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Volatility in the Police State


By Bill Bonner • May 6th, 2010 • Related Articles • Filed Under

About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

See All Articles by This Author

  • Japan and its Economy Did Not Have Secret to Everlasting Success
  • Japanese Government Displays Generosity as Prices Fall in Japan
  • The Fallacy of the Fallacy of Composition
  • Zen and the Art of Economy Repair
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Filed Under: Market • Precious Metals • The Americas
Tags: bernanke • deflation • dow • Dow to gold ratio • FBI • federal reserve • geithner • Gold • inflation • Japan • Patriot Act • police state • SEC • treasuries

The present volatility will be resolved by a decisive move to the downside.

Yesterday, the Dow moved 225 points into negative territory. Was that decisive? No. Not in itself. But it looks like the top is in. If so, stocks should be going down...down...down...

Maybe for a year...maybe for 5 years...maybe for another 10 years...

Yes, dear reader...the stock market is now free to complete its rendezvous with destiny.

Just where, exactly, will that rendezvous take place? Who knows? About 3,000 on the Dow is our guess. But it's just a guess.

Stocks trade around 20 times earnings now...and the Dow is about 10 times the price of gold. Sometime in the future, you'll probably be able to buy Dow stocks at 5 times earnings and maybe only 1 times the price of gold.

Three thousand seems like a likely target, because that would move stock prices down into the right range from a P/E standpoint...and we can easily imagine a gold price of $3,000.

Why would stocks move down?

First, because the bear market that began in January 2000 never fully expressed itself. It was distracted, first by the big flood of stimulus during and after the micro-recession of 2001...and then by the huge flood of stimulus following the crisis of '07-'09.

Second, because the economy is in a Great Correction - a difficult time, with lagging earnings, slow growth, and high unemployment.

Paul Volcker is the only financial authority associated with the government who has any credibility left. Here's what he says:

"What we need is more saving, more industrial investment, and a stronger trade position. Our expansive and expensive program of entitlements simply must be brought under control. Our mortgage market must be rebuilt from the ground up."

Volcker is talking about a Great Correction, which he describes in the same way we do: "a long period of economic adjustment:"

"Not much of that can be done this year, or even next," Volcker said. "It is a challenge not just for this Congress and this administration, but for years ahead."

Neither Tim Geithner nor Ben Bernanke seem to understand this. But the man on the street feels it. This from Charles Delvalle, who runs the research team for our family office:

Floyd Norris points out that the Conference Board's economic survey, which dates back 4 decades, shows a curious change in future expectations. Since 1967, Americans have for the most part, remained more optimistic than pessimistic about their own futures. This was true even when their expectations for the overall economy were negative.

But that optimism disappeared during the 2007-9 downturn. A majority of folks began to expect their own financial situation would get worse - versus those expecting better personal times ahead:

"In April, the Conference Board reported this week, about one person in 10 expected his or her family's income to improve, while about one in six expected family income to go down.

"...good times in recent years have produced less net optimism than in previous cycles, while bad times have brought more pessimism.

"On its face, such a result would seem to indicate Americans are losing their optimism, but it may not be as simple as that. In this cycle, unlike earlier ones, many workers were forced to take pay cuts, at least on a temporary basis. So it became reasonable to expect lower income, even for some who did not expect to lose their jobs.

"Still, the decline in expectations regarding their own incomes is another indication of how much this recession scared people - and that some of the fright remains."

As we keep saying, this is not a typical post-war recession. So, it is no surprise that consumers and investors aren't acting like they usually do.

This time it's different - really. This time people are beginning to doubt that old formula works. They know they can't continue to run up debt in their own accounts. And they doubt that the government can do it either.

That's why gold is moving the way it is. Only a few months ago gold and the dollar were headed in opposite directions. Now they're moving together. When investors get worried, they move into gold AND the dollar.

The next trend will be to move into gold and reject the dollar. But that trend may be far in the future. See the rest of our Las Vegas speech, below:

And now, more thoughts...and the conclusion of our speech...in which we explain why GDP is a lie....

On the police state of things...

On Saturday, we heard a speech by Judge Andrew Napolitano, no relation to the Attorney General.

"The Patriot Act, pushed through Congress and signed into law by George W. Bush, probably did more damage to the US Constitution than any other legislation in modern times. It empowers the FBI to write its own warrants - something that has always been prohibited by the Constitution.

"As a result of this law, two very diligent FBI agents went into a public library in New Jersey. They handed a warrant to the 86-year-old woman behind the desk. They wanted to know who was checking out what books. Of course, remember, this is a government-owned building, with books purchased by the government, sitting on government shelves. So, how bad could these books in a New Jersey public library be?

"And I should tell you too that the law makes it a crime to tell anyone when you've gotten one of these warrants. You're not allowed to tell the person the warrant concerns. You're not allowed to tell your spouse. You can't even say anything when you're asked the question under oath, in court.

"Well, these two agents go to the library and hand their warrant to the librarian, an 86-year-old woman. She looks at the warrant. She looks at the agents. And she says: 'Who the hell are you?'

"Don't worry about it, lady,' says one of the agents. 'Just read the warrant.'"

"I can't read it," says the lady, and she hands it over to her 78-year- old assistant. Another nice old lady.

"Well, the agents decide to take these two women to court for a criminal violation of the Patriot Act. You may wonder how these two librarians posed a threat to the republic, but that's what the FBI did. And so these two ladies were in front of the court in New Jersey when the judge turned to the FBI and said:

"If you pursue this case I will have to find your law unconstitutional."

"So, the FBI wisely withdrew their case."

And the final installment of our speech in Las Vegas...on why you can't engineer a genuine recovery...and why GDP is just a number...and why China will blow up...

The problem with trying to engineer a 'recovery' is the same problem with all central planning - it substitutes the honest signals from the marketplace with imposters. For example, instead of getting the message that they need to conduct their business in a different way, the banks get the idea that the feds will always bail them out...and automakers - thanks to the Cash for Clunkers program - may get the idea that there is more demand than there really is...and everyone could get the idea that the economy is healthier than it really is, thanks to the feds $1.5 trillion deficits.

The authorities are trying to force the economy back into the shape it was in before the crash. They're preventing it from taking a new, better shape....and preventing the correction from doing its work. A correction is supposed to cleanse out the mistakes from the 50-year credit expansion. But it's hard to do so when you don't know what is really going on. Markets - when they are allowed to do their work - are always in the process of discovering what assets are worth. They were doing a good job of it in the fall of 2008. They were discovering that the US had too many houses, and too many shopping malls, (the US has 10 times as much retail space per person as France...) We also had too many derivatives backed by real estate, and too many private equity deals based on too many optimistic assumptions about the future.

[Anyway you look at it, we have, as Paul Volcker puts it, a "long period of economic adjustment" ahead of us. The feds are just getting in the way...and making it even longer.]

The market was in the process of discovering what assets were worth when the feds stepped in. They stopped the process of discovery. Instead, they forced the market into a process of Price Hiding.

Probably the most dramatic example of price hiding has been in the financial sector itself. There, the feds took away the risks of bad debt from the bankers and put it on the general public. The Fed bought the toxic loans, transferring hundreds of billions of losses from the banks' balance sheets onto the balance sheet of the Fed.

The Fed also lent the banks money at near zero percent...and then the federal government borrowed it back. The banks were able to make profits without doing any work or taking any risks. No wonder they didn't lend money to private businesses or consumers. It was too much trouble. And they didn't have to.

If you look at the latest figures from the Fed you will see that private credit is still falling. Commercial and industrial loans in March fell 16%. Asset backed commercial paper fell 20%. This correction, by the way, marks the first major reversal of commercial and consumer credit since WWII.

And now the Treasury has the gall to tell the public that it made money from its 'investments' in the banking sector. If so, those were the most expensive profits in the history of finance. They cost the nation about $4 trillion in fiscal stimulus deficits - added to the national debt. And another $1.8 trillion worth of dodgy debt on the FED balance sheet. And about $6 trillion more worth of financial guarantees of various sorts.

If the SEC wants to redeem itself, it should forget about the small fry. It should get off Fabulous Fab's case and go after the real frauds in this case...Ben Bernanke and Tim Geithner.

That won't happen. But everything regresses to the mean. That's the work of a correction - to bring things back to normal, back in balance. First, the private sector is corrected. And then, the public sector.

When something is out of balance on one end, you can be sure it's out of balance on the other side too. Americans consumed too much during the Bubble Epoch. Now, they need to save and produce more. But who was on the other side of this trade...?

Let's begin by going back to the 1920s. Back then, the USA was the industrial powerhouse of the world and its number one exporter. In those boom years, America had the largest trade SURPLUS on the planet. At the time, trade balances were settled in gold. So, the US built up the world's largest reserves - in gold. It still has them.

But that pile of gold didn't keep the US from financial trouble. The stock market crashed in '29 and the following two years cut the US GDP in half.

It took the stock market 27 years to recover.

In the 1980s, Japan had the biggest trade surplus in the world. You remember Japan, Inc? It was such an export success story that people worried that the Japanese would take over the world. But in 1989, Japan, Inc. peaked out. Its stocks have been going down ever since - 20 years already.

Now, it's China's turn. China has the world's largest trade surplus and its largest pile of reserves. (Unfortunately for China, after 1971, treasuries switched to using paper dollars for reserves. So China has one enormous pile of paper...not gold.)

Thomas Friedman wrote that he wouldn't bet against a country with more than $2 trillion in reserves. But does this pile of paper money guarantee that China cannot fail? To the contrary, history tells us that China is most likely to fail - spectacularly - even though, over the longer run, like the US after the '30s, China may turn out to be a great success story.

Everything regresses to the mean. Everything tends to go back to normal.

Corrections are normal. They help things get back in balance.

Now, here's the interesting thing. While Japan's government tried to prevent it, the Japanese private sector de-leveraged. Over a long period of adjustment - 20 years - the household, business and financial debt went down by about 40%, in GDP terms.

And now, in the US, even though the government tries to hide prices and delay the correction, the private economy is still de-leveraging. The latest figures suggest that households took a little pause in the first quarter of this year. Savings actually went down as consumption went up. But if we continue to follow the Japanese example the de-leveraging should resume soon.

We know from the Japanese history too - if we had any doubt about it - that price hiding doesn't work. First, they tried fiscal stimulus. That didn't do anything. The banks took the monetary stimulus and held onto it, just as US banks are doing now.

Then, they tried fiscal stimulus. Now, this deserves a little discussion. Because Richard Koo among others argues that the fiscal stimulus did work in Japan. He points out that Japanese GDP did not drop significantly - thanks to massive doses of fiscal stimulus. And now, Paul Krugman and others are saying that fiscal stimulus has worked in the US too...because our GDP only went down less than 3% in what they call the Great Recession.

Here is where we see the claptrap theories at work. Fab Finance turned the economic profession from historians and philosophers into mathematicians and engineers. Dozens of these fellows won Nobel Prizes for elaborate mathematical proof of what were essentially bogus or inconsequential ideas.

And now they turn to GDP as proof that fiscal stimulus works, without bothering to think about what is really going on. GDP measures economic activity. Like everything else in modern finance, it is sensitive to quantity and completely ignorant about quality. To borrow from Oscar Wilde, it knows the price of everything but the value of nothing.

Yet, here again, as the Soviet Union showed us, you can summon up all the GDP you want. Just divide the country at the Mississippi. Get half the population to dig a big hole in Tennessee...and get the other half of the population to fill it up. Imagine the trucks...the fuel...the machinery...the labor...the housing you'd need... GDP would go up. You'd have full employment. Modern economists would be content with themselves. They'd sit by the phone, waiting for the Nobel committee to call.

But what would you really have?

You'd have Japan! That's what the Japanese did. Well, not quite like that... They put people to work building roads and bridges...pouring concrete on a massive scale. Until then, Japan had the healthiest government finances in the world. Now, it has more government debt/GDP than any other nation - approaching 200%.

And think about what really happened. Japan's population is getting older. These are people who lent the government money so that it would be safe. They wanted to be sure they'd have the money they needed when they retired.

But where is that money? It has literally been poured into a hole in the ground. The savings of an entire generation have been turned into bridge abutments and canals - most of them unnecessary and many of them unwanted.

That is what is happening in the US too. Except we don't have enough savings to finance our own holes in the ground. We're more like Greece.

And like Greece, we will pay a high price when the final correction comes.

Regards,

Bill Bonner
for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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Volatility in the Police State, 9.6 out of 10 based on 12 ratings



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Related Articles:

  • Japan and its Economy Did Not Have Secret to Everlasting Success
  • Japanese Government Displays Generosity as Prices Fall in Japan
  • The Fallacy of the Fallacy of Composition
  • Zen and the Art of Economy Repair
  • Investing in Japan…

About the Author

Bill BonnerBest-selling investment author Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter companies. Owner of both Fleet Street Publications and MoneyWeek magazine in the UK, he is also author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning.

See All Posts by This Author

There Are 6 Responses So Far. »

  1. Comment by Stillgotshoeson on 6 May 2010:

    I am calling sub 5000 on the DOW sub 3000 on the ASX and Gold at $2400USD ($3000AUD)

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  2. Comment by Lachlan on 7 May 2010:

    We're on the way Shoes...seems people are remembering GOLD IS MONEY afterall.

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  3. Comment by Lachlan on 7 May 2010:

    Although some obviously still think USDs' equally delicious...cant figure that one out.

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  4. Comment by Stillgotshoeson on 7 May 2010:

    Comment by Lachlan on 7 May 2010:

    We're on the way Shoes...

    I hope Gold takes a breather at $1300/$1350.. upsets my plans a little if it races on.. fairly certain it will pause.. or fairly hopeful anyway :)

    Kind of hoping Citigold get a decent upgrade to production rates prior to Gold doing the Pamplona thing and starts running with the bulls too soon..

    Here's a pic of my pet bull Goldie saying hi to some property spruikers
    http://www.independent.co.uk/multimedia/archive/00037/bull3_37410b.jpg

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  5. Comment by Stillgotshoeson on 7 May 2010:

    Comment by Lachlan on 7 May 2010:

    Although some obviously still think USDs' equally delicious

    The perception is, and just guessing here, it is a case of USD is not great but it is more "great" than the Euro...

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  6. Comment by Lachlan on 7 May 2010:

    Congrats on CTO Shoes..that final capitulation sell off (around 12.5c) was calling for a bounce in hind sight but thats a very fair gain for you even if the bear market continues. I'm hoping to pick up some small cap goldies on weakness anytime. If/when AUD gold goes to moon they'll be fantastic gainers imo. Its good to hear about your share trading adventures here..it gives me some plays to check out...I'm a bit lazy that way. I'm keen on TA but very much appreciate the fundamental insights here people like yourself, Ross, CA and others.
    Point taken on the euro, it stinks slightly more than USD.
    I have a pet bull too but named Harry and dehorned because we have a lot of property bulls around here and I cant afford damages claims ;)

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