"Is there anyone who still does not understand that talk
of 'inflation' by officialdom is just a red herring intended
to distract us from the far more dangerous dragon of deflation?"
--Mike Shedlock; Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis
We are to about see how much George Bush really believes the
“supply side” mumbo-jumbo he's been spouting for
the last seven years.
Last week's Labor Department report confirmed that unemployment
is on the rise (5 percent) and that corrective action will be
required to avoid a long and painful recession.
There's a good chance that the Chameleon in Chief will jettison
his “trickle down” doctrine for more conventional
Keynesian remedies like slashing interest rates, government
programs, and tax relief to middle and low-income people. Last
Monday, Bush announced that his team of economic advisors was
patching together an “Economic Stimulus Package”
that will be unveiled later this month in the State of the Union
Speech. The goal is to rev-up sagging consumer spending and
slow down business contraction. Ironically, the UK Telegraph
dubbed the stimulus plan Bush's “New Deal.” It's
a shocking about-face for a president that has been clobbering
the middle class since he took office and who balks at even
providing temporary shelter for disaster victims. Now Bush is
going to have to give away the farm just to keep the economy
from crashing. Good luck. Clearly, the prospect of a system-wide
meltdown in banking, real estate and equities has become a "Road
to Damascus" moment for lame-duck George.
(Article continues below)
The uptick in unemployment is just the final part of an otherwise
bleak economic picture. Manufacturing is hurting too. The December
ISM Manufacturing Index plunged to 47.7, its lowest level in
five years. The news put the stock market into a 200-plus nosedive
and sent gold soaring over $800 per ounce. Since then, the news
has gotten progressively worse. The market fell another 200-plus
points on the Labor Dept's repor, followed by 238 point jolt
last Tuesday on rumors of (potential) bankruptcy at mortgage
lending giant, Countrywide Financial, and a 2.6 percent plunge
in pending housing sales from the National Association of Realtors.
By the time ATT announced its fears of “reduced consumer
spending” the market was already barrel-rolling towards
earth in a sheet of flames.
The Dow Jones is now 10 percent off its yearly high, the official
sign of a correction. More important, equities blew through
their support levels indicating a basic change in the market's
trajectory. It's a primary bear market now and any rebound will
be temporary. There's still a lot of fat to be trimmed before
overvalued stocks return to the mean. No wonder Bush is nervous.
The constant rate cuts and geopolitical jitters have sent gold
skyrocketing. Since August 2007, gold has gone from $650 per
ounce to $887 -- a whopping $237 in just five months. If that
is not a indictment of the Federal Reserve and their “loosey-goosey”
monetary policy; then what is? According to the Wall Street
Journal “gold and oil have run almost in perfect tandem.
The price of gold has risen 239 percent since 2001, while the
price of oil has risen 267 percent. That means if the dollar
had remained as 'good as gold' since 2001, oil today would be
selling at about $30 a barrel, not $99.” [WSJ; 1-4-08]
That's right; the price of gas today is attributable to war,
tax cuts and the relentless expansion of credit by the Federal
Reserve -- NOT OIL SHORTAGES!
Escalating energy prices are increasing the cost of food production
which creates a self-reinforcing inflationary cycle. Additional
rate cuts will only weaken the dollar further and put an even
greater burden on maxed-out consumers.
Before he left on his “Victory Tour” of the Middle
East, Bush said, "When Congress comes back, I look forward
to working with them, to deal with the economic realities of
the moment and to assure the American people that we will do
everything we can to make sure we remain a prosperous country."
The economic realities that Bush will be facing are the anticipated
“hard landing” from a nationwide housing slump coupled
with a credit crunch that is strangling the banking and financial
industries. The country is lurching recklessly into a deflationary
death-spiral while Bush makes a pointless junket to the scene
of his biggest foreign policy flop. What a joke. When he returns,
Bush will find that he is constrained in his “stimulus”
plan due to massive fiscal deficits which are the result of
the enormous tax cuts and gluttonous military budget.
“This isn't like 2000 when the US was running a large
fiscal surplus of $300 billion or 2.5 percent GDP,” said
economist Nouriel Roubini. “Now that all the fiscal stimulus
bullets have been spent on the most reckless and unsustainable
tax cuts in history -- the administration is left with very
little room [to maneuver] in bad times . . . We are now stuck
in a situation where the room for any meaningful fiscal stimulus
. . . is gone. . . . We did indeed waste all our macro policy
bullets in 2001-2004 in 'the best recovery that money can buy'
and now we are left with relatively limited room for monetary
and fiscal policy stimulus. This is one of the main reasons
why the recession of 2008 will be more severe and protracted
than the mild 2001 recession.” [Nouriel Roubini's Global
EconoMonitor]
Still, there will be a stimulus package -- however meager --
and there'll also be more rate cuts by the Fed. That means that
gold and oil will continue to soar and the dollar will continue
to get hammered. Bernanke's options are limited; as are Bush's.
The system is grinding to a halt and the Fed chief will have
to use the tools at his disposal to try to stimulate economic
activity. It won't be easy. Presently, he faces a number of
challenges. Home prices are falling, retail spending is off,
commercial real estate is in a sharp downturn, and many of the
major investment banks are capital impaired from their poor
investments in mortgage-backed bonds. If the Fed's "low
interest" smelling salts don't revive the comatose American
consumer -- and get the cash registers at Target and Billy McHale's
ringing again -- the world will face a global slowdown. That's
why the Fed Funds' rate will probably get hacked by 50 basis
points by month's end and Comrade Bush's economic team will
concoct a fiscal bailout plan worthy of Fidel Castro.
Are we there, yet?
A growing number of market analysts believe we're already in
recession. David Rosenberg of Merrill Lynch put it like this:
"According to our analysis, this [recession] isn't even
a forecast any more but is a present day reality."
Rosenberg argues that a weakening employment picture and declining
retail sales signal the economy has tipped into its first month
of recession. . . ."Mr. Rosenberg points to a whole batch
of negative data to support his analysis, including the four
key barometers used by the National Bureau of Economic Research
(NEBR) -- employment, real personal income, industrial production,
and real sales activity in retail and manufacturing.”
[UK Telegraph]
Whether one chooses to call it a recession or not is irrelevant.
When the two behemoth asset-classes -- real estate and securities
-- begin to cave in, there's bound to be some ugly fallout.
Housing stayed strong during the dot.com bust. Not this time.
No way. The whole system is keeling over and it could take the
bond market along with it. As the two gigantic equity bubbles
lose gas; consumer spending will stall, business activity will
slow, more workers will get laid off, and prices will tumble.
Equities and commodities will be hit hard (even gold) and housing
prices will dive to new lows as the pool of potential buyers
grows smaller and smaller.
These problems will be further aggravated by the lack of personal
savings and the huge debt-load which will push increasing numbers
of homeowners, credit card customers, even student loan recipients
into default. By 2009, bankruptcy will be the fastest growing
fad in American pop-culture.
Housing doom
Many experts are now predicting that home prices will dip 30
percent by the end of 2008. That means that nearly 20 million
homeowners will be “upside-down,” that is, they
will owe more on their mortgage than the current value of the
house. (Imagine owing $400,000 on a home that is currently worth
$325,000!) 40 percent of all homeowners in the US will be upside-down
by the end of next year. This is a grave systemic problem that
will have widespread implications. Experts already know that
when mortgage holders have “negative equity” they
are much more inclined to put their keys in the mailbox and
skip town. Hence, the name for this increasingly common practice
-- “jingle mail.”
Secretary of the Treasury Henry Paulson is desperately trying
to put together a national “rate freeze” to avoid,
what could be, the most devastating surge of foreclosures the
world has ever seen. Paulson's rate freeze does not offer “New
Hope” as promised but, rather, a lifetime of servitude
paying off an asset of ever-decreasing value. Underwater homeowners
are better off taking the hit to their credit and letting the
bank repo the house. Let the bank worry about it. They created
this mess.
The housing bubble is deflating faster than anyone had anticipated.
Overall sales have slipped more than 40 percent from their peak
in 2005, whereas prices have gone down a mere 6.5 percent. Prices,
which are a lagging indicator, have a lot further to drop before
they touch bottom. Robert Schiller, Professor of Economics at
Yale University and author of “Irrational Exuberance,”
predicted that there was a very real possibility that the US
would be plunged into a Japan-style slump, with house prices
declining for years.
Professor Shiller, co-founder of the respected S&P Case/Shiller
house-price index, said, “American real estate values
have already lost around $1 trillion [£503 billion]. That
could easily increase threefold over the next few years. This
is a much bigger issue than sub-prime. We are talking trillions
of dollars’ worth of losses.” [Times Online]
Schiller's on the right track, but his estimates are way too
conservative. After all, in 2002, the median price of a single-family
home in Los Angeles was $270,000. But, by 2006, the cost of
that same house had doubled to $540,000 -- “pushed by
unbridled speculation fueled by unparalleled access to mortgage
capital.” [LA Times] The problem was cheap credit that
was readily available to anyone who could fog a mirror. All
that has changed. The banks have tightened up their lending
standards, and jumbo loans (loans over $417,000) are nearly
impossible to get. So, why doesn't Schiller believe that prices
will return to 2002 levels? They will. And they'll go even lower;
much lower. In fact, real estate is quickly becoming the leper
at the birthday party; everyone is staying away. That means
that prices will fall -- and more rapidly than anyone imagined.
The word is out on housing and it's not good. The blood is in
the water. Get out before the pool of mortgage applicants dries
up entirely.
Banking tsunami
The US banking industry has never faced greater challenges
than it does today. Many of America's largest and most prestigious
investment banks are seriously under-capitalized and buried
beneath hundreds of billions of dollars in complex, structured
investments that are being downgraded on a weekly basis. On
top of that, many of the banks main sources of revenue have
vanished as investor interest in sophisticated mortgage-backed
bonds and derivatives has disappeared altogether. For example,
the sales of collateralized debt obligations (CDOs) “plunged
85 percent to $15.69 billion in the fourth quarter.” Also,
“The value of Alt-A mortgages . . . issued in the third
quarter fell 64 percent to $39.3 billion from the second quarter’s
record high of $109.5 billion . . . S&P said the dramatic
drop is the result of ‘unprecedented credit and liquidity
disruptions’ for both borrowers and lenders.” [Dow
Jones] These are steep declines and represent a serious loss
of revenue from the banks' bottom lines.
Many of the banks are simply in “survival mode”
trying to conceal the magnitude of their losses from their shareholders
while attempting to attract capital from overseas investors
to shore up their sagging collateral. [via Sovereign Wealth
Funds]
The banks are now struggling to fulfill their function as the
main conduit for providing credit to consumers and businesses.
They have curtailed their lending as their capital base has
steadily eroded through persistent downgrading. The Federal
Reserve has tried to resolve this issue by opening a Temporary
Auction Facility (TAF), which allows the banks to secretly borrow
billions from the Fed without the embarrassment of disclosing
the transaction to the public. The banks are also free to use
mortgage-backed securities (MBS) and commercial paper (CP) as
collateral for securing the Fed repos. It's a sweetheart deal
and more than 100 financial institutions have already taken
advantage of the Fed's largesse.
This is a bad sign. It indicates that the banks are seriously
overextended, “capital impaired,” and need a handout
from the Central Bank to keep from defaulting. It means that
the vaults are stuffed with worthless mortgage-backed slop that
they are deliberately hiding from their shareholders and depositors.
If there were adequate regulation, then the banks would never
have been allowed to dabble in such risky debt-instruments as
subprime loans and toxic CDOs. The whole catastrophe could have
been avoided. Instead, hundreds of billions of dollars will
be wiped out, a number of banks will fail, and public confidence
in their institutions will be shattered.
Last week, the Federal Reserve announced that it “will
increase the size of two scheduled auctions of emergency loans
by 50 percent to $30 billion as part of a global attempt by
central bankers to restore faith in the money markets.”
[AP] In other words, the Fed will provide an even bigger begging
bowl to prop up the banks to maintain the appearance of solvency.
It is an utter sham.
Inflation vs. deflation
The size and scale of the approaching recession is impossible
to forecast. The real estate and stock markets will undoubtedly
see trillions of dollars in losses, but what about the estimated
$300 trillion dollars of derivatives, credit default swaps and
other abstruse counterparty options? Will the global economy
freeze up when that ocean of cyber-capital suddenly evaporates?
Will that virtual wealth simply vanish into the ether when the
underlying assets (CDOs, MBSes, ABCP) are downgraded to pennies
on the dollar, or when the number of home foreclosures catapults
into the millions, or when the dollar slips to a fraction of
its current value? No one really knows.
But Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart summarized what we
can expect in a speech he gave last week, titled “The
Economy in 2008.” He said, “A sober assessment of
risks must take account of the possibility of protracted financial
market instability together with weakening housing prices, volatile
and high energy prices, continued dollar depreciation, and elevated
inflation.”
Amen.
What the upcoming recession “will look like” has
been the topic of a fierce debate on the Internet. Everyone
seems to agree that this is not a typical economic downturn
resulting from overproduction, under-consumption or malinvestment.
Rather, it is the crashing of humongous equity bubbles that
were generated by the Fed's abusive expansion of credit and
the unprecedented proliferation of opaque structured-debt instruments.
Many believe that the unwinding of these bubbles will trigger
a round of hyperinflation, which is already evident in soaring
food, energy and health care costs. These prices are bound to
increase substantially as the Fed continues to cut rates and
further undermine the dollar.
But the real issue (it seems to me) is the unfathomable loss
of market capitalization, the growing insolvency of maxed-out
consumers, and the inability of the banks to freely extend credit
to responsible loan applicants. These three things are likely
to drag down all asset-classes, slow business activity to a
crawl, and compel consumers to hoard rather than spend. The
dollar will strengthen in a deflationary environment. (if that
is any consolation?)
Paul L. Kasriel, Sr. V.P. and Director of Economic Research
at The Northern Trust Company, answers some typical questions
about deflation in a recent interview with economic guru Mike
Shedlock (Mish).
Mish: Would you say that consumer debt in the US as opposed
to the lack of consumer debt in Japan increases the deflationary
pressures on the US economy?
Kasriel: Yes, absolutely. The latest figures that I have show
that banks' exposure to the mortgage market is at 62 percent
of their total earnings assets, an all time high. If a prolonged
housing bust ensues, banks could be in big trouble.
Mish: What if Bernanke cuts interest rates to 1 percent?
Kasriel: In a sustained housing bust that causes banks to take
a big hit to their capital it simply will not matter. This is
essentially what happened recently in Japan and also in the
US during the Great Depression.
Mish: Can you elaborate?
Kasriel: Most people are not aware of actions the Fed took
during the Great Depression. Bernanke claims that the Fed did
not act strong enough during the Great Depression. This is simply
not true. The Fed slashed interest rates and injected huge sums
of base money but it did no good. More recently, Japan did the
same thing. It also did no good. If default rates get high enough,
banks will simply be unwilling to lend which will severely limit
money and credit creation.
Mish: How does inflation start and end?
Kasriel: Inflation starts with expansion of money and credit.
Inflation ends when the central bank is no longer able or willing
to extend credit and/or when consumers and businesses are no
longer willing to borrow because further expansion and/or speculation
no longer makes any economic sense.
Mish: So when does it all end?
Kasriel: That is extremely difficult to project. If the current
housing recession were to turn into a housing depression, leading
to massive mortgage defaults, it could end. Alternatively, if
there were a run on the dollar in the foreign exchange market,
price inflation could spike up and the Fed would have no choice
but to raise interest rates aggressively. Given the record leverage
in the U.S. economy, the rise in interest rates would prompt
large-scale bankruptcies. These are the two "checkmate"
scenarios that come to mind. (Read the whole interview.)
Summary: When banks don't lend and consumers don't borrow;
the economy crashes. End of story. The whole system is predicated
on the prudent use of credit. That system is now in terminal
distress. Everyone to the bunkers.
Perhaps the whole “inflation-deflation” debate
is academic. The real issue is the length and severity of the
impending recession. That's what we really want to know. And
how many people will needlessly suffer.