Warren
Buffett, Government Propagandist
by
Karen De Coster
by Karen De Coster
DIGG THIS
"Believing
that fundamental conditions of the country are sound and that there
is nothing in the business situation to warrant the destruction
of values that has taken place on the exchanges during the past
week, my son and I have for some days been purchasing sound common
stocks"
~ John D. Rockefeller,
October 29th 1929.
I'll tell you
what the real purpose is behind Warren
Buffett's recent column in the New York Times.
Buffett writes,
"Buy American. I Am." He goes on to say that Americans should not
panic and flee equities, but instead, they should buy them. That's
right Warren Buffett wants people to buy equity stakes in American
companies.
Buffett
is doing the government's dirty work in trying to calm the fears
of the masses. That was the whole purpose of his column. He agreed
to become an instrument for the establishment, and when Buffett
speaks, people tend to listen. The timing was perfectly executed.
As the markets splintered and rocked the world of regular people
everywhere, they were exiting their speculative adventures in equities
and escaping to safe havens in their 401k accounts. And here was
the respected, industrious, sensible folk hero, telling everyone
that the fear felt by others should be a sign to us, and let that
dictate our speculative strategy.
Warren Buffett
is an admired man. He is admired, even by the middle and lower classes,
for his frugality, wisdom, no-nonsense delivery, plain-folk personality,
and yes, his hard-earned wealth. Readers may know that I deeply
respect this man because I reflect on his business acumen frequently.
But his latest column puts him in the role of being a propagandist
for the government and its bull market-perpetual bubble-sustainable
boom doctrine. The government and its Wall Street cronies are big
on building "investor confidence" these days, especially
when it comes to selling you on the stock market game and the ever-increasing
Dow. Warren Buffett is working to convince you, the unsophisticated
investor, to have unmitigated confidence in the market so that you
will continue to buy and prop up market fantasies, even in a time
of rapid decline and volatility. I find his reason for not fearing
the equity speculation game to be a bit odd. He says,
But fears
regarding the long-term prosperity of the nation’s many sound
companies make no sense. These businesses will indeed suffer earnings
hiccups, as they always have. But most major companies will be
setting new profit records 5, 10 and 20 years from now.
Essentially,
he’s suggesting that the Dow can only move upward – eventually!
but he does not provide any reasonable justification for
this belief. He's careful, here, to not give out strict advice because
it makes him uneasy. So he's telling us that the profits will be
there in "5, 10, and 20 years." Is it 5 or is it 20? Or anything
in between? Or more than 20 years? Of course, no one knows, but
to middle-class Joes it makes a heck of a difference whether it's
5, 10, or 20 years, or even at all, because most of us don't have
the cushion to be wrong (and 20 years off the mark), as does Warren
Buffett. Twenty years can be almost a half of one's working life
in the middle class, and that kind of time is not available to most
people to find out whether or not they won or lost the roll of the
dice.
The supermajority
of the population cannot ever have an investment strategy like that
of Warren Buffett. We can take much (and I do) from his value-investing
blueprint and sensible roadmap for avoiding speculative pitfalls
while engaging serious investment analysis. But Joe the Plumber
and his friends cannot afford to gamble away their financial futures
on the hunch that the stock market "can only go up." On BubbleVision
the other day, two desk jockeys also questioned Buffett's BUY advice
amazing! and they noted that since he's working on
a much larger scale than the rest of us, how does his top-level
recipe for success apply broadly to a populace of terrified people
who are losing big on a lifetime accumulation of wealth?
The answer
is that it doesn’t apply. That is to say, amateur "investors" (they
are really speculators) cannot apply his big-picture advice
because every person he speaks to about the "long term" has a unique
age, time to retirement, ability to save, and capability to bear
risk.
In retrospect,
Warren Buffett’s posture on political issues shows us that in spite
of being a remarkable value investor, he has sanctioned collectivist
state hysteria and policies
from climate
change to taxes
to fiscal policy. In fact, his nod of approval for some of government’s
most destructive taxation tactics has clearly distinguished him
as an unabashed redistributionist.
Finally, Mr.
Buffett presents us with "a little history" when he notes
that:
During the
Depression, the Dow hit its low, 41, on July 8, 1932. Economic
conditions, though, kept deteriorating until Franklin D. Roosevelt
took office in March 1933. By that time, the market had already
advanced 30 percent.
I’d like to
extend that history. The Dow
did hit 41 in July 8th, 1932, after plummeting from a high of
381 on September 3rd, 1929. However, the Dow did
not get back to 381 until November of 1954, twenty-five years
after the peak. But we are supposed to believe that things are different
now. The Dow is a predictable and perpetual bull ride. In fact,
every so-called expert" in the media has declared that another
Great Depression can never occur because, after all, "the fed
has our backs." They have all the right safeguards in place
to assure us that such a catastrophe can never happen again.
The
Fed has intervened on a massive level not seen since FDR’s New Deal
takeover of the economy. They don’t have our backs, they have our
balls. Certainly, we have come to expect FDR-style fascism on steroids
from the ratfinks who have co-opted the ranks of the current regime.
On the other hand, Warren Buffett’s unequivocal endorsement of Washington’s
ruling class and its scheming agenda to lure the middle and lower
classes with the promise of financial bread and circuses is a sign
that we must not trust Omaha any more than we do Washington D.C.
or Wall Street.
October
23, 2008
Karen
De Coster [send
her mail] is a Certified Public Accountant,
has an MA in Economics, and works in finance and accounting
in the securities industry. See her website
and her blog.
Copyright
© 2008 Karen De Coster
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