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by Doug Wakefield with Ben Hill
"I just found out there's no such thing as the real world; just a lie you've
got to rise above." - John Mayer, "No Such Thing"
On October 3rd, 2006, a Foxnews.com headline read, "Dow
Jones Industrial Average Surges to New All-Time High, Closes at Record." Likewise,
on October 12th, 2006, CNNMoney.com published an article titled, "Dow
up Nearly 100 to All Time High." Though they both mentioned "reasons" for
this phenomenon, neither alluded to the growth of the money supply.
But, what do news headlines really tell us? Are they indicative of rational
investors looking at the entire economic and corporate landscape and surmising
that stocks must climb higher in order to correctly reflect their true future
value? Do they really reflect the collective wisdom of millions of rational
investors, advisors, and managers? Should we all be content with pure market
index returns, knowing that if we are diversified we'll
end up far better off than those who are arrogant enough to think beyond today's
headlines to the future?

Source: The Investor's
Mind: January 2006
This chart was presented in our January 2006 Investor's Mind. Today,
if we look only at "the bottom line" and the recent past, then we would come
to the conclusion that this chart, and any warnings from our 2004 and 2005
writings, is of little or no value to investors. After all, the market has
spoken, and its "collective wisdom" bespeaks smooth sailing, so the "negative
perceptions" of the naysayers need not distract us.
But has anything of historic significance happened since this chart was produced?
Will the wonderful tool of fiat currency, by which the fearless leaders of
modern capitalism navigate, continue in an unending stream of liquidity? Or
will the dam (of) debt one day block their "forward" progress?
The
money measures in the table to the right were taken directly from the Federal
Reserve, who, until February of this year, had been publishing said numbers
each month. If we click on the link, we begin to gain the historical perspective.
In January of 1959, the first date in this data series, the money supply stood
at $292 billion. By February of 2006, it had grown 3,419 percent to $10,276
billion. Since 2000 the money supply has grown 55 percent and it has grown
by $764 billion in the last twelve months.
So, why did the Fed stop producing this number? The Fed announcement stated
that the, "Board judged that the costs of collecting the underlying data and
publishing M3 outweigh the benefits." But, why would the "cost" of producing
anything be a concern for an agency that creates an additional $764 billion
of debt in 12 months? This is like telling your spouse that you are going to
make an additional $100 million in income next year, but that you've decided
that the cost of paying a maid to clean your home appears to "outweigh the
benefits." Call me cynical, but I doubt your spouse would buy it. The chart
at the beginning of this article makes it apparent that the Dow's new high
is hollow. Even more disconcerting is the fact that many are paying for yesterday's
debt with today's debt. Clearly, this is not the path to an ever-stronger economy.

Since the Federal Reserve has decided that it cannot justify the cost of producing
this number, I have found it necessary to turn to others, like John Williams
at Shadow Government Statistics,
to stay abreast of the speed at which this "little" number is growing.
While some public figures believe that "there
is a concerted effort to make it appear that the economy is bad," the
data, revealed in these charts, shows the opposite to be true. If we have
money in the financial markets, we'd best look at these numbers that we've
been told are not worth the cost of collecting. I hope that you will ponder
this and then act for your own benefit.
To read some of our other postings and learn about our educational
services, we encourage you to visit our website.
Our industry research paper on short selling, Riders
on the Storm: Short Selling in Contrary Winds, is available to those
who subscribe to our monthly newsletter, The Investors Mind: Anticipating
Trends through the Lens of History.
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Doug Wakefield,
President
Best Minds Inc., A Registered Investment
Advisor
Best Minds, Inc is a registered investment advisor that
looks to the best minds in the world of finance and economics to seek a direction
for our clients. To be a true advocate to our clients, we have found it necessary
to go well beyond the norms in financial planning today. We are avid readers.
In our study of the markets, we research general history, financial and economic
history, fundamental and technical analysis, and mass and individual psychology.
Copyright © 2005-2009 Best Minds Inc.
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