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In June of 1966 (similar to the warm sunny days of summer
in 1929 and 2007), Brian Wilson produced the Beach Boys' single "Good
Vibrations." Capturing the positive feelings of the day, it quickly became
a number one hit. But something had changed in 1967 when the Beach Boys moved
on to their next album: Smile. They just couldn't do it. With discord
among the band members (Mike Love reportedly called Smile 'acid alliteration'), Smile was
simply shelved. Unable to deal with the pressure, Brian Wilson experienced
an emotional meltdown. The next single released by the Beach Boys was titled "Heroes
and Villains."

Just compare the image
of the Beach Boys of the early 60's to their appearance in the single "Don't
Go Near the Water" produced in 1971. The later single comes from the
album Surf's Up. Oddly, the artwork of that album depicts the End
of the Trail by James Earle Fraser. This kind of ragged exhaustion is
laughable now, but remember we aren't down in the depths quite yet. Clearly
the downward shift in social mood, as evidenced by the inflation adjusted
Dow Jones Industrial Average (chart above updated to 2005), had made an impact.
"Consider what it means to live through our times in the light of (Ed Note:
Austrian or Psychological) economic understanding. Even in the face of calamity,
there is no mystery and hence fear is reduced...In many ways, it is like watching
the movement of stars and planets with the scientific knowledge provided by
astronomy, or observing the effects of a plague with medical knowledge...Without
the understanding, the events look mysterious, like a curse from the gods,
and their patterns appear random. With the knowledge, with the understanding,
we can make sense of the events. Patterns of cause and effect emerge. You
see events before they happen, like turning the page of a script before the
movie catches up to you. This gives you a sense of intellectual coherence
and inner peace - even in the midst of calamity." - Lew Rockwell, Money
and Our Future.
Surprise Losses
We would like to recommend to all of our readers Russell Napier's Anatomy
of the Bear: Lessons From Wall Street's Four Great Bottoms. His analysis
suggests we may have another
55% decline in the S&P by 2014. How could that much more downside
in the market be realized?
"There was some signs of economic stability in early 1931, but this resulted
in only a modest rally in the equity market...Even at this stage, the magnitude
of the decline in the index was only marginally in excess of the 1907 and the
1919-1921 bear markets. It was now that the second bank crisis hit. An investor
committing funds to equities on Feb 24, 1931, almost 16 months after the October
1929 crash, would witness a 79% drop in the DJIA in the next 17 months. It
was this period of decline that marked out the bear market as clearly different
from anything before." - Russell Napier, Anatomy of The Bear.
The banking crisis of 1931 (the second wave of Panic after 1929) was triggered
by a surprise loss at an Austrian bank named the Creditanstalt. Earlier in
the Panic, the Creditanstalt had been merged with a weaker bank:
"In 1929, the Bodenkreditanstalt (the 'monarch of Austrian industry' according
to Rudolf Notel, "Money, Banking and Industry in Interwar Austria and Hungary")
was fused overnight with the Creditanstalt. The Bodenkreditanstalt brought
to the Creditanstalt large loans to industrial concerns which could be maintained
only by the device of ignoring market values...When the Creditanstalt took
over the Bodenkreditanstalt, it acquired 80 million shillings of capital. But
it also acquired 140 million of accumulated losses, as it learned later when
a British chartered accountant revealed the truth...the announcement of the
support operation on May 11, 1931 started a run, partly foreign, partly Austrian." -
Charles Kindleberger, The World In Depression: 1929-1939.
Weaker banks have been rescued by stronger banks all over the globe. So far, Bank
of America has already been surprised by losses from its Merrill Lynch merger.
Others are sure to follow.
***More For Clients and Subscribers***
The Money Printing Secret - A Collapse in the Money Multiplier
The Fed is printing money as fast as it can and cramming it into the vaults
of the banks. This 'printed money' is known as the monetary base and includes
Treasury Bills for bank reserves, currency, coins, etc. If we look at the broader
measures of the money supply, we see that large portions of our money are
actually private agreements created in the marketplace, such as deposits at
banks, money market deposit accounts, and repurchase agreements. These private
agreements are called commercial bank money. In a fractional reserve system, "new
commercial bank money is created through loans." We referred to these 'money
substitutes' in March of last year.
In a banking crisis, these additional private agreements are not necessarily
entered into. Instead, fearful bankers pile up excess reserves (monetary base)
and refuse to lend.

The money
multiplier, the rate at which bankers take the Fed's printed money and
multiply it into commercial bank money, collapses (chart below). This leads
to a contraction in the money supply which is deflation.

Therefore, the Federal Reserve is unable to prevent a deflationary Depression
because the amount of money base it prints becomes less and less effective
in boosting the money supply. More Fed printing at this point will lead to
more fearful hoarding by bankers and the
two opposing sides are locked in to the deflationary spiral.
***No graph, chart, formula or other device offered can in and of itself be
used to make trading decisions. This newsletter should not be construed as
personal investment advice. It is for informational purposes only.
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