The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Friday, November 23, 2006 ------------------------- - The good Dr. is back with your Rude housing prognosis
and a word on a word on asset-driven growth,
- Only three more days to save yourself half a grand,
- The Laguna Beach Lunch Exchange (LBLE) and plenty
more...
------------------------- Eric Fry, reporting from the manicured sands of Palm Springs, CA... "How was school today Ethan?" your editor asked his 8-year old son the other day. "Okay," he replied, "except for lunchtime." "Why? What happened?" "We had to exchange lunches," he griped. "What does that mean?" "We had to exchange lunches," he repeated. "We had to trade our lunch for someone else's lunch." "What was the purpose of that?" I asked. "I have no idea," he said. "I guess it was supposed to be some sort of 'fun activity.'" "But it wasn't very fun?" I asked. "No. Not at all. It was lame. I got stuck with some sort of turkey sandwich on wheat bread, and a banana and some kind of gross juice thing." "Well that doesn't sound THAT bad," I said. "What was in your lunch? "A peanut butter and jelly sandwich...and these little candies that I like...and a yogurt and a Gatorade." "Wow! That sounds pretty good. Why didn't you just keep that one?" "Because the teacher forced me to trade it for the one that I didn't want," Ethan explained. "So all during lunch, I kept asking the girl who got my lunch if she would trade it back to me. But she kept telling me no...She wouldn't even let me have half of my sandwich." "I don't blame her," your editor laughed. "Your lunch was better. You wouldn't have given back a peanut butter and jelly sandwich either." "Well, actually, I might have," Ethan sighed. "It would depend if she was nice or not." "Lucky for you, there's a Taco Bell on the way home," I smiled. "You're kidding, right?" "Nope." "Will you really take me there?" "Yep." "Awesome! Thanks Daddy!" Unfortunately, dear investor, adversity does not always resolve itself so quickly and painlessly. Instead, adversity, once it arrives, tends to take up residence for a while...and it tends to hang around longer than an unemployed college graduate. Bad breaks have a way of becoming worse breaks. Just like bad relationships have a way of becoming worse relationships. Just like bad investments have a way of becoming worse investments. And just like bad financial busts have a way of becoming worse financial busts. The housing bubble has busted...and this bust is far from over. Despite proclamations, predictions, and prayers to the contrary, the U.S. housing bust is likely to continue for a good long while. That's not good news for the U.S. economy, as Dr. Kurt Richebacher explains below... --- Special Report --- During these 3 Shocking Events... Join The World's Most Elite Investors This year millions of average American investors will be wiped out... but not this elite circle of potential investors. Introducing TWO very simple investments that will protect you, creating a fortress of "wealth insurance" around your portfolio... Become part of the world's most intelligent and elite investment circle today! http://www.isecureonline.com/Reports/RCH/ERCHGB13 ---------------------------- A Dangerous Addiction By Dr. Kurt Richebacher It has become customary in the United States to speak of "asset-driven" economic growth. "Asset-driven" is, of course, a euphemism for bubble-driven, because it requires particularly large rises in asset prices. Many modern economists consider asset-driven growth a valid alternative to the traditional growth pattern, nowadays called "income-driven" economic growth. Mr. Greenspan gained high regard in the late 1990s for nourishing the rising stock values that provided such a massive "wealth effect" and, therefore, such a massive boost to consumer spending. Plainly, this inspired him to subsequently nourish the housing bubble. A new, indirect and apparently more efficient method of stimulating consumer spending through intermediation of an asset bubble was invented. It seems to have two great advantages. Rising asset prices can boost "wealth" much more quickly than income growth, while also providing facilities with high leverage. But if these are advantages, they cannot be regarded in isolation. For obvious reasons, the bullish publicity concentrates on the two best-looking statistical aggregates as the key measures of economic performance. That is, real GDP and productivity growth. As a rule, they are in line with what people actually experience in the incomes they earn and the prices they pay in the shops. But this time, there is an unprecedented gross discrepancy between the very good looks of these two aggregates and what they experience in actual life. It is an open secret there is extensive statistical spin. 
Frankly speaking, we liken asset bubbles and associated credit bubbles with drugs. Just like human bodies can become dangerously addicted to drugs, economies can become dangerously addicted to these bubbles. Of course, drugs cause severe damage to body and soul, and so do asset and credit bubbles to the economy and its financial system. In the U.S. case, these damages are highly visible. See the collapse of saving, the monstrous trade deficit, the capital spending crisis, miserable employment and income growth and, on top of that, the debt explosion devastating balance sheets. These are definitely the attributes of pathological, unstable and unsustainable economic growth. These are more than just symptoms, because they exert their own malign effects. The decisive problem is that credit bubbles do not evenly distribute their effects across the economy. They concentrate on one or two areas, which expand out of proportion to normal trend growth. In the U.S. case, the latest credit excess has centered on durable goods, housing and financial speculation. Put differently, asset and credit bubbles distort the economy's demand and output structure in an unsustainable way. At some point in the future, the related spending excesses flag, either under the pressure of credit tightening or on their own accord. Depending on their size, the bubble economy slides into recession. Have the borrowing-and-spending excesses of the past years in the United States been of a size to make a severe adjustment crisis and deeper recession possible or probable? That is today's most important question, not only for the U.S. economy, but for the world economy. A crucial related question, of course, is the U.S. economy's resilience and flexibility to resist the coming adjustment shocks. According to forecasts, the consensus economists expect the U.S. economy to see little more than a brief and minor economic slowdown from the housing blow. Basically, it is still in their eyes a "Goldilocks" economy, its outstanding emblem being low inflation interest rates. For American economists, it is dogmatic that low inflation rates are the infallible indicator of economic health. The Great Depression of the 1930s, and also Japan's prolonged economic malaise, both having followed many years of a stable price level, should have taught a lesson about the inadequacy of this aggregate as a measure of health and a guide for policy. The key point about the U.S. economy, really, is that the forces that caused the 2001 recession never went away. They went from bad to worse. Business fixed investment has not really recovered from its slump in 2000–02. Its recovery in the following years has been far too weak to offset the prior loss. The counterpart and implicit cause of this capital spending crisis are the spending excesses on consumption and housing absorbing a growing share of GDP. In 2005, consumer spending and the housing bubble accounted for 90.1% of real GDP growth. Now consider the following two figures: Real disposable income of private households grew 1.2%. This compared with an increase in real consumer spending by 3.5%. That is, spending rose three times as fast as disposable income! 
It is no secret what made this incredible discrepancy between the two aggregates possible: equity extraction against inflating house prices. Over the four years 2001– 05, outstanding mortgages of private households have jumped from $5,292.9 billion to $8,888.1 billion, or 68%. Apparently, the housing bubble was not only the icing on the cake. It was the cake. While U.S. real economic data overwhelmingly keep surprising on the downside, comments by economists and the media keep surprising on the upside. According to a count by Kleinwort Benson (Dresdner Bank), the frequency with which the word "Goldilocks" is mentioned in the financial press has risen to its highest level since the word came into vogue as a description of the ideal U.S. economic environment. This is grotesque. Compared with 2000, when the last downturn started, the U.S. economy's growth fundamentals — savings, investment and the trade balance — have dramatically worsened. Debts, in particular of private households, have escalated as never before. And now comes the housing bust – a bust that has barely started. The housing-driven wealth effect that Americans have been enjoying has disappeared. And now that home prices are falling, the wealth effects will become anti- wealth effects. Rising home values have been supporting the U.S. economy's recovery. Any significant fall in home values will abort it. [Joel's Note: The housing bubble wasn't the only thing the world's most notable classical economist predicted way ahead of time – the wilting U.S. dollar and a plummeting savings rate has lead Dr. Richebacher to some other ghastly conclusions regarding current U.S. economic trajectory. The following report outlines the coming crisis and, more importantly, details exactly how you can prepare yourself and your portfolio for it. Greenspan fans need not apply. The Coming Crisis and How You Can Best Prepare http://www.isecureonline.com/Reports/RCH/ERCHG813 --- ONLY 3 DAYS TO GO --- Your Chance To Save $500 On Our Resource Trader Alert. Learn How $400 Became Over $200 Million With This Once- Secret Profit Blueprint A pizza delivery boy turned his measly $400 savings into over $200 million. Savvy investors have followed suit and turned mere thousands into hundreds of millions - and now you can too. Get in on gains of 379%, 396%, even an astonishing 519% in as little as 12 days with this world-renowned resource trader's system. But you must act before November 27. Get the details here: http://www.isecureonline.com/Reports/RTA/ERTAGB29 ---------------------------- |