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Bill
Bonner, Daily Reckoning
A man can make a fool of himself whenever he wants. Generally, he pays the
price himself and the rest of the world goes on with its business. But in order
to get a real public spectacle going you need to separate cause from effect.
Because it is only when a fellow thinks he can get away with something that
he really lets loose.
One of the great innovations of the lending industry during this period was
that it broke the link between the person who made the loan and the person
who would suffer the loss if the loan went bad. That was what made the housing
bubble possible. While the marginal lumpen took out I.O. low-doc ARMs, the
hedge fund, pension fund and insurance fund geniuses bought MBSs - mortgage-backed
securities. The securities were backed by the mortgages, which were in turn
backed by the imaginary incomes of the borrowers and inflated house prices.
The credit agencies rightly judged the quality of the mortgages as less than
perfect BBB and then with the miraculous powers of modern finance these same
mortgages were put into MBSs and turned into triple-A credits! This transformation
of bad credits into good ones, in front of the very eyes of Ph.D. mathematicians
and hedge fund quants, must be rated along with Christ's performance at the
marriage of Cana, where the Nazarene turned ordinary tap water into wine. Scientists
often suggest that the Gospels lie. But as to the veracity of modern finance,
they are mute.
Chris Ciovacco,
Ciovacco Capital Management
In the financial press, the appeal of gold is often portrayed as a way to protect
yourself from "end-of-the-world" events. The press tells us that people buy
gold because they are fearful. There is no question that there is some truth
to that concept. However, I would argue that the real appeal of gold is that
it enables you to protect yourself from constant money creation which erodes
the purchasing power of paper currencies. The U.S. dollar, as measured vs.
a basket of foreign currencies via the U.S. Dollar Index, has lost roughly
30% of its purchasing power since July of 2001. The endless creation of credit
and the dollar's decline has not gone unnoticed by many investors. These investors
have flocked to gold.
Peter
Cooper, AMEInfo.com
So far the US has organized an orderly devaluation of the US dollar which has
fallen by almost a third in value this century. However, in all market mechanisms
there comes a tipping point where a trend becomes a rout - and it has to be
said that expecting global creditors to continue to accept falling real debts
is not sustainable. This is why an authority as eminent as Paul Volcker forecasts
a dollar crisis within the next two-and-a-half years, and why he is unwilling
to extend that timeframe according to recent statements. But surely that also
makes investment in gold and silver a one-way bet for this period?
Richard
Daughty, the Mogambo Guru
If we speak of gold, how can we not speak of silver? And so, if you want another
reason to buy silver, since I seem to always be screaming that you should buy
silver and it hasn't done any good, then read the essay "Silver in clothing
keeps odors away" by Michael Rubinkam at the Associated Press, and maybe you
will get with the program.
For one thing, if you have ever listened to one of your kids say "Ewww! Don't
put your stinky feet near me/in the same room as me/ in the same state as me/
I hate you", then you, too, are probably self-conscious about the odor of your
feet. So rejoice in that silver-impregnated socks prevent odors! If nothing
else, this should send the sales of these socks soaring, sending the price
of silver soaring, making me (as a holder of silver) rich, rich, rich, allowing
me to run for office, get elected and use the power of government to crush
my enemies! So how close are we to that sweet dream of self-righteous vengeance,
as measured by the "silver per sock ratio"?
Well, the amount of silver in one pair of these socks, says the article, is
1/100 of an ounce. So a stinking million pairs of socks is 10,000 ounces of
additional consumption of silver per year. A hundred million pairs of socks
per year, which I think is globally conservative, is another million ounces
of silver consumed per year! And this does not include shirts, shoes, or underwear
with embedded-silver material! And you can count on the military to increase
consumption of silver-impregnated materials, as silver in soldier's clothing
not only eliminates the smells, fungi, bacteria, viruses and icky crap that
plague soldiers, but it is actually "a first line of defense against shrapnel
wounds, because any of the silver fabric that becomes embedded in the wound
'actually starts treating the wound,' according to the company founder."
The clothing itself not only helps heal the wound, but will also maintain
a relatively sterile area around the wound by virtue of the remaining protective
clothing? Man, oh man! And you can be sure that it is not just the American
army that is looking at this stuff and saying, echoing the sentiments of The
Mogambo, "Man, oh man!"
Bill
Fleckenstein, Fleckenstein Capital
Part of me thinks that the current mini-mania in equities is a response to
Fed-induced liquidity. And yet, when I discuss with my good friend Jim Grant
what the big central banks of the world are doing -- Japan's, the United States'
and Europe's -- he suggests that they really aren't spewing out liquidity as
aggressively as people think. Of course, if they were, one might expect commodities
to be on more of a run than they have been. To me, they seem to be suggesting
that the world economy is slowing down at the margin. Therefore, I've concluded
that what we may have is the illusion of a liquidity fest. The stock market
is acting as though there's an enormous fire hose of liquidity gushing forth
-- when, what might actually be the case, is that a wanton derivatives/credit/lending
mania is in full force.
Markets in motion may stay in motion. If, however, the source of the propulsion
is mispriced and badly structured credit, things can come to a sudden stop.
But if that were to occur, the Fed at some point would ride to the rescue with
plenty of liquidity. That is the point of my pet saying that in a social democracy
with a fiat currency, all roads lead to inflation. No matter how you examine
the milieu, it seems that all roads lead back to gold. When the world's central
banks are forced into a real print-athon, gold will truly explode. And the
more they drive up the financial markets via their efforts -- that is, if they
can drive up the financial markets -- the faster gold will go up.
Clive Maund,
CliveMaund.com
The dollar plunged with startling ferocity late last week, driven by heavy
selling. This was very bearish action that signals panic, and the probable
onset of a severe downtrend. A break below the crucial support at 80 on the
dollar index is expected to mark the transition from a clandestine unloading
of dollar assets to an all-out stampede to "get what you can for them" before
it's too late.
The conditions leading to an inevitable dollar panic sell-off did not come
about overnight. They are the result of years of abuse, principally by the
Federal Reserve of the US, which has created a veritable blizzard of dollars,
and the universal acceptance of this "funny money" has, up until now, allowed
the United States to freeload economically on the rest of the world, living
way beyond its means. The exponential growth in dollars has been and is created
electronically at the touch of a button, so that paying for anything is never
a problem, whatever you want you simply print the extra money to pay for. Because
foreigners have so far played along with this game, they are now widely, and
to some extent understandably, regarded as stupid. However, it is a dangerous
mistake to underestimate the mental capacities of other peoples. The Chinese,
in particular, have an ancient and deep culture, and when it comes to strategic
considerations, can outthink - and outflank virtually anyone. So what's going
on? - why have they accepted a mountain of paper and IOU's over many years
in exchange for real hard work and a vast quantity of real tangible products?
The Chinese, and others, have done this to carry them over a bringing period
during which they have built up their economies and infrastructure. Their goal
- which they are fast moving towards - is to arrive at the point where there
is sufficient domestic and regional demand that they no longer need to rely
on orders from countries like the United States. At this point - which we may
arrive at sooner rather than later - things will become very dangerous for
the US dollar, and the situation is actually far worse than many now believe,
because the Chinese and others are preparing to WRITE OFF THEIR DOLLAR ASSETS
AS A BAD LOSS - they will try to get what they can for them, of course, but
otherwise will be ready to fall back on domestic and regional demand and tough
it out, thus severing the umbilical with the United States, which will be left
stranded, with no takers for its funny money, a gutted manufacturing base,
astronomic debts and fiscal chaos, and a huge military it can no longer afford
to service.
Nigel Maund
For the majority of home owners, they are now "lobster potted" for the rest
of their lives in the 21st Century's version of the Victorian treadmill. Welcome
to modern debt controlled serfdom, where if you lose your job, either through
retrenchment or illness, you lose your home. It has become a veritable "Sword
of Damocles", or a stick with which to beat recalcitrant labor into a bloody
pulp, should they ever prove restless or disobedient. The ruthless and faceless
plutocrats who benefit vastly from this incredible and dreadful scheme must
be laughing on their return to a status of demagogic power which is the modern
equivalent of the Roman or the Medieval European Aristocracy at its exploitative
worst.
The mortgage weapon forms an integral part of the armory of the so called
New World Order (NWO) as it seeks to accumulate wealth and power to control
people by stealth. Other tools include the explosion of credit card debt where
people have been encouraged to spend to the limit of their cards. If they can
manage this limit, then the credit envelope is just expanded to encourage them
to spend to the absolute limit of their debt servicing capacity incurring "loan
sharking" interest rates in doing so.
Michael
Nystrom, Bull Not Bull
The shorting opportunity of a lifetime is near.
Jim Puplava,
Financial Sense
Only after hyperinflation will we get deflation. But we're nowhere close to
that now, that's a few years out. What we get next in my opinion for a 3 to
6 month period is disinflation as manufacturing inventories are brought down,
lowering prices, so headline inflation comes down. You've got low energy prices,
falling from let's say 78 down to the $59 a barrel. That's going to work its
way through the headline numbers, and what you'll have then is that perceptions
on Wall Street will start shifting focus away from inflation, to slowing economic
growth and deflation which is really going to be nothing more than disinflation.
Stephen
Roach, Morgan Stanley
This limited [housing] decline should hardly be surprising -- construction
activity almost never turns on a dime. In most cases -- Thailand being a notable
exception in 1997 -- builders tend to complete the pipeline of previously initiated
projects even as the outlook sours for new construction. That tends to support
employment in the homebuilding sector long after the demand underpinnings of
the cycle have turned. The latest trends in the US labor market bear that out.
Since peaking in February 2006, employment in the homebuilding sector -- namely,
residential building and residential special trade contractors, combined --
has contracted by a mere 2.8%; this reverses only 12% of the outsize run-up
in hiring that occurred in these industries since early 2001. In other words,
the homebuilding sector is still basically staffed for the boom. As existing
projects are completed, I suspect there will be a sharp fall-off of headcount
in this once frothy industry -- with important implications for the state of
the overall labor market, income generation, and personal consumption.
Richard
Russell, Dow Theory Letters
I just placed a one dollar bill on my desk, and next to it I placed a hundred
dollar bill. What's the difference between the two bills?
Both bills are composed of the same thing -- linen and cotton. So what's the
difference. The difference is the writing on the two bills. Both say they are
legal tender "for the payment of all debt, public and private." The only real
difference between the two items is that the Treasury states that one will
pay off a dollar of debt while the other will pay off a hundred dollars of
debt.
Thus, this nation's money has been degraded to the point where the writing
on a piece of paper tells you what the thing is worth. This is money by government
edict or by fiat. Intrinsically, neither bill is worth a damn thing. And ultimately,
they'll both end up as bookmarks or museum pieces.
Steve Saville,
Speculative Investor
If our short-term expectations for gold and commodity prices prove to be in
the right ballpark then bond futures will most likely tank over the coming
few months.
Peter Schiff,
EuroPacific Capital
Americans are not producing wealth, but merely consuming the wealth produced
by others. When Americans go shopping this Christmas season (primarily spending
borrowed money on imported goods), classic economic theory holds that the principal
benefit goes not to the U.S. but to those who supply the goods. In exchange
for their production, they receive interest and dividend paying assets (dollars,
bonds, stocks, etc), which should provide future wealth. Americans in return
accumulate depreciating consumer goods and piles of external liabilities that
must be serviced and repaid. So Americans squander the wealth of their parents
while their vendors amass it for their children.
However, the classic economic theory may not actually be in play as the liabilities
our "trading" partners are now accumulating will likely be repaid in currency
with severely diminished purchasing power. Trade normally involves the exchange
of real stuff for real stuff. As illustrated by our yawning trade deficits,
we now have a system where real stuff is simply exchanged for currency, which
in effect represent IOU's for future stuff. However, rather than being a source
for future spending, the currency must be horded indefinitely. As the Chinese
and Japanese clearly understand, any attempt to use their vast amount of dollar
reserves would cause their theoretical value to collapse. Therefore they continue
to accumulate more rather than to admit the extent of their prior folly.
The sad reality is that it is foreign producers that will eventually have
the last laugh. Sure we will screw them by repudiating our debts through inflation,
but in the end they will enjoy all of the abundance of their productive capacity
and we will suffer the wide-spread shortages that result from our lack of it.
Their standards of living will soar just as ours plunge.
Mike
Shedlock, Mish's Global Economic Analysis
Rest assured a massive "Credit Event" is coming. When it happens, no matter
how bad it seems at the time, try to remember that it will be a good thing.
Unless and until there is a total and complete repudiation of these excesses,
the ultimate consequences will just keep rising. The sooner we have a debt
purge the faster the recovery will be. Japan fought deflation for 18 years.
Is the U.S. doomed to follow suit?
This is NOT the golden age of financing, unless of course you have been investing
in gold on account of it.
Martin
D. Weiss, Safe Money Report
I'm in London, in transit for our return flight to Florida, and I have a brief,
but painful, message for you this morning:
We're going to lose the war in Iraq.
This is hard to swallow, I know. But it seems blatantly obvious to everyone
except those who have the most to lose. Every single newspaper on this side
of the Atlantic is headlining the deepening chaos in Iraq. Even the sentencing
of Saddam on Saturday, heralded in the U.S. as a victory, is likely to deepen
the sectarian strife and inflame the anti-American insurgency, according to
the Wall Street Journal's Europe edition this morning.
In Washington, most politicians now seem vividly aware of the crisis -- not
to mention the sweeping impact it's likely to have at the polls tomorrow. But,
strangely, the movers and shakers on Wall Street still seem oblivious to the
impact the war could have on investors. The Iraq war is the elephant in the
living room. Investors look at it but don't see it. They feel its presence
but don't want to touch it.
Among the various scenarios that U.S. military strategists are now painting,
here's the one I believe to be the mostly likely:
Phase 1. In the wake of spreading violence, the moderate, pro-American
government factions fall from power in Baghdad. In their place, Moktadr al
Sadr, leader of the radical anti-American factions in the current government,
comes to power.
He compels the U.S. army to pack up and leave.
He transforms all, or most, of Iraq into a fundamentalist Shiite Republic
similar to Iran's.
He forges a holy Shiite alliance with Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and they
aim for religious, political, military and economic supremacy over the entire
region.
Phase 2. Between them, Iraq and Iran control more petroleum reserves
than Saudi Arabia. Their combined armies, including the U.S.-trained and U.S.-equipped
forces in Iraq, also challenge Saudi's military might. Together, they aggressively
pursue an agenda to depose traditional Sunni leaders in nearly a dozen Muslim
nations.
Phase 3. There thus emerges a new axis of power -- extremely radical,
extremely destabilizing and powerfully resistant to foreign pressure. This
axis of power, in turn, wields tremendous leverage over the global oil market
and the financial destiny of the West as a whole.
How likely is this scenario? Highly likely! And those that agree with me are
no longer such a small minority.
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