If Americans Do Not Return to Work, There Is No Recovery
by Bill Jenkins
Recently
by Bill Jenkins: The
Almighty Dollar
First,
a historical note...
US equities
have just come off their best July since 1989. Overall, the market
is up over 8% for the year.
But if we look
backward (after all, hindsight is 20/20), March 1989 also saw a
huge run up. It was followed by an even stronger rally in July,
during which volume dried up. It appears the same is happening now.
What came next in 1989 was a big sell-off in September, followed
by an even greater one in October.
Don't look
now, but history tends to repeat itself.
Also, consider
the fundamental picture. We have rallied 48% from the March lows
on the back of what? Good earnings? Good employment figures? Good
spending figures? Expanding GDP? No.
We have rallied
based on one of the largest and most concerted propaganda campaigns
ever waged, supported by government stimulus. But no government
can stimulate forever. The bottom line is this, if Americans do
not return to work, THERE IS NO RECOVERY. Memorize this line. Post
it on your refrigerator, your mirror, your dashboard wherever!
So maybe now
you're asking yourself, "Aren't the unemployment numbers getting
better?"
Well, let's
see...
Verizon 8,000
jobs cut
Motorola 7,000
Microsoft 5,000
Untied Technologies 8,000
HSBC 6,100
Anglo American 19,000
Avon 2,500
Goodyear Tire 5,000
GM 10,000
Nissan Motors 20,000
Panasonic 15,000
PNC Bank 5,800
Many of these
will be released in the third and fourth quarters. No doubt there
are plenty more we haven't heard from yet. Frankly, I couldn't list
the thousands of companies and millions of jobs lost in this write-up.
That's just a sampling. But let's get to some hard and fast figures.
According to
Seeking Alpha, 13 million Americans will lose their benefits by
years' end. So if unemployment claims are falling, people must be
getting back to work. Right?
WRONG!
They are exhausting
their benefits. There are 30 million people in the United States
on food stamps. There are only 200 million working-age Americans
(age 1564). Is there any wonder why the Administration is
NOW saying they will have to raise taxes on the middle class to
fund their programs?
Unemployment
has been estimated by many good economists as being around 20%.
Unfortunately for these people, their nanny-government lifeboats
are slowly running out of air.
Those 3 million
people who lost their jobs in the second half of last year? Once
you factor in their dependants, that equals 10 million people who
have no income and no savings.
And how about
the 4 million others who lost their jobs in the first half of this
year? They will be next. The numbers get so depressing, I hate to
even count them up.
As I have said
before, unemployed people don't spend money. They don't buy technologies,
or durables, or even pay their mortgage. Bankruptcies are up 600%
in this recent downturn. And that includes the time after Congress
affected new rules to make bankruptcy harder.
So who is going
to pay for anything when they are struggling to buy groceries?
If the equity
averages are already rallying on the back of these horrible stats,
there is nowhere to go but down when the real truth sets in.
And we have
seen this corollary frequently in recent months. When stocks and
risk assets fall, so do the currencies, and the dollar rises. We
are a long way from being out of the woods on this retracement.
So why do I
cite all this doom and gloom about the United States? Believe me,
there's plenty more to go around. Because the fact of the matter
is this: When these chickens do come home to roost, we will see
another gut-wrenching breathtaking sell-off in equities, which will
be followed by currencies. We have not seen the end of this yet.
While some
are talking of a recovery, others are talking about a possible double-dip
recession and I'm reasonably sure we are in for a "multi-dip."
It is hard to be bullish on the dollar for any reason, but if the
market drops again, which I believe it will, funds will rush right
back to the dollar (and the yen).
So far, we
have seen range-bound trading in the recent months as currencies
search for direction. This week the big news was the US GDP. Risk
currencies rallied on the back of it, but for 24 hours they have
remained flat as there were no buyers to move it higher.
Also,
the market got awfully jittery on the release of the consumer spending
news yesterday. The manufacturing euphoria expended itself, and
now we find out that personal income has dropped 1.4%, the biggest
fall in four years. Inflation-adjusted spending fell 0.1%. The real
dark spots in the economy have started showing back up. The stimulus
has worked its way and done its best, but its effects are now negligible.
Even though there are signs of a "recovery," it isn't
going to be one without the consumer. If he's exhausted his means
of spending, or is just afraid to put out any money, the recovery
trade will be doomed. And that means dollar strength once again.
But for now,
we will have to trade with what we have. It is hard to argue with
the markets, even with the most compelling of reasons. A person
may as well try to stop an ocean wave from breaking onshore.
And as we look
ahead, we must always be mindful of what may be. As numerous talking
heads were saying on Tuesday of this week, "We have turned
the corner... things are going to get better if they don't get
worse!"
August
8, 2009
Bill Jenkins
is a church minister and owns his own contracting business.
Copyright
© 2009 Daily
Reckoning
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