:
What’s
a Consumer Economy Need in Order to Keep Growing?
Personal conversions
sometimes mark dramatic turns in history. Saul of Tarsus saw a vision
so bright it left him blind. The next thing you know, he had changed
his name and was pushing Christianity all over the world. According
to Gibbon, the Roman Empire fell as a consequence. Then, on the
advice of his mistress, Gabrielle, Henry IV became a Catholic, leading
to the Edict of Nantes and its subsequent revocation.
Even in the
world of finance, there are momentous conversions. As they say on
Wall Street, a rally ends when the last bear gives up. An old friend
had been a source of inspiration for tech bears for many years.
He suddenly saw the light and gave up in 1999. Shares he had formerly
scorned often dotcoms with no revenue and no business plans
were suddenly added to his own portfolio. This also heralded
a big change the end of the tech bubble. Tech stocks collapsed.
Most disappeared. Then, Stephen Roach became vaguely bullish in
2007, after a long period of doubt and misgivings.
Now it is Jim
Grant who has changed his mind. A generation of investors has gotten
used to Grants “doom is nigh” warnings. Now, he says, its
a boom that is nigh.
What is remarkable
about the Grant conversion is that his vision gives off so little
heat and light. His WSJ article shilly-shallies around; rehearses
the history of previous recessions and comes to rest in front of
a flickering match: The deeper the slump, the zippier the
recovery.
Many were the
sheep in Grants flock. They feel betrayed, as if their shepherd
had gone over to the wolves. We take no personal offense. In the
following few words we merely stoke up the fire.
We will not
argue with Newtons Third Law. For every action, there is a
reaction. Every boom has a bust. And every busted bubble has a bounce.
Even the Titanics stern rose, before she slipped below the
waves.
First, we consult
the facts. But facts are survivors. They will tell whatever tale
their interrogators want to hear. As for opinions, after six months
of a stock market rally, the once half empty glass has become half
full. We predicted it ourselves. But well let Robert Prechter
say, “I told you so.” Even before the rally began, Prechter foretold
its story:
Regardless
of extent, it should generate feelings of optimism. At its peak,
the Presidents popularity will be higher, the government will
be taking credit for successfully bailing out the economy, the fed
will appear to have saved the banking system and investors will
be convinced that the bear market is behind us.
As to Mr. Obamas
popularity, Prechter was wrong. But 4 out of 5 aint bad.
Grants
brief tour of recession history seems to confirm his Newtonian position:
the further an economy falls, the further up it rises to get back
to normal. This downturn has clipped nearly 4% off Americas
GDP, substantially more than any previous downturn since WWII. Therefore,
it will come back strong.
Todays
slump in the United States hardly compares to the one of 2933,
which took 27% off the GDP. Then, in the ranks of the unemployed,
stood one out of every four able-bodied workers, as opposed to just
one out of every 10, according to todays statistical legerdemain.
Still, the depth of the drop did not prevent a vigorous bounce;
on the contrary, it seemed to demand it. After 33, the US
economy grew by nearly 10% in each of the next four years.
In the slump
of 82, GDP sank at a 6.4% rate. Again, the reaction was nearly
equal and opposite to the action. Not until the third quarter
of 1984, says Grant, did real quarterly GDP growth drop
below 5%.
Of
course, even a US Congressman will bounce, if you push him down
the Capitol steps. But not every one will get up again. In the 33
example, the US economy, still youthful and vigorous, got up nicely.
But then it fell again. By the end of the decade he was still on
his back, with 15% unemployment and 2% deflation. Only later, after
four years of world war, did the economy begin a sustained recovery.
Now it is 2009.
The poor fellow is down again. The feds rushed to help him to his
feet. They gave him a combined fiscal and monetary shot-in-the-arm
seven times stronger in terms of GDP than the average
postwar countercyclical stimulus. The juice opened his eyes. But
he still staggers. He has put on some weight over the years; he
now carries three times the debt/GDP as he had in 82. His
stocks are three times as expensive, in P/E terms, too. His bones
are more brittle and his mind a little slower. Whats more,
in 82, he had been on a deleveraging diet for more than a
decade. In 09, he has just begun.
What will happen
next, we dont know. But if we turn bullish on this economy
and urge you to buy stocks, it will surely be time to sell them.
September
28,
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
The
Best of Bill Bonner
|