Provided as a courtesy of Agora Publishing and DailyReckoning.com.
-- On behalf of those of us who demonically persist in pointing out the sheer
inflationary horror of what is happening with the Federal Reserve, the banks
and the money supply, I want to commend Barron's for restoring their reporting
of the Federal Reserve and bank data. On behalf of a grateful America, I say "thank
you!"
And since we are talking about it, and since that is all I seem to talk about,
I will note that Total Fed Credit, the fabled fountainhead from which springs
forth, literally, money from thin freaking air (by creating credit, which creates
debt, which creates the money, which inflates the money supply, which causes
price inflation), has slowed its rate of growth, and last week actually showed
a decline in Total Fed Credit of $8.9 billion.
This is, obviously, the proverbial good news/bad news situation, in that it
is good that the Federal Reserve has stopped its insane inflation of money
and credit which creates subsequent inflation in prices (which is the killer-diller),
but it is bad because, by this time, we are so far gone that the only way this
idiotic government-centric economy can keep going is by continuing to create-
forever! -exponentially rising amounts of money and credit/debt! Forever! Hahahaha!
For a dash of some modern, mood-appropriate, surround-sound ambience, I now
cleverly cue up a soundtrack of distant thunder and multitudes of desperate,
tortured people wailing in despair. And over this mournful dirge I bellow "And
now we're not, all of a freaking sudden!" Boom! Crack of thunder!
Of course, foreign central banks are still accumulating US Treasuries and
agency debt as they are forced to do something, anything, with the constant
flood of almost $900 billion dollars per year that keeps flowing into their
countries via the American trade/current account deficit. And now their combined
stash at the Federal Reserve has ballooned by another $6.8 billion last week
alone, taking their hoard to an absolutely staggering total of $1.8 trillion!
This is astounding! In January of 2002, a short 5 years ago, the accumulated
foreign holdings of American government and agency debt was $730 billion, which
seemed enormous at the time. Now it is $1.8 trillion! In five years the government
and government-sponsored agencies were loaned another $1.1 trillion!
-- I was so busy reeling from the lunacy I see all around me, and trying to
erase the memory of the lunacy I see all around me with high dosages of cheap
tequila faaAAaarr beyond what could be considered medicinal, that I almost
did not notice that the new index of economic indicators was released.
Using my finger to pry open one bleary eye, I see that the Leading Economic
Indicator (essentially future profits) was nothing to write home about, as
it was up a miniscule 0.4, rising to 138.0 from 137.6. The Coincident Indicator
(current business activity) was even more lackluster, rising 0.2 to 123.3 from
123.1.
The real action was in the Lagging Economic Indicator (burdens and inflation),
which is the one that I always pay particular attention to because that is
the one that reports inflation, rose a comparatively monster 1.1 as the index
jumped from 127.3 from 126.2. Inflation is swamping current and anticipated
future business activity! Gaaahh!
This is horrible news, both because it means that I will probably be berserk
in just a few minutes as the full horror of this congeals my central nervous
system, which means that my innocent family is in for some pretty rough sledding
in the next few hours, which probably explains why the Mogambo Security Video
System (MSVS) recorded them blasting out of here, engine roaring, tires squealing,
just after I yelled "Holy hell! Look at that inflation in the Lagging Indicator!"
They left before I could tell them that the JOC-ECRI Industrial Price Index
shot up 2.82 points as that index rose to 133.02 from 130.2. This is a hell
of a big move in prices! But they'll find out about them soon enough.
-- And if the economic ignorance, stupidity and intellectual rot and corruption
in which we are drowning is not enough to convince you go buy gold and hang
onto it for dear, dear life, then perhaps the GoldForecaster.com will be enough
to change your mind. They write "The European Central Bank is to adopt an accounting
change that will strip out of reserve total assets the amounts of gold loaned
and sold into the market."
Whoa! Does this mean that the fraud of central bank gold holdings (which are
allowed to say that they still owned the gold that has actually been loaned
out and sold) is about to be exposed? I laugh cruelly and contemptuously, "Hahaha!"
Trust me that there will still be lots and lots of loopholes and exemptions,
and long-delayed due dates for reporting requirements, and blah blah blah,
so don't start thinking that sanity has returned to the world. GoldForecaster.com
itself admits when they say "Gratifying though that may be, what we would like
to see is the full detail with maturing dates, of the past and future maturing
dates of the futures and options sales. At the moment, gold that has been sold
by way of a futures or option transaction is not reported until the sale matures."
But my lot in life is not to expose corruption in America, as it would be
a dreary, full-time job these days, but to find a way to make a lot of money
in Big Freaking Hurry (BFH). And towards that end, I note that they report
that it is not just you and I that are putting money into the gold and silver
ETFs, but there is a wide-spread resurgence of interest in precious metals,
as they report that "there are now seven products of this type trading on ten
exchanges around the world"! Seven new ETF-like investment vehicles around
the world, all to compete for a relatively finite supply of precious metals!
For this NOT to resolve with much higher prices is to make a mockery of the
whole "supply/demand dynamic, equilibrated by price" paradigm that you learned
on the first day of Econ 101! It's so laughable that it is tantamount to saying "The
tenuous Mogambo fantasy/reality dynamic, equilibrated by gold, raw firepower
and irrational revenge against real and imagined enemies, is no longer valid,
either." And even a casual perusal of my voluminous "official" files gives
the lie to that, too!
So, unless they have repealed the classic, ironclad interplay between supply
and demand, then this may be the most bullish thing that you can possibly think
of, other than somebody ringing the door bell and literally stuffing money
into your hands and down your shirt when neither the spouse nor kids are at
home, and so you don't have to share it with any of them.
And if it is not so bullish, then why am I standing here with this stupid,
bug-eyed look all over my Stupid Mogambo Face (SMF) at my total astonishment
that this opportunity is even happening at all? I mean, this is the kind of
thing that usually only happens in Happy Mogambo World (HMW), a pleasant fantasy
land where I prudently and intelligently buy gold and silver with every dime
at my disposal, and I instantly get so rich that I am able to pay off the wife,
and kids, and creditors, AND all their slimy little lawyers, and STILL have
enough money left over to cut a wide swath of infamy wherever I go, setting
local records in sheer disgusting excess and unpardonable gluttony.
But now it is happening in real life! This is going to be SO cool!
-- If you want a good reason why we are screwed, and you suspect that it may
be because of the quality of our school system, then perhaps nothing could
be more enlightening than "A Contrarian View: Save Less, Retire With Enough" from
the New York Times.
The article starts out "A small band of economists from universities, research
institutions and the government are clearly expressing the blasphemy that many
Americans could be saving less than they are being told to by the financial
services industry -- and spending more -- while they are younger. The negative
savings rate, they say, is wildly distorted."
Before I went bananas at the utter preposterousness of this, I decided to
read more, so that I won't be accused of "rushing to judgment." That is when
I read "According to them, the financial industry, with its ostensibly objective
online calculators, overstates how much money someone will need in retirement."
To give everything a kind of surreal quality, the article then goes on to
say "A study last October by another group of economists, including two working
for the Federal Reserve Board, found 88 percent of retirees age 51 and older
had adequate wealth." Hahaha! This is too, too much! We are talking about $60,000
dollars or less! You can live as a retiree, for another thirty years or so,
on $60,000? Hahaha! The Federal Reserve is saying this, too? Hahaha! Gimme
a break!
They ignore my laughing and making rudely disparaging hooting noises, and
blithely go on to say "Some, in fact, contend that financial firms have a pointed
interest in persuading people to save much more than they need because the
companies earn fees on managing that money." Hahaha! Of course they do, doofus!
It's true! It's always true!
It's the same way that roofers think you need a new roof, the same way that
housepainters think you need to paint your house, the same way that decorators
think that you need a whole new "look" in the living room, and it's the same
way that your wife's hairdresser thinks that you need to pay for an expensive "Oriental
rejuvenating regimen" with rare oils, emollients and scented essences so that
my wife's hair will be beautiful and youthful, like I'll be, I guess, I dunno,
somehow happier about her kicking me in the groin if her hair looks nice or
something. Well, we'll see!
But everything's all a scam in the end, anyway, in one way or the other. Or,
as I have heard it said, "Ninety percent of everything is crap."
Of course, the article goes on to say that "The findings of the economists
are being met as most challenges to orthodoxy are: with stony silence or extreme
umbrage." She quotes Christopher Jones, the chief investment officer at Financial
Engines, as saying "I count myself as deeply skeptical."
If you are one of those people who enjoys dividing people up into groups,
count me in with the guys who take "extreme umbrage" at such idiocy, as this
may be the most ludicrous lunacy that has ever come out of an American university
or the Federal Reserve, and I can prove it by simply noting that there is not
one instance in all of recorded history, anywhere, when the "people" had saved
enough money to live comfortably in retirement, especially in an inflationary
period, doubly especially when the inflation is caused by a fiat currency,
triply especially when the banks operate with a zero reserve requirement (and
thus achieve the ability to infinitely multiply the level of deposits), and
quadruplely especially when the whole thing is to finance a large, suffocating
government that now employs, directly, one out of every seven workers, and
is the sole means of support for about a third of the country! Not one time!
Ever! Not even close! Never!
And not only did the "people" not save enough money to retire, but they almost
uniformly ended their years in penniless poverty as a burden on somebody, as
the persistent inflation cruelly destroyed the buying power of whatever little
money that they had accumulated.
But I am supposed to believe that now, for no particular reason at all, inflation
will suddenly cease? Hahaha! And retirement "nest eggs" will, for the first
time in all of history, maintain their purchasing power against a guaranteed
rising inflation, which will last from the instant of retirement through another
few decades of this monetary insanity? Hahaha! Stop it! My sides are hurting
from all the laughing! Hahahaha!
Hell, today, here we are at the tail end of the biggest boom in American history,
financed by the biggest, most irresponsible explosion of excess money and credit,
measured over whole decades, built up, whole trillions of dollars, for longer
than most people have been alive, when money incomes rose and rose, and accrued
as never before to government contractors and the holders of equities.
And yet retirees are now unable to continue in retirement, and are having
to be given more and more goods and services (like the expensive the new Medicare
Prescription Drug Coverage), on top of the years and years of receiving more
and more goods and services, always with the idea of government offsetting
the persistent, grinding of price inflation, primarily through rising Medicare
and Social Security payments!
And the retirees are being given more things, too, to offset the inflation
that is eating retirees alive, like special exemptions on their property taxes!
And yet, rubbing my eyes in shocked disbelief to hear such stupidity, here
are these ostensibly educated, ostensibly sane people saying that now it is
possible for most people to retire in comfort? This is too, too weird!
So, yes- for the love of God, yes! -put me in the group that takes "extreme
umbrage" at these university eggheads and the equally ridiculous Fed studies,
and further put me in the group of the subgroup group that registers in the "Extreme,
very extreme, maximum extreme" range, past redline on the Umbrage Meter, as
in "Run for the freaking hills! It's going to blow!"
But you don't need no stinking Umbrage Meter to know that it is a Timeless
Mogambo Truism (TMT) that nobody will EVER be able to save enough money when
a central bank can create excess credit, and thus create debt, and thus create
excess money, and thus create monetary inflation, and thus price inflation,
because they will. They always (pause for dramatic effect) do.
And what is even more, now that I am getting myself worked up), I will tell
you for a Freaking Mogambo Fact (FMF) that it works out that if you want to
have a month's income in retirement, then this requires that you save, at least,
the equivalent of 100% of everything you spend in a month right now, and you
do this every day of your life. In short, you must save everything you make,
and live on nothing.
In chow and automobile-related terms, you need to invest a cheeseburger now
to have a cheeseburger in retirement, and you need to invest a new car now
to have a new car in retirement.
And there is no other way to do it, net of inflation, made worse by high taxes
and the constant grinding down of your assets by the financial services industry
with fees and expenses and charges.
And it ain't theory, or math, or my loud, penetrating Mogambo voice (LPMV)
that makes this true; this is a grim fact of history, and all you have to do
is look it up and work a calculator for about two seconds to prove it to yourself.
So, you want a scam? Without a doubt, the whole "everybody gets a secure retirement
by investing in the stock market" is the biggest scam of them all, judging
by the sheer number of people who believe such utter, utter nonsense.
-- From a new advertising flyer for the incredible Richebächer Letter,
we read that "If you use the real statistics to calculate unemployment, the
way we used to calculate it back in 1980, the real unemployment rate is a much
more devastating 12.5%."
My God! This is the horrifying level of unemployment seen only during depressions
and dark, dark, dark and dreadfully dismal days for an economy, which is both
1) true and 2) this week's gratuitous use of alliteration for no particular
reason at all.
The only thing that is different today is the sheer number of "safety net" government
programs that exist at the local, state and federal levels, which is funneling
money and benefits with both hands to a gigantic and ever-growing population
of needy people, who have been made needy by the inflation in prices caused
by the very act of the government borrowing money, which the Federal Reserve
created (monetary inflation) so that they government can grow larger and give
more money and expensive services to the needy! Hahaha! The government creating
more needy people by helping needy people! Hahaha! How's THAT for a classic
example of the perversity of government "helping"!
In a related note, even worse, Initial Jobless Claims rose to 325,000.
And speaking of jobs and Initial Jobless Claims, one funny by-product of Congress
raising the minimum wage is that I think I see the sudden re-appearance of
discussions of the "wage-price" spiral, where higher prices means labor demands
higher wages, which forces businesses to raise prices to cover the higher labor
cost, which makes workers demand higher wages, which makes prices go up, which
makes workers demand higher wages, which raises prices, around and around.
The funny part is that the enormous salaries and benefits paid to CEOs and
all the other executives (and to a lesser extent the rising wages and benefit
packages of workers and retirees) have already made prices go up, and nobody
complained! I mean, the average new car now costs almost $27,000, which is
a hell of a lot of money, and the reason they charge so much is that they have
to charge a high enough price to get back all those wages and expensive benefits
the company paid to employees and retirees, which all kept rising every year,
and thus every dime of it showed up in higher prices, as it eventually must.
I blush to admit that in an effort to emulate this tempting philosophy, for
a time the finances of the Mogambo household were so arranged. I kept borrowing
more and more money, and taking the better part of the kid's babysitting and
lawn-mowing money, and spending it all on myself (mostly on tasty things that
contained a lot of calories or had a high "fun factor", as it turns out).
Unfortunately, as I grew gloriously fatter and fatter, and the household grew
more and more in debt, I had to cut back on foolishly spending so much money
on the wife and kids for things like, you know, their food and clothing and
their stupid prescription medications. Predictably, they started whining about
that, too, saying "We're poor and sick and starving! Help us, daddy! Please
help us!"
And so I explained to them, for what seemed like the zillionth time, that
they were all a bunch of malcontents, and drove the point home by saying "Just
look at me! Do I look poor to you? No! I wear expensive clothes and drive a
brand new Cadillac! Do I look like I am sick? No! I play golf five days a week!
Do I look like I am starving? No! I'm freaking enormous! Now, go to hell, you
little whiners! This kind of luxury and overabundance proves that the Mogambo
household economy is in fine, fine shape, all thanks to my Fabulous Mogambo
Genius (FMG)!"
Unfortunately, several adverse court decisions discredited the FMG in a hurry,
but not so for the Federal Reserve! They just kept going! And now, after all
this time, as the Federal Reserve made it all worse and worse by providing
the excess money and credit that financed it all, and the Congress kept deficit-spending
to add to the pressure to create more money and credit, prices have gotten
so high that Congress is mandating a 40% increase in wages? And yet they say
that there is no inflation of any kind? Jeez!
-- The sad state of the debasement of the dollar by the Federal Reserve is
made chillingly clear by the link that Chad T sent. It was to News.Yahoo.com,
which had the article "Coin shortage could turn pennies to nickels". It was
there that we read that Francois Velde, who is the senior economist at the
Chicago Fed, argued that "The best solution would be to 'rebase' the penny
by making it worth five cents rather than one cent. Doing so would increase
the amount of five-cent coins in circulation and do away with the almost worthless
one cent coin."
His argument is Gresham's Law ("Bad money drives out good money") in all its
glory, as Mr. Velde notes by saying "History shows that when coins are worth
melting, they disappear."
His solution, then, is that "Rebasing the penny would ... debase the five-cent
piece and put it safely away from its melting point." In short, use the power
of government to declare that the penny is now a nickel, and stop making nickels!
This is all very, very interesting from the point of view that stating the
obvious-yet-ugly, brute-force fascist solution is a lot less than one should
expect from the bigshot senior economist at the Chicago Fed, who should have
said, instead, "The Mogambo was right! We are a bunch of idiots and raving
lunatic wankers for having debased the dollar by creating so much of them!
And the only way to solve this crisis is to make the nickel again worth more
than the metal in the nickel, and the penny worth more than the metal in the
penny, and the only way you can do this is to act like you got some smarts
and for the Federal Reserve to stop this stupid, insane regime of excessive
creation of money and credit!"
But, instead, we pay this guy the big bucks for ruining the dollar and then
declaring that, by fiat backed by unlimited government force, the penny is
now-magically-a nickel. Hahaha!
But let me try to salvage a little silver lining out of this dark cloud by
calling up the Fed on the telephone ("ring ring!") to have them, exactly likewise,
declare that I am an irresistible, hot babe-magnet, and they throw up their
hands and roll their eyes, like "We can't do that!" Fabulous. Just freaking
fabulous. Thanks for nothing.
-- George L. sent the link to where the Treasury says that they are going
to be issuing the 30-year bond more frequently. The site notes that the "Treasury
will issue 30-year bonds on a quarterly basis beginning in February 2007",
and that "Total bond issuance in 2007 is likely to rise slightly to ensure
liquidity in the new issue."
My sensitive nervous system detects trouble ahead, as they are issuing 30-year
bonds more often, and announcing that they are going to issue a lot of them,
too! Uh-oh!
And my heightened sense of panic is elevated all the more when George notes
that "In 1993, they changed 30-year auctions from quarterly to semi-annually,
ostensibly because of 'taking advantage of low short-term rates.'" I wonder
what it all means? I'll bet it's not good!
-- Being the kind of guy who is pretty much out of it most of the time, I
didn't notice an important nuance in the way the Social Security benefit is
calculated. So imagine my surprise to be reminded, according to the form titled "Your
Social Security Statement", which is Form SSA-7005-SM-SI (10-2006) from the
Social Security Administration, that "Remember, it's your earnings, not the
amount of taxes you paid or the number of credits you've earned, that determine
your benefit amount."
Now comes the kick to the head; "When we figure that amount, we base it on
your average earnings over your lifetime." What? I scream in outrage! Hell,
that ain't the way I remember it!
Now, instead of using the average of the 10 highest quarters of income (which
is how I remember it) to determine by benefit amount, they now average my income
to include the time when I didn't make squat, like just out of high school!
And I made practically nothing while in the Army, and, as a starving college
student trying to make it on the GI Bill, I made nothing then, either! And
graduate school was even worse!
And now they are going to average my earnings to include all those ten lean
years (a quarter of my working life when I made almost zero income), in calculating
my benefit? I'm screwed!
But this is not about how another communist/socialist/collectivist benefit
program cooked up by a communist/socialist/collectivist government has failed
and caused ruinous inflation in desperately trying, and failing, to make it
work, but about the lying and blatant fraud to which they will stoop to renege
on their end of the deal when their expensive efforts are for naught, which
proves that, to the politician palefaces, we're all still just a bunch of stinking,
heathen savages with worthless treaties in our grubby, dirty little hands that
don't mean squat to the Great White Father in Washington. Ugh.
****Mogambo sez: You should be buying gold, silver and oil stocks with every
downtick in those markets. If you are, you will soon be wealthy. If not, you
will soon be educated, which some say is almost as good. But it ain't.