 01/03/02 BENEFITS OF RECESSION* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Euro rises! Dow too. Wholesale index up
Consumers more indebted than ever
business debt up too
But higher long term rates cutting off refi activity
where will new money come from? Who would vote for a tax inspector? And more
Well, so far the euro is doing what it should do - rising against the dollar. It was up a penny in its first day of trading since appearing in tangible form. Until January 1st, euros existed only in theory. But on the 1st, cash machines and banks began distributing them. Now that they're a little more real
perhaps people will have more confidence in them. The world has never seen anything like the euro. Previously, money might be backed by gold. Or it was backed by the power of a sovereign state. The euro is backed by neither. Only a convention between European nations gives it life. But couldn't France or Italy decide it no longer wants the euro? Suppose inflation began to endanger savings? Or, suppose the euro rose so high that it hurt exports? Wouldn't the Italians say, "thanks, but we'll go back to the lire
at least we could inflate that currency as much as we wanted"? The euro is a grand experiment. It should be fun to watch. Just a guess: the threat of nations abandoning the euro in favor of their own currencies will force European central bankers to be very careful to keep the currency stable. By contrast, Americans are stuck with the dollar, like it or not. Americans have much more debt than Europeans. Debtors favor inflation
and a falling currency. On these factors alone, we expect the dollar to drop against the euro - eventually. And even if it doesn't
well, it should. Eric, what's new on Wall Street? ***** Mr. Eric Fry
- David Copperfield may be the "Master of Illusion," but Mr. Market is at least a master's apprentice. He can make rallies appear out of thin air, without any visible valuation support. He can cause vast crowds of people to imagine they see an economic recovery right before their eyes. And for the grand finale, he can make paying 85 times earnings for Cisco Systems look exactly like a "great investment". Yes indeed, no minor illusionist is he! - Yesterday, he performed a very nifty trick by halting a falling stock market in mid-descent and then causing it to levitate. The Dow fell about 50 points early in the day, before reversing course and climbing 52 points to 10,073. The Nasdaq floated 29 points higher to 1,979. - But Mr. Market will need to call upon the complete scope of his magical powers to maintain the illusion of economic recovery throughout the entire 12 months of 2002. More than likely, investors will begin to spot the smoke, mirrors, and other tricks of the trade sometime early this year. - Try as we might, it's hard for us to see how consumer spending can carry the economy much longer - unless there is a pronounced rebound in employment or dollar bills start falling from the sky. - Employment, as we all know, continues to fall; savings are something only rich people have; and the mortgage- refinance boom has run into a brick wall. The economic results might be gruesome. "No rubber-necking folks! Keep it movin'! Keep it movin'!" - Despite massive mortgage-refinance activity in 2001 - five times greater than in 2000 - the consumer finds himself more indebted than ever. In other words, household debt outstanding has actually INCREASED. This is a rather astonishing fact. - How does surging refi activity cause mortgage debt to RISE? Shouldn't indebtedness be heading in the opposite direction when mortgage rates fall? Yes, is the obvious answer, unless folks are sucking equity out of their houses, thereby increasing the size of their mortgages. - The consumer has been trading in his home equity for some extra pocket change, which helps the economy short- term. But longer-term, his rising debt load will weigh on consumer spending, and therefore, on economic growth. - Furthermore, soaring 10-year interest rates have put an end to the refi boom's heart. The Mortgage Bankers Association's data show that applications for mortgage refinancings have plunged about 54% during the four weeks ended December 21st, compared to the prior four weeks. My well-placed contact in the mortgage industry told me yesterday that January volumes would be even worse. No more "free money" for homeowners. - The National Association of Purchasing Management (NAPM) has rechristened itself the very New-Age-sounding "Institute for Supply Management." To commemorate the momentous event yesterday, the Institute-formerly-known- as-the-NAPM issued a "surprisingly" strong reading on the economy's health. - Notably, the new orders index popped to 54.9 from 48.8 the prior month - the strongest reading in 20 months. Even a skeptical bear would have to acknowledge that the report is in fact "surprising." - However, a skeptical bear would quickly add, "But let's see what happens next month!" - But the financial markets took the news at face value and reacted immediately: stocks jumped, bonds fell. The 10-year Treasury yield soared to 5.16%. The refi boom that recently died is even "deader" now. - Nevertheless, says Ventana Capital's Charlie Peabody, "Investors appear to be 'hanging their hats' on the belief that the Federal Reserve's interest rate cuts will finally have an impact on the consumer in 2002." - The rate cuts may be causing consumer confidence to pick up a bit, but rising consumer spending is not automatic. - Most of the recent surge in confidence, Peabody observes, was due to an improvement in the expectations for the future, while the 'present situation' index remained virtually unchanged. - He concludes: "We do not believe the [surge in confidence] indicates that more consumers will pay their bills on time, or that consumers will be reinvigorated to pile on more debt
It is interesting to note that collapses of bubbles are often preceded by surges in consumer confidence. Investors buying shares on this latest news are buying on shaky ground." ***** Back in rural France
*** We continue to think that the only real problem with this recession is that it hasn't happened yet. *** Recessions straighten things out
like rain, they remind you to fix the roof. In recession, default rates and bankruptcies go up
and lenders are reminded that not all credit is good credit. They tend to tighten up on their loan requirements. *** But "this time around," reports the Wall Street Journal, "lenders, who were quick to reduce the flow of credit during past recessions, have left the tap wide open." *** What a strange recession! More below. *** The mayor of a nearby town is getting ready to retire soon. Who will replace him? This was the subject of conversation last night when some neighbors dropped by. "Mr. Leopald is the most likely winner," said Francoise. "He's a socialist and he's stupid as a pig, but people seem to like him." "And there's no real competition," added Henri, "the other candidate is a guy who has been the tax inspector for years. Can you imagine anything so ridiculous. Who would vote for a tax inspector? As soon as you mention 'tax inspector' people want to kill him, not vote for him." * * * * * * * * * Advertisement * * * * * * * * * Bull market, bear market, doesn't matter. You can multiply your investment capital and achieve outstanding returns year after year, regardless of market conditions. Let a former floor trader and experienced market strategist show you how.
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* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * BENEFITS OF RECESSION
by Bill Bonner What a strange recession!
Instead of cutting back on debt, Americans have added to it. Instead of cutting back on major purchases - they've bought cars and homes at near record rates. And stocks - instead of sinking to recession levels, where you can buy a dollar's worth of earnings for 8 to 12 bucks, a dollar's worth of earnings today, after 10 months of recession, will cost you about $40. Stocks are so high that earnings could double this year - as most analysts are predicting - and P/E ratios would still be at the top of the bull market range
even if stock prices went nowhere. What kind of recession is this? Perhaps it is the perfect one - as phony as the boom that preceded it. We remind readers that the boom was built on a lie: that thanks to a cluster of 'New Era' stars, the earth would never again sleep in darkness. Things would get better and better, forever and ever, amen. So brightly did these stars sparkle that investors went mad looking at them - sure that they were going to get rich without working! Suffused with the confidence of a rich man's spoiled son, they bid up stock prices and thought they saw their wealth go up. And thus they thought the promises of the stars were coming true. It was a phony wealth. "It was new wealth, yes
" writes Dr. Kurt Richebacher, but "the burst in stock prices created wealth for the stock owners, for them only, not for the economy as a whole
Generations of economists would never have thought of rising stock and house prices as 'wealth creation.' They would have derided it as pseudo or paper prosperity." Real wealth, Dr. Richebacher goes on to explain, only comes from real savings and investment in industries that produce profits. But instead of investing real savings in real businesses with real profits
consumers stopped saving altogether, and invested whatever money they had in information technology, an industry that has so-far failed to produce a single net dollar of profits, and which - according to a McKinsey study - has added neither a jot nor a tiddle to the nation's productivity. As stock prices rose, Americans were not shy about spending their new-found 'wealth.' Spending rose at twice the rate of incomes during the entire bubble period. But then, the Nasdaq bubble burst. All of a sudden the stars that had lit up the "New Era" went out. But some habits are hard to break. Americans had gotten in the habit of anticipating paper prosperity and spending money they didn't really have. Stocks were no longer going up at double digit rates, but people still had faith that the bull market would continue. Polls show investors still expect 15% per year from their stocks
after this "recession" is over. But at the present rate, today's recession may never be over. Because there is barely enough recession in it to do any good. Where once Americans thought they could get richer without the discipline and forbearance of saving money and investing it carefully in serious businesses
now they think they can have a recession without real suffering. They spend as though they were still in a boom - and postpone the lessons of hardship. For the last two years, stocks have gone down but real estate has continued to go up. Aided by lower rates from the Fed, Americans have eagerly 'unlocked' the equity in their own homes. Home mortgage debt has increased by $1.2 trillion over the last 3 years - money that has been fed back into the economy as though it were real income. Easier credit has helped "soften the downturn" notes the Wall Street Journal, allowing "Americans to continue borrowing to pay for homes, cars and other big-ticket items, bolstering the weakened economy. But the resulting growth in consumer credit - to a record $7.5 trillion at the end of the third quarter of 2001 - also has exposed a potential new economic fault line." "Economists worry ," the WSJ continues, "that by buying now what they would otherwise be buying tomorrow, consumers are dulling one of the few major benefits of a recession. Though painful, recessions usually purge the economy, as lenders reduce the availability of credit to compensate for the higher risk that their loans will go bad." So far, the recession of '01 has produced little purging. A few companies - Enron, Cisco, Amazon, Global Crossing - have turned out to be such flaming losers that even this market couldn't ignore them. But most companies still sell for reckless multiples of earnings
while the earnings themselves rapidly disappear. "Dividends Show Biggest Drop Since 1951," reports the PRNewswire. Enron alone wiped out $61 billion of supposed wealth. Cisco knocked off $168 billion. But against the tide of debt that swamps the nation, even these huge amounts seem trivial. Consumers' assets fell 4% over the last 2 years. Their debts, however, rose 15%. "During the first two quarters of the early 1990s recession," the WSJ cites Mark Zandi at Economy.com, "the average American household reacted to those tighter credit conditions by paring its debt by an inflation- adjusted $410
That helped leave consumers in shape to borrow anew when the economy ultimately turned the corner. By contrast, during the first two quarters of the current recession, which began in March, the average U.S. household took on $1,420 of new debt." At the corporate level, the situation is little different. Since 1994, corporate debt has increased twice as much as the nation's GDP - 85% compared to just 42%. In the last year alone, corporate debt increased 7% - even as 3 times as many corporations had their credit downgraded as upgraded. In fact, "Credit Quality Falls Worldwide," observes the Financial Times. That is the trouble with cutting rates to try to avoid a recession. They dull the main benefit of an economic downturn. People get older and poorer but no wiser. Useful instruction is lost in a swamp of easy money. Why bother to settle old accounts, people ask themselves, when new ones are so easy to open? Thus do marginal borrowers - in need of cash to keep up appearances - sink in liquidity, like primitive amphibians, rather than learn to walk upright on dry ground
Credit quantity increases, while its quality drops. Here at the Daily Reckoning, we do not forecast what will happen. We forecast what should happen. And even if it doesn't happen, we don't worry. We are right no matter what. For even if it doesn't happen, it should have. God may be wrong from time to time, but never us! "Should" and "will" rarely meet in politics. But in the markets, they regularly cross paths. Consumers and businesses, deeper in debt than anytime in history, should want to pay off some of their obligations. Will they do so anytime soon? We don't know. But sooner or later, we feel confident, "should" and "will" are bound to bump into one another. Your correspondent, on the job in the year 2002
Bill Bonner P.S. My friend, Jim Davidson, informs me that 2002 is the last palindromic year for 110 years. "Palindromic" is such a rare word, even my computer doesn't know what it means, putting a red line beneath it as though it were a mistake. But it refers to anything that reads the same back to front as in the normal direction. "Madam, I'm Adam," for example. Just thought you'd like to know what kind of year we're going to have: one whose ending is likely to be the same as its beginning.  |