 The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Tuesday, August 30, 2005
------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: Forget the Chinese; we Americans consume plenty of natural resources all by ourselves. --- Advertisement --- "Why Didn't You Want to Turn $1,000 into $1,001,527,933?" I won't waste your time with a yarn about Warren Buffett or Peter Lynch. In fact, I won't need any elaborate tale to grab your interest today
The facts I have to share outshine anything. Actually, this is such an incredible story that you may not believe it. Please look here: http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/RTA/WRTAF901 ------------------------- FROM LAGUNA TO LONDON By Eric J. Fry The inventory of copper cathodes at the London Metals Exchange has tumbled to record lows. The inventory of shimmering, chrome-rimmed SUVs rolling through Laguna Beach, California, has soared to record highs
Both phenomena illustrate a demand for natural resources that shows no sign of exhaustion. Laguna Beach is a beautiful place, which is why your editor and his kids were hanging out at the place all last week. (The fact that a good friend offered a beachfront home for our use, free of charge, provided a second reason to visit the town). But Laguna is also an unusual place. It is home to both the "uber-riche" and the "uber-surf" crowds. A few uber-riche surfers also mill about. But Laguna was not always thus. Watercolor artist, Norman St. Claire, pulled into town on a stagecoach in 1903 and began to paint canvasses of the Laguna surf, hillsides and lagoons. "His fellow plein air artists in San Francisco were so impressed with his work and his praise of the weather that they soon followed," Californiapaintings.com relates. "By the late 1920s, there were about 300 permanent residents of Laguna, about half of whom were artists." The Hollywood elite followed shortly thereafter. Mary Pickford, Judy Garland, Rudolph Valentino and Charlie Chaplin all maintained vacation homes in Laguna. But by the late 1960s, when your editor first began vacationing in Laguna, "granola heads" crowded the streets. Hippies, surfers, and Hare Krishna devotees seemed to comprise most of the year-round population. The scent of patchouli, mingled with "Sea & Ski," wafted on the ocean breezes. Today, a few artists, surfers and aging hippies still call Laguna home, especially if they have inherited a hefty trust fund somewhere along the way. But the uber-riche and quasi-riche have become the town's most conspicuously visible social class. Their cars have also become conspicuously visible. Almost every resident of the town, it seems, drives a pricey foreign car or a monster SUV, adorned with glitzy, oversized chrome rims - usually one of the pricey Italian brands. Although one may still hear the unmistakable jingling of kartals (cymbals) when passing by the Hare Krishna temple near downtown, "pimped out" Hummers have become far more plentiful than Hare Krishnas. So numerous are the impressive autos that your editor's youngest son invented a simple little game to play with his siblings: Whoever spots the "hottest car" within 60 seconds wins. (Daddy is the judge). Every sixty seconds, each of the three kids would spot some sort of "hot" car: Typically, a high-end SUV with oversized chrome rims. And every sixty seconds, the winning hot car would be a vehicle we would not likely see back home, even if we had watched the road for 60 DAYS. Most of the 60- second champs were gas hogs like the, GMC Denali, Mercedes G-Wagon, Range Rover HSE, or Hummer H1. Clearly, in Laguna Beach, money is no object
and neither is fuel efficiency. Elsewhere in the Los Angeles area, appearances have become so important - especially automotive appearances - that many Angelenos are stretching their pocketbooks to the limit, just to "make the cut," socio-economically speaking. "I have this acquaintance in Burbank, California - to safeguard his anonymity, I'll call him 'Homer' - who drives a 2004 Mercedes-Benz SL500," relates a writer for Motor Trend Magazine. "This fact makes me more than a little envious
That said, I most definitely do not envy the price Homer has to pay glide along in his SL500's rarefied cockpit. Each month, to cover his lease, insurance, and gas bills, Homer shells out more than $1,800. The thing is, Homer isn't rich. He inhabits a $735-a-month studio apartment
"Of course, you'd never know this if you saw Homer on the road" the Motor Trend writer continues. "Out there, he's a master of the universe, ruling from the helm of one of the world's finest automobiles. Asked about this seeming lifestyle imbalance, Homer replies, 'C'mon. This is L.A. You either have a nice car here, or you are toast. I mean, I've had women beg me to take them out in this car.'" We Americans continue to consume - and to over-consume - without any evident distress or anxiety about the rising costs of our consumption. Very few of us worry about the future supplies of the cheap credit and cheap energy that have been facilitating our over-consumption. So far, $3.00- a-gallon gasoline has not dented the appetite for massive cars, any more than $7.00-a-pack cigarettes have curbed the demand for cancer sticks. Forget the Chinese; we Americans consume plenty of natural resources all by ourselves. The richest fifth of the world's population, including the U.S., consumes 86 percent of all goods and services and produces 53 percent of all carbon dioxide emissions, according to E: The Environmental Magazine. "Looked at another way," the magazine relates, "that same privileged fifth also consumes 80 percent of the world's natural resources and generates 80 percent of the pollution and waste. The U.S. alone, with only five percent of the world's population, gobbles up 30 percent of the natural resource base, using 20 percent of the planet's metals, 24 percent of its energy (the highest per capita consumption in the world) and 25 percent of its fossil fuels." Because we are "driving more car" and "buying more house" than prudent financial practices would dictate, we also consume more natural resources than prudent resource stewardship would allow. Our conspicuous consumption may not be exhausting the world's supply of natural resource just yet, but it is beginning to exhaust many of the world's CHEAP supplies.  The nearby chart tells the tale. As global copper consumption has reduced copper stockpiles at the London Metal's Exchange (and elsewhere) the copper price has soared. There's still plenty of copper to go around, but maybe not plenty of CHEAP copper. The situation in crude oil is, obviously, even more acute. The world is not running out of fossil fuel just yet. But it may have run out of $40 crude oil forever.
The resource bull market continues
Buy the dips. [Ed. Note: When the bull market is raging the Maniac Trader is as good as money in the bank. We brought news of his successes a few months back. Those that took heed of our advice have been laughing all the way to the bank ever since. If you hesitated then, time to give yourself an upper-cut and get on board this time around! Click here for Kevin Kerr's Resource Trader Alert --- Advertisement ---
America's Leading the World to Financial Ruin! So says the world's greatest living economist
And after seeing the REAL numbers - the ones mainstream "analysts" never even look at - I have to say he's absolutely right. The brutal truth is that the U.S. economy is a brittle house of cards. But you don't have to blindsided when it all comes crashing down - not if you've got the facts - and the expertise to parlay them into major profits
Click here |
------------------------- And the Markets
| Monday | Friday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,463 | 10,394 | 69 | -3.0% | S&P | 1,212 | 1,205 | 7 | 0.0% | NASDAQ | 2,138 | 2,121 | 17 | -1.7% | 10-year Treasury | 4.17% | 4.18% | -4.13 | -0.04 | 30-year Treasury | 4.36% | 4.37% | -4.32 | -0.46 | Russell 2000 | 655 | 649 | 7 | 0.6% | Gold | $436.90 | $437.70 | -$0.80 | -0.2% | Silver | $6.74 | $6.74 | $0.00 | -1.1% | CRB | 323.23 | 317.10 | 6.13 | 13.8% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $67.20 | $66.13 | $1.07 | 54.7% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 110.61 | JPY 110.18 | -0.43 | -7.8% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2231 | $1.2284 | 53 | 9.8% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.7964 | $1.8012 | 49 | 6.4% |
|