
The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Friday, May 6, 2005 ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: To complete this week's Orange County trifecta, today we contrast the respective trajectories of a master-planned city in California with a large coffee retailer and find these two really aren't that different
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------------------------- FOOLS IN PARADISE By Eric J. Fry What do the city of Irvine, California and the Starbucks Company have in common? Maybe nothing
or maybe both of these prosperous entities owe a debt of gratitude to the consumption-crazed American economy. If not for America's three-decades-and-counting consumption boom, for example, Starbucks might not be selling $4 lattes from 8,000 different locations. And if not for the growing tendency of Americans to assume the riskiest possible mortgages in the quest for the largest possible homes, the average home price in Irvine might not be bumping up against $800,000 - double the price of four years earlier. Unfortunately, booms that derive from debt, rather than incomes, tend to die a grisly death
More about this below. "Archeological research establishes prehistoric man in the Irvine area at least 12,000 years ago," the city of Irvine's Web site explains, but the first Starbucks outlet did not arrive in this Southern California suburb until many years later. In fact, the first Starbucks outlet did not arrive anywhere until 1971, when the very first location opened its doors in Seattle's Pike Place Market. Coincidentally, 1971 was also the year that gave birth to the city of Irvine, California, a prosperous suburb of Orange County. Over the ensuing 34 years, both Starbucks and Irvine enjoyed almost uninterrupted prosperity. Today, both entities are priced for perfection. Starbucks shares change hands for a lofty 48 times earnings, while Irvine's $792,000 average home price towers above the national average. The chart below tracks the remarkably similar trajectories of median home prices in Orange County, CA, of which Irvine is an important part, and the number of Starbucks outlets worldwide. We are somewhat intrigued - and amused - that these parabolic trajectories so closely resemble one another.
Perhaps no legitimate connection exists between these two trends. Or perhaps, Irvine and Starbucks share a more profound connection than is readily apparent. The former is "one of the safest, master-planned, business- friendly communities in the country," according to its Web site. The latter is one of the most successful master- planned food retailers in the world, complete with a "CEO and global strategist." Both entities reflect are an aspect of America's rampant consumption boom - a boom that may be living on borrowed time, not to mention borrowed money. If, for example, the Irvine real estate market had to rely solely upon buyers who paid cash for their houses, or who financed their purchases with traditional 30-year fixed- rate mortgages, the average home price would be well below $792,000 - at least, that would be our guess. And if all of the nation's non-cash home-buyers had no choice but to finance their home purchases with 30-year fixed-rate mortgages - instead of cash-flow friendly innovations like interest-only mortgages - they would have much less disposable income to dispose of in places like Starbucks. But American homebuyers do have a choice - many choices in fact. And increasingly they are choosing to borrow as much money as possible against their homes, repay as little as possible, and use their borrowings to fund an outsized consumption that their incomes alone could never support. In short, Americans are choosing to borrow and spend, rather than to save and invest. We Americans scorn fiscal conservatism and its attendant deprivations. Saving money is for losers. Why bother saving money, when perpetually rising home values will do the saving for us
without any of the unpleasant side effects of saving, like foregoing frivolous luxuries. We Americans have come to believe, in fact, that inflating asset values provide a legitimate substitute for the traditional capitalistic wealth-creation cycle: Save, invest, produce, save
Our growing reliance upon inflating asset values to fuel our prosperity can be summed up as "wealth creation is a fool's paradise," according to Dr. Kurt Richebächer, editor of the Richebächer Letter. "There is, actually, a very simple rule about wealth creation," the doctor observes, "It says capital decreases when a nation consumes more than it produces. But capital increases when a nation produces more than it consumes. Of course, that is equally true for firms and private households
"But what is happening in the Unites States is the exact opposite of capital accumulation," Richebächer warns. "Instead of accumulating foreign assets, it is accumulating foreign debts. And internally, instead of expanding its capital stock for higher future output and income growth, there is record accumulation of unproductive debt collateralized by inflating asset prices." Of course, as long as our assets continue inflating, we fools may continue to enjoy our paradise. Besides, who would want to do the hard work of saving and investing if there were a "better" way? Asset-financed consumption is a pretty cushy means of producing economic "growth." And such growth can appear to be genuinely robust, especially if one refrains from looking too closely at the liability side of the balance sheet. As Richebächer readily admits, "A paradoxical situation has developed in the world. Countries with rock-bottom savings, sluggish business investment and the worst trade balances have been excelling with strong economic growth, while countries with high savings and strong trade balances are mired in protracted sluggish growth. The prime examples of the first group are the United States, Britain, Australia and New Zealand. Outstanding examples of the second group are Japan and Germany." But no country can match America's, unbridled consumption. "During the four years 2000-04, personal consumption captured 87.1% of U.S. real GDP growth, as against a longer-term average of 67%," Richebächer points out. "At the same time, net national savings plunged from 5.8% to less than 1% of GDP." Since we do not save and invest, neither do we produce. The nation's manufacturing capacity been withering away year- by-year, as the nearby chart attests.
"The important point to see from the macro perspective," Richebächer concludes, is that inflating assets prices have played the key role in propelling consumption in the United Sates to an exorbitant and patently unsustainable level." "For the U.S. economy, huge twin deficits, excess consumption, the demise of manufacturing, near-zero savings, super-sized unproductive debt and poor profitability of non-financial activity all speak of an unstable economic recovery in the United States
The looming danger is that relatively moderate further increases of interest rates, short- and long-term, may prick the highly leveraged bond bubble with ghastly ramifications for the stock market and the housing bubble." That's the bad news. The good news is that the post-bubble era might feature lower home prices in Irvine, California and shorter lines at the neighborhood Starbucks. [Ed. Note: Richebächer has some bad news for you
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------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Eric J. Fry Vladimir Putin might be smiling to himself. Yesterday, Russia's debt rating - for the first time ever - topped the debt rating of America's largest automobile manufacturer. Three months ago in this column, we noted that GM and Russia both possessed an identical near-junk, BBB- debt rating from S&P, and we presented the nearby chart to illustrate their respective rating histories. "What lies ahead for Russia and General Motors?" we wondered at the time. "Which of these two marginal credits will advance to the big leagues and which will fall even deeper into the minors?" Yesterday, S&P provided the answer: GM is the minor- leaguer. Russian debt, for the record, remains in the big leagues. We do not expect to see GM back in the majors any time soon.
As we first observed in our column of February 11th, "GM's debt load is massive and growing. Its net debt outstanding has doubled over the last four years to $244 billion. In addition, GM's balance sheet contains a towering pension liability of $102.4 billion and a $67.5 billion liability for other post-employment benefits (OPEB), primarily health care, insurance and other benefits that the company is committed to providing both current retirees and active employees
Net-net, GM seems fully deserving of its 'near junk' rating and seems likely to trend from bad to worse. The adverse trends plaguing GM might simply continue, in which case this BBB- borrower could slip into a kind of junk-credit abyss - paying ever higher interest rates, while struggling to satisfy ever-growing liabilities." Once in that abyss, there is no easy way out
Just ask Vladimir Putin. [Ed. Note: Click here for the Rude Awakening's February 11, 2005 comparison of GM and Russia and their respective debt ratings
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/RudeAwake/Articles/majorleaguedebtors.html ------------------------- And the Markets
| Thursday | Wednesday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,340 | 10,385 | 148 | -4.1% | S&P | 1,173 | 1,176 | 16 | -3.2% | NASDAQ | 1,962 | 1,962 | 40 | -9.8% | 10-year Treasury | 4.16% | 4.19% | -0.04 | -0.06 | 30-year Treasury | 4.58% | 4.59% | 0.07 | -0.24 | Russell 2000 | 596 | 595 | 16 | -8.6% | Gold | $430.02 | $429.70 | -$4.38 | -1.7% | Silver | $7.05 | $7.01 | $0.14 | 3.5% | CRB | 300.20 | 300.97 | -3.54 | 5.7% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $50.83 | $50.13 | $1.11 | 17.0% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 104.49 | JPY 104.49 | 0.36 | -1.9% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2957 | $1.2947 | -87 | 4.4% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.9055 | $1.9023 | 24 | 0.7% |
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