The Blowoff in Emerging Markets: Buy Turkey?
The Blowoff in Emerging Markets: Buy Turkey? by Chris Mayer The Daily Reckoning Thursday, August 10, 2006 --------------------- - The Fed is caught between Scylla and Charybdis
The military is the one institution in the United States that citizens seem to trust
- Why people just don't like to think - it's too hard
A faith-based currency facing destruction
The latest report from Addison in Cannes
- Forbidden Words: An Irishman and a Lebanese woman share their thoughts on a Jewish conspiracy
Bill continues his gypsy wagon
A wine vacation
and more!
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Last night was one of the most beautiful we have ever seen. Dinner was followed by a concert performed by the family band. After that, we wandered outside. The moon was so full, we needed no flashlight. It shone through thin clouds, so that the earth looked like it had been covered with shimmering gauze. And then, there was a strange apparition in the southern skies
a shooting star that would not stop shooting. A comet? What could it herald? Today's news brings more speculation about the Fed's recent spurt of inaction. After raising rates steadily for the last two years, this week the Fed did nothing. Not knowing which hand to raise, Fed governors sat on both of them. Why? Do they sniff an economy in decline? Or, have they done their work well - finally bringing rates to exactly where they ought to be? The Fed is caught between Scylla and Charybdis
between a rock and a hard place
between one hand and the other. It could continue the fight against inflation - and risk crashing against the rocks of a recession. Or, it could turn to face the deflationary threat - and wash up on higher inflation rates. As to the former, we see that Toll Brothers, one of the nation's biggest builders, has had to go back and revise its estimates downward for the second time. It says signed contracts for new houses are off 45% from a year ago. We also read in the Florida press that foreclosures are up 34% in Palm Beach County. We thought that was where rich people lived. Surely the rich aren't losing their houses. But maybe everyone in Palm Beach isn't so rich after all. At any rate, rich or poor, they're losing their houses. Meanwhile, over on the rocks of Charybdis, the threat of higher inflation rates looms
But, the ship of state has yet another hard place on which it could founder. At dinner the other night, a French historian wondered why Americans supported the Bush administration's military adventures in Iraq and Afghanistan. She judged them contrary to the country's own interests. "You are wasting your most precious resources," she told us. "Your military strength and your money
on nothing. It doesn't make sense. Why?" We tried to explain: "Because America's experience with war has been rather positive for the last 100 years," we began. "The military is the one institution in the United States that people seem to trust. People believe in military solutions
" The truth is, attitudes have little to do with serious thinking and a lot to do with the way the wind blows. In general, people don't really think, because thinking is private, hard. It's easier for people to just rely on mass sentiments and feelings. And these develop over a long time. Americans' faith in the righteousness of their military is an old one, only paralleled by their faith in the solidity of land and houses as investments. "You can't go wrong with real estate," is a stock phrase in the United States. People presume that though there may be stagnation - and even isolated bear markets in housing - the general trend is always up. But, of course, it's simply not true. When our grandfather bought a house in Baltimore in the 1920s, he probably paid a price that, in real terms, was not matched for another 70 years. And people who bought farmland in western Kansas in the 1880s are still waiting to break even. People even believe in the solidity of something as uncertain as stocks. Yes, they are aware, intellectually, that prices go up and down. But who really remembers the last genuine bear market? Who really believes that stock prices might go down for 20 years? Who really expects a Dow of 5,000 or even 3,000? We can barely remember it ourselves, but in 1980-82, you could take a single ounce of gold, sell it, and get enough money to buy every one of the Dow stocks. Now, you need 17 ounces. And that is after the price of gold has more than doubled. You are probably thinking: "Well, those are simply examples of markets at work; they go up and they go down." True, dear reader, but our point is that really big moves in the market or in the military are driven by sentiment, which follows very long patterns, like the orbit of a distant comet that makes its appearance in the southern skies only once in a lifetime. Right now, people have begun to talk about recession
about bear markets
about war. But they don't really feel the misery of these things. It is only an abstraction. That is why they continue to buy stocks with dividend yields below two percent. It is why they are willing to buy shares in foreign companies whose names they can't pronounce, and why they happily steep themselves so far in debt that the least setback would bankrupt them. And, it is also why they still keep their savings in a faith-based currency, even though its own custodians have publicly announced they will destroy it, little by little, forever and ever. Yes, Americans are aware that hard times come around from time to time, but they don't feel threatened by them. They can't quite imagine getting hurt themselves. If they are short money, they will always have credit cards. If they lose their jobs, well
there are always plenty of jobs in the United States. And no matter what happens, the feds will make sure that nobody suffers too much. But, if there is one thing we know about the sentiments of crowds, it is that they change. Today it is greed. Tomorrow it is fear. But, never is it doubt. And, when mass sentiment goes negative, people stop worrying about the return on the money and begin to be concerned about the return of their money. They want six percent dividends, not 1.9%. They want guarantees, security, collateral
before they lend. And when they save, they want things of real, tried and true, tested value - gold, for instance - to protect their wealth. It has been a long time since that sort of fiery comet has come around and people have forgotten the sense of awe and dread it inspires
as if it announced the end of a world. They can't quite imagine what that might be like. They will have to see it, again, for themselves. It's only a matter of time. More news from the currency experts at EverBank
-------------- Chris Gaffney, reporting from St. Louis: "The pound sterling fell the most in three weeks as British Airways canceled all incoming flights to Heathrow airport. It is possible that we will see more selling of the pound if the news keeps escalating. This sell off of pound sterling was not dramatic." Read on
in today's Daily Pfennig: Terror Threat -------------- And more views from Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin
*** First, news from Addison: "Outside the cities, for most part, American's live like savages." Dr. Richebächer poked me again. "C'mon, you know it's true." We had come nine time zones from Vancouver to visit Dr. Richebächer in Cannes. While discussing the difference between Europe and the United States at dinner, he kept pointing out the number of babies being pushed in strollers. When we were doing research on demographics for our book Financial Reckoning Day, several years ago, we discovered France was the only country in Europe with a naturally increasing population rate. All the others, most notably Italy, were producing babies below "the replacement rate." "In the 1950s, when I was having my children," said the good doctor, "France was facing a similar disposition. They were not producing children fast enough to keep their population rising. That's when the invented the crèche [a free kindergarten for little ones] and helped working mother's get a tax break and land help with other families who had borne a lot of children. Today, we see the fruit of those changes. France is alive with babies. It's wornderful." Our babysitter here in France is 18 years old and proudly claims her "cohort" - those in their teens and twenties - to be the largest segment of society in the country. Interestingly, according to Huntington's book, Clash of Civilizations, it is the rise of this same cohort in the Islamic world that is creating such a wave of revolutionary discontent. Huntington likens the rise of militant Islamism to the Protestant Reformation in the Middle Ages in Europe
driven by a desire for purity of soul and a healthy dose of teenage testosterone. Such is the genre of conversation we've been having here in the Cote d'Azur. For more on Dr. Richebächer's economic thought, see: Countdown to Crisis *** And now, over to Bill: "Of course, you can't say this in America
you can barely say it in England," began a guest at last night's dinner. There is nothing like forbidden words to get a man's attention. If you want to make sure people listen to you, whisper. We listened up. The man doing the talking was a fellow Irishman
his family cast out from the homeland many years ago, like your editor's, by poverty, famine, and most likely, trouble with the law. His wife was Lebanese. Naturally, the talk turned to the current crisis in the Middle East. "What is really, really amazing," he began, "is how the Israelis have managed to get control of the foreign policy of the largest, most powerful country on Earth. There is no blue water between America's foreign policy and Israel's. You have to hand it to the Israelis; who would have thought it possible? They can do whatever they want in the 'Near East,' knowing that they have the world's only superpower backing them up. "And can you believe Condoleezza Rice? I read in the newspapers that she said that Americans had not faced such a threat since the British burned down their capital in 1812. What is she talking about? The British threatened to end the American experiment with independence completely, which probably wouldn't have been a bad idea, in retrospect. But whatever threat she is talking about today is nothing in comparison. Sometimes, you don't know whether these politicians say things they think the public wants to hear or whether they actually believe what they say. And, you don't know which is more appalling. "And now, what the Israelis are doing in Lebanon - that's appalling, too. I was in New York recently, and I couldn't believe how lopsided the news coverage in the United States really is. Every Israeli casualty is treated as a horrible tragedy, but a hundred women and children dying in Lebanon is passed off as a military victory for our side." His wife picked up the conversation. "I left Lebanon when I was three," she told us. "But I still have a lot of family there. My brothers, cousins, uncles and aunts
they were all in the country when the war started. At first, they said they would stay and tend the business. But now, they've all had to leave. Thank god they could. It's far too dangerous to stay. "We ourselves were planning to go there for a summer vacation, but I'd just had a baby, and we thought the trip would be too hard. Had we gone, we probably would have been caught in the fire when the Israelis started bombing the place." "You know," resumed her husband, still intent on the bigger picture, "when I was growing up, we used to read things about the Zionist conspiracy. You know, like the Protocols of the Elders of Zion
things like that. It was really horrible stuff, put out by nuts and kooks
the same kind of people who like to say the Holocaust never happened. "But now, there really is a Jewish conspiracy, isn't there? I mean, neo-conservative Jews really have got together to take control of the U.S. military and divert it to their own interests. They already control a substantial part of the U.S. media, you know, and the financial sector. For instance, guess who owns the Federal Reserve? Goldman, Lazard, Rothschild. I was shocked when I first found out. Now, its looks like they control the U.S. army, too. Well, bravo for them!" "But wait," we replied. "Isn't that like saying that if the majority of lawyers are Episcopalians, then the Episcopalians control the courts? Even if it were really so, not all Episcopalians think alike, you know
nor do all of them have the same agenda." "Of course," came the reply. "You're absolutely right. There are plenty of Jews who oppose the Bush administration and Israel's attack on Lebanon. Don't get me wrong; I'm not being anti-Jewish here at all. But at the same time, we have to think for ourselves and not just conform to popular shibboleths and taboos. "And, whichever way you look at it," he continued, "you can't deny that there is definitely a group of Jews with a particular point of view
and a particular agenda. They have definitely gotten themselves into positions of power. Naturally, they use the power to promote their own interests
Israeli interests, I should say. Is that a conspiracy? Well, yes. Is it wrong? Well, no. I'm not saying that. Israeli interests could be just as important to us as our own. Some people certainly think they are. I'm just saying that if most Americans understood what was going on, they wouldn't like it." *** Our carpenter friend left today. "You're on your own now," he said as he got into the car, referring to the gypsy wagon we had begun. But he had done his work well. The frame is now complete. We have only to put on the tongue-in-groove siding
and the doors and windows
and the roof
and the
well, never mind; there's still a lot to do. But, we don't mind. Jules, Henry, and Edward worked on it in the mornings, while we wrote The Daily Reckoning. We looked out the window at them
and wished we could join them. They seemed to be having such a good time - sawing, drilling, bolting, measuring, planning, sanding, chamfering. Occasionally, we couldn't resist; we would get up from our desk and go over to offer unwelcome advice. Otherwise, we remained at our post, ever loyal to our dear readers. But, as the work progressed, neighbors came over to admire it
and too wonder why we bothered. "I guess now you're going to become gypsies," said the farmer from the village. "Load everyone in the wagon and head to the south of France. "I remember when I was little, there were real gypsies with wagons like this. They would come into town. You know, they were real gypsies, with very dark faces. They would tell fortunes and sharpen knives. People thought they stole things like children, but I don't know
that might have been just an old wives' tale. All I remember is that they were very colorful. We always liked to see them come. And, we liked to see them go, too, because, as little children, we were afraid they might take us away with them. "But now that you have a gypsy wagon, you can gather the family together, hitch it to a horse and go down to the annual gypsy gathering at Ste. Marie de la Mer. They go down there and put their idol in the sea for three days. I don't know why. It's just a tradition
"They used to burn their wagons too, whenever the owner died. But now they have those motor homes. I don't think they burn those. Besides, they're insured." *** And finally, a quick note received by The Daily Reckoning's junior editor: Hi Craig, I'm not sure if Bill has even mentioned this to you yet, but I really would like if you all could mention this tour in the DR - it's a wine/investment tour. The reason I'd like you to mention it is because when we go to Cafayate in the province of Salta, we will be going to see the development that Doug Casey is working on with Bill Bonner. So, it's a great opportunity for DR readers to come along, drink some excellent wine, and be among the first to see Bill and Doug's next project. Here is where your readers can click to get more information:
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