...Are doomed to repeat it! Unfortunately, there is so much "noise" out there
- from geopolitics to macroeconomics - that it is difficult for the average
person (who is simply trying to make ends meet and secure a reasonable financial
future) to make sense of it all.
Yesterday, we were treated to some happy numbers from the Congressional Budget
Office regarding the 2005 deficit. From the CBO's report:
"CBO now expects the 2005 deficit to total $331 billion - an $81 billion
decline from the deficit recorded for2004 (see Summary Table 1). Relative
to the size of the economy, the deficit this year is expected to equal 2.7
percent of gross domestic product (GDP), down from 3.6 percent in 2004."
Budgets are calculated and extrapolated based on current trends. The government
had projected surpluses as far as the eye can see leading up to the technology-led
bust of 2000. We all know how that ended.
The deficit is indeed closing at the moment, but consider that all of the
revenue growth that is the basis of the projections is from a most unsustainable
source. Yes, that old bugaboo, inflation. Inflation of Federal Reserve Notes,
inflation of credit, inflation finding its way into every corner of the economy,
from bonds (the very fact that the bond market is "not concerned" about inflation
is inflationary) to real estate to stocks. It is all being monetized and carried
forward as if it is viable. Crude oil is going along for the ride as well.
What the heck, it's just the cost of doing business in the inflation economy.
I learned my lesson in 2000 and vowed never again to get caught up in Ponzi-dynamic
fantasies. I will trade and play short and intermediate trends as readily as
the next guy, but the true secular trend remains unchanged; our seed corn is
all used up and we became too lazy to do the work of replanting year in and
year out. We used credit instead, as it has been as abundant as the seeds of
productivity once were. This is going to end and it is going to end painfully
one day.
Meanwhile, I am sure there will be continued bull horning of everything from
an ephemeral budget deficit reduction to the fact that a rampaging crude price
has not slowed the economy (good thing the bond market has not put the kybosh
on those home refi ATM machines). It is ironic that at the same time a glimmer
of good news about government debt reduction hit the wire, the public is sliding
ever more deeply into debt, which of course will one day send those inflatable
chickens home to roost and land right back on the government's doorstep in
the form of gaping new deficits.
It is advised to seek out havens where you may preserve capital first, and
perhaps sensibly make some return. I, along with the other usual economic suspects
(said with respect, as I have learned a lot from many of them) have taken pains
to come up with ideas for safety, capital preservation and generally side-stepping
the worst of the storm that will one day land on the shores of the US and much
of the rest of the world.
Despite my über-bearish macro bias, I have been bullish on the stock
market when warranted and bearish as well. It is only price. Price is price
and value is value. This was taught to me by John Mackenzie, who is now probably
putting more energy into sustainable living than worrying about every twist
and turn of the "mess" we call a market and economy. Debt can only provide
value when it is used as a leverage tool for building sustainable growth and
gainful productivity. For too long now, debt has been used as THE economic
fundamental, in and of itself creating a boom with no hope of payback.
Like I said, those who don't learn from history are doomed to repeat it. You
don't have to take the way-back machine too far until you get to the early
1930's and the 1920's boom that preceded it.
Enjoy the current economic boomlet for what it is. Truth be told, I am.
But be safe.
Biiwii Letter #2 is currently available for free. Simply email me a request
and it will be sent ASAP (PDF format).