-->Pondering Post-Bubble America
The Daily Reckoning
Paris, France
Wednesday, 5 February 2003
Watch Fannie Mae! As she goes, so goes the whole world
economy.
Stability is destabilizing, warned economist Hyman Minsky.
Because the financial intermediaries - notably banks and
mortgage lenders - take advantage of the perceived low-risk
conditions in order to lure investors to destruction.
Alan Greenspan has been the most successful Fed chief in
history. For nearly 15 years, it seemed that he could make
water run uphill! Paper money - unbacked by gold -
typically loses its value compared to real money (that is,
gold itself). There are no counter examples in all of
history; sooner or later, paper disappears and gold
remains.
But Greenspan did the impossible. He made gold go down
while the dollar went up. It looked as though he had
created a perfectly stable economy - with high growth, low
unemployment, and little inflation; people thought it would
last forever.
But like wolves at a pigs' picnic, along came the
"innovative financial intermediaries" to take advantage of
the situation. Since the good times are here forever,
Fannie Mae and other lenders seemed to whisper in the
little piggies' ears, why not take advantage of them? Why
not take out some of the equity from your house and live a
little? Go on...why not...the house will just keep going up
in price...jobs will always be plentiful...what have you
got to worry about?
And so, the poor saps took the bait, and borrowed more and
more...to the point where the whole system is dangerously
destabilized by an excess of credit. Lenders can still
lend...but only to weaker and weaker customers. Borrowers
can still borrow...but only by weakening the balance sheets
of those they borrow from. Fannie Mae's book of loans
expands, in other words, but it is less and less sure of
getting paid back.
Sooner or later, the trend that can't go on doesn't.
Borrowing stops. Regretting begins.
"This is the harsh reality that we should recognize as a
nation as we contemplate Post-Bubble America," writes Doug
Noland."And no amount of inflation will change the facts
of economic life. There are no available shortcuts but many
risky gimmicks to prolong the Bubble, hence only making the
inevitable day of reckoning all the more painful and
Balkanizing. There is nowadays only louder call for
stimulating and 'reflating,' but there is absolutely no
discussion of the consequences."
Consequences are shouting from every news report.
Yesterday's gold price (April contracts) came within 10
cents of $380. Bankruptcies continue to rise. Unemployment
edges up. Car sales went down last month. The dollar falls
almost every day.
"There is so much at stake," Noland continues."It is our
view that the longer we travel down this dangerous course,
the more rapidly the Post-Bubble America pendulum swings
away from a Japanese scenario in the direction of
Argentina." (More on Post Bubble America from Noland
below...)
Eric is having surgery this morning. We don't know what
they are cutting out, but we hope it's nothing important.
In the meantime, Addison covers the markets for
us...Addison?
------------
Addison Wiggin, also reporting from London...
- The markets don't seem to like waiting for Colin Powell's
appearance before the U.N. Security Council later today.
Stocks and the dollar sank yesterday, while bonds
rebounded. The Dow fell 96 points to 8,013; the Nasdaq lost
18 points to 1,306. War jitters pumped up oil prices almost
$1.
- But there seems to be only one word on the lips of
investors these days...and I believe Klondike said it best:
"GOOOLLLD!!!" New highs, record volumes...gold's in the
news around the world.
"There's nothing traders like to see more," says veteran
FOREX trader and the Daily Reckoning's man-on-the-scene
here in London, Sean Corrigan,"than the new lot of buyers
and sellers that accompany the move to a new price range.
In gold's case - where that range is being extended to a
new 11-year high and exchange-traded volume records are
being set - you couldn't find a better signal."
This is exactly what is happening in Japan, where the
surging price of gold in terms of yen is doing all of the
above, attracting frantic interest in the metal - which
does, after all, yield more than the home-grown paper
money. Reuters reported panic buying, but also
opportunistic selling, though the latter shouldn't be taken
as a bad sign - better to get the selling over in a rising,
rather than a falling market.
The most-active December gold contract was up 28 yen in
mid-afternoon yesterday at 1,489 yen per gram, a level not
seen since August 1992, before it eased back to Y1469 at
the close. Turnover hit unprecedented volumes, with trade
in the December contract alone topping 397,714 lots (400
tons), and all six contracts reaching a massive 525-ton
equivalent.
Osamu Ikeda, general manager of precious metals at Japan's
biggest bullion house, Tanaka Kikinzoku Kogyo K.K., told
Reuters that ordinary Japanese were turning up in droves to
buy gold bars and coins. Even so, Ikeda warned that there
were sellers among people who bought back in 1999 - when
gold prices hit a low of 917 yen per gram - who were now
taking advantage of the high price.
Kikinzoku reported that its bullion sales for investment
purposes soared 54% in calendar 2002, as investors funneled
money to gold from stocks and other assets.
"Many individuals have recently come to us to purchase gold
in chunks of 2 or 3 kilograms," a dealer from the company
told the Kyodo News."It appears that gold possession is
regarded as a good method for preserving the security of
one's assets from a long-term standpoint, as people have
come to develop anxieties about the course of Japanese
society."
In Australia - where gold has hit a 15-year high in terms
of the local dollar - it seems a veritable gold rush is
underway. Reuters reports that"gold prospectors eager to
peg new ground made a run on heavy mining equipment."
"This morning, we tried to hire a diamond-tipped drill, but
were told there was none available," said Ron Manners,
chairman of Croesus Mining NL, Australia's third-biggest
gold producer."Such a thing was unheard of until now."
Hmm...we're guessing they'll be hearing it more and more in
the coming months...
-------------
Meanwhile...back in London...
*** China and Russia are buying gold, too. Put yourself in
the shoes of one of these export-driven foreign countries.
They send goods to the U.S. and get paid in dollars. The
U.S. doesn't seem to produce much that they want...so what
do they do with the dollars? They used to buy U.S.
assets...but with the dollar falling and Wall Street taking
a beating...they have to think twice.
Gold, meanwhile, is streaking up so dramatically that even
the financial press has noticed. Wouldn't you be tempted to
replace a little of your dollar reserves with real money?
Gradually...or suddenly...the extra dollars of cash and
credit squeezed into the system by the Fed, Fannie, and
other financial intermediaries lose their appeal. Who wants
them? Who can borrow...and pay back? The system has become
destabilized...and must collapse. But how? Will it implode
- like Japan? Or explode - like Argentina?
***"I guess they wanted people to take them more
seriously." Elizabeth was trying to explain the shift in
the economics profession from the 'moral philosophers' of
the 18th century to the econometricians of the 20th.
The question at hand was: why hadn't economists noticed the
destabilizing effects of Greenspan's policies?
"Because they forgot what business they are in," was your
editor's response."They so admired physicists and other
hard scientists that they began to imagine that economics
was a hard science too. Like astro-physicists, they thought
they could come up with quarks, anti-matter, and black
holes...they thought they could come up with ideas that
were unbelievable...counter-intuitive...fantastic.
"In the hard sciences, you can heat water, for example, and
every time it reaches 212 degrees Fahrenheit it will boil,
other things being equal. Neither steel, water, nor dice
have any memory or any feelings...they do what they do
every time.
"But economics is not a hard science at all. It's a human
science. And humans react differently depending on their
experiences, expectations and so forth. If they think they
can get rich buying stocks...they rush into the stock
market, and bid up prices to the point where there is no
way they can get rich. A company only produces so much
profit. If you pay too much for it, you don't get rich, you
get poor.
"Plus, humans are not machines; they're not mechanical.
They do wild and crazy things...make fools of themselves
from time to time...that is what makes them so much more
amusing than steel or silly putty...
"And when you put them in a group, it is even worse...they
seem to go mad regularly...and only come to their senses
after they've nearly destroyed themselves..."
Well, most humans are that way...not Daily Reckoning
readers, of course.
The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: As America reaches the end of
its credit-tether, speculation is rampant as to where the
country's economy is headed. Below, Doug Noland contrasts
the post-bubble reactions of Japan and Argentina...and
hints as to which way he thinks the U.S. is headed.
PONDERING POST-BUBBLE AMERICA
By Doug Noland
Where is the faltering U.S. economy headed? For starters,
it is not clear to us that the consequence of the U.S.
Credit Bubble is a predestined"deflation". Indeed, we can
look to the disparate environments in post-Bubble Japan and
post-Bubble Argentina as evidence that collapsing Bubbles
may end in a long, draw-out mild deflation or, in the case
of Argentina, rapid financial implosion and devastating
inflation. From the standpoint of attempting to analyze
which of these polar extremes may best apply to Post-Bubble
America, we are increasingly convinced that the dollar's
performance will play an instrumental role.
Consider first Japan. Before succumbing to extreme
financial excess in the late eighties, Japan made truly
incredible economic progress for several decades. Sadly,
the Japanese"drank the poison" and basically destroyed
their financial system in a few short years. Yet, post-
Bubble Japan remained endowed with great wealth-creating
manufacturing capacity. The Japanese multinationals have
not only survived; they have prospered. With enormous trade
surpluses, the economy has been able to muddle through a
wrenching decade-long financial quagmire.
The related trade surplus and household saving attributes
(Japan as a creditor nation) played an instrumental role in
supporting the Japanese currency. The yen today trades at
about 120 to the dollar, just off its 10-year average and
above where it began the nineties. Importantly, and
especially for retirees, the frugal Japanese saver has
maintained her purchasing power. There has been no run on
Japanese financial assets.
The Japanese Credit Bubble was a severe domestic debt
problem, but international investors and speculators played
a relatively insignificant role. The fate of the financial
system and economy did not rest tenuously on yen
confidence. The post-Bubble banking system has been an
unmitigated disaster, but the Japanese economy's debt
structures - supported by decades of sound investment and
enormous household savings - proved resilient.
Stagnant private sector credit growth was partially offset
by large government borrowing, playing a critical role in
tempering financial fragility and stabilizing the system.
Excesses, both real and financial, had not reached the
point where contracting private-sector debt growth would
lead to unmanageable collapse. Fortunately, I would argue,
the Japanese government used its fiscal and monetary powers
to ease an arduous post-Bubble transition, rather than to
sustain the Bubble.
While certainly encumbered, Japanese society has remained
cohesive through a protracted and difficult adjustment
period. The general population has not rioted or spent much
time in protest, but rather fell back on financial
discipline and its hard-work ethic. There has been too much
(typical post-Bubble) talk of policy incompetence and not
enough recognition of a most impressive performance by the
Japanese people.
At the other extreme, an arguably much less formidable and
pervasive Bubble in Argentina has left the financial system
and economy in absolute tatters. Many savers have been
completely wiped out, and the social fabric has been
severely frayed. Argentine citizens have lost confidence in
the government and the country's institutions. Sadly, bank
runs have become commonplace.
The Argentine peso has lost 70% of its value, with
inflation running rampant. Foreign bankers, investors and
speculators have abandoned the country, with international
institutions (and"globalization") under justifiable attack
from Argentine citizens, politicians, and monetary
authorities. The economy has sunk into deep depression,
with little benefit from a collapsing currency. Indeed, the
sinking Argentine peso has been a major hindrance, in stark
contrast to the experiences of post-Bubble South Korea,
Thailand, Russia and Brazil.
The boom-time Argentine economy came to depend on foreign-
sourced finance, much of it of a speculative character.
Once addicted, all involved were steadfast in refusing to
recognize the sickness. Foreign borrowings financed too
much consumption and too little of the type of sound
investment capable of creating the necessary economic
wealth to repay creditors. Once this course was chosen, it
was only a question of the dimensions of the inevitable
financial and economic dislocation.
Reliance on foreign borrowings in combination with economic
maladjustments over time combined to create acutely fragile
debt structures. Indeed, it was precisely the nature of the
speculative capital flows fostering non-productive credit
excess that proved fatal to the Argentine financial system.
Frail debt structures and economic maladjustment left the
currency, credit system, and economy hopelessly vulnerable
to both the inevitable reversal of speculative flows and
attendant capital flight.
Confidence in the peso's peg to the dollar became of
momentous consequence. Almost overnight, Argentine
financial assets were no longer an acceptable medium for
international exchange. Significantly, none of these types
of issues have played a role in post-Bubble Japan.
Considering these two post-bubble scenarios, we have very
difficult and complex questions to contemplate in our
pursuit of What Will Be Post-Bubble America. Most
regrettably, the Greenspan Fed, Wall Street, the GSEs and
Washington politicians are resolute in their determination
to stonewall the adjustment process. This dangerous course
of prolonging the Bubble is categorically based on
continued credit excess - inflating dollar financial
claims. This should not today be in dispute, and incessant
credit inflation is why we remain fixated on dollar
vulnerability and devaluation.
There may certainly come a day when faltering confidence
and a run on dollar financial assets wreaks (Argentine-
style) havoc on the U.S. credit system - especially its
acutely fragile"Structured Finance" parallel"banking"
system. However, the system today still retains its
capacity for unchecked and rampant inflation of dollar
claims (credit inflation).
The inescapable consequences of the U.S. Credit Bubble
Dilemma include only more credit and speculative excess,
heightened financial fragility, deeper economic
maladjustment and impairment, and a further debasement of
our currency. It is not at all outrageous to assert that
the U.S. system has set a perilous course toward the
collapse of the world's reserve currency. No amount of
inflation will change the facts of economic life.
There are no available shortcuts but many risky gimmicks to
prolong the Bubble, making the inevitable day of reckoning
all the more painful and Balkanizing. Nowadays, the call
for stimulating and"reflating" grows ever louder, but
there is absolutely no discussion of the consequences. Yet
there is so much at stake. It is our view that the longer
the U.S. travels down this dangerous course, the more
rapidly the Post-Bubble America pendulum swings away from a
Japanese scenario in the direction of Argentina.
Warm regards,
Doug Noland
for The Daily Reckoning
-----------------------
As you know, dear reader, we've been waiting for the End-
of-the-world-as-we-have-known-it, EOTWAWHKI for short.
The EOTWAWHKI hasn't exactly made the headlines. Life goes
on one day to the next pretty much as it always has. In
today's TIMES of London, for example, it is business as
usual: Tony Blair wonders whether his support of an
American war against Iraq will cost him the next
election...Michael Jackson admits he sleeps with boys...and
a naughty vicar has been charged with molesting male
prisons and buggery.
With so much going on, who noticed the smell of something
rotting?
"While the United States rules the waves as well as turf
and sky, I'm not so sure that we are, or perhaps will be
the economic powerhouse we once were," writes PIMCO's Bill
Gross."Three years of stock market declines, a 20%
devaluation of the dollar over 10 months, and an inability
to serve as the global economy's locomotive despite massive
monetary and fiscal stimulation suggests America's 'shining
city on a hill' may have lost some of its sheen of late.
The US of A, it seems, is becoming less wealthy by the
minute, as foreign investment is withheld and in some cases
redirected to Chinese and other more attractive ports of
call. Economically, we may have begun a process of
hegemonic decay..."
Over the last 50 years, America's net foreign trade
position has gone from nearly 3% surplus to nearly 6%
deficit. These are big numbers. The current deficit runs
about $500 billion - that is the amount of foreign capital
required to keep Americans living beyond their means.
And now cometh the Bush Administration with a $2.2 trillion
budget. The central government proposes to seize and spend
about one out of every four dollars its citizens make. It
also proposes to run the biggest deficits in the history of
organized government - more than $300 billion in 2003 - and
a total of about a trillion dollars over the next 5 years.
This may not be the end of the world...but there's a whiff
of decay in the air. America's consumer credit expansion is
half-a-century old. Its continued credit needs...along with
an aging population burdened by debt, military ambitions, a
falling dollar, overpriced stocks...all of these things are
going to force the consumer to cut back and scale down.
"While that may not qualify as a trip to the poor house,"
Gross continues,"I have no doubt that such events signify
to at least some Americans a trip to a poorer house. Many
of us will have to adjust, either in the form of higher
unemployment, an increased price for imported goods, or
heavier indirect taxes in the form of higher inflation and
interest rates. Investment strategies, both bond and
equity, should put these secular reversals at the top of
their A list when considering opportunities to make
relative and absolute returns. Hegemonic decay will impose
costs unimagined just 16 months ago during the innocent
hours of September 10th, 2001."
But let's turn to Eric for the latest news from Wall
Street...and then we'll return to the EOTWAWHKI.
Eric?
-------------
- Yesterday's trading action on Wall Street featured Day II
of a feeble"relief rally." The Dow added modestly to last
Friday's 108-point gain by tacking on 56 points to 8,110.
The Nasdaq inched ahead 3 points to 1,324.
- Meanwhile, gold continues to glisten. The yellow metal
rallied $2.50 to $371.60 an ounce. Although gold's months-
long rally has been pretty impressive, platinum is the
hottest precious metal these days. Yesterday, platinum
prices soared $25 to $698 an ounce - their highest level in
23 years! A worldwide lack of supplies is spurring the
price higher, along with threat of additional supply
disruptions. Specifically, Russia's Norilsk Nickel, the
world's fifth-largest producer of platinum, is battling
modest labor unrest.
- Stock market investors are also growing a bit restless.
"Investors are understandably gun-shy these days," observes
Morgan Stanley's Stephen Roach."Bear markets tend do that
- especially this one. The hope is that the worst is over.
But there are few willing to bet that a meaningful
resurgence in the global economy is now at hand." Roach
says investors aren't too worried anymore about the
downside, but neither do they hold out much hope for the
upside...On average, investors are perfectly ambivalent,
and the latest mutual fund numbers tell the tale:
-"Investors took $50 million more out of stock funds than
they put in last month," USA Today reports."While the
exodus was relatively small, the fact that it happened at
all is troubling, because investors normally resume funding
retirement plans and put year-end bonuses to work in the
market in January."
- During the bubble years, the lumpeninvestoriat would
routinely dump about $20 billion per month equity mutual
funds. But after three straight losing years in the stock
market, the lumps have little money left to dump.
- The few remaining folks who still have a spare dollar or
two to their name are hesitant to try"catching the bottom"
in tech stocks for the umpteenth time. Even the lumps can
see that the tech sector's"bottom" is likely to be as wide
as a sumo wrestler's. Global information-technology
spending has stagnated and could easily remain stagnant for
some time. And yet, many tech stocks still command very
rich valuations.
- The World Semiconductor Trade Association announced
yesterday that global chip sales fell 2.3% in December from
the previous month. For the year, sales grew just 1.3% to
$140.7 billion in 2002. All in all, not a very impressive
performance.
- The semiconductor sector's malaise typifies an American
economy that is"reverting to the mean" from the excesses
of the bubble era. Weakness - both in the economy and in
the stock market - is the path of least resistance.
- But that doesn't mean we won't enjoy the occasional,
spectacular bear-market rally. In 1992, three years after
Japan's Nikkei Index reached its peak, the Japanese stock
market rallied about 40% before resuming its inexorable
decline. That was ten years ago, and the Japanese stock
market is still languishing.
- Michael Belkin thinks the U.S. stock market is on the
verge of mounting a very similar sort of bear-market rally.
Belkin is looking for a gain on the order of 40%, before
the market rolls over and resumes its decline.
-"Mike's reasoning draws heavily on his formative early
experiences strategizing the Japanese market's twists of
fate," writes Kate Welling of Welling@Weeden."He was just
starting out on his own back in 1992, when his charts and
models started setting off alarums. Bearish calls on Japan
at that point were a lynchpin of his reputation, but
suddenly it looked to him like the Nikkei would rally,
big."
- Belkin was right, as it turned out. Now he sees - or
thinks he sees - the setup for a similar rally in the U.S.
market."His major theme for trades," Welling reports,"is
that the markets, sectors and groups that have fallen the
most, have the best bounce potential - that's right, stuff
like Nasdaq, TMT, utilities - while, conversely, all the
usual suspect 'safe havens' won't be."
-"But careful who you call a 'bull,' says Welling."Mike
is adamant: 'This is not a new bull market forecast, just a
bounce in a long term downtrend. But 40% upside potential
is substantial, too much to endure if you are an under-
invested long-only manager or shortseller.'"
- Consider yourself forewarned...
-------------
Back in London...
*** Why would foreign investors continue to buy U.S.
shares? Overseas stocks are cheaper than those in the
U.S...and there is no dollar risk.
Forbes reports that London-based Cadbury Schweppes sells at
only 9 times earnings, compared to Alanta-based Coke at 23
times.
Based on price to sales, Total Fina Elf is a third cheaper
than Exxon. So is the Bank of Ireland compares to Wachovia.
Lafarge is less than half the price of U.S.-based Vulcan
Materials. And Unilever is only one-ninth the price of
Kraft Foods.
*** But foreign investors are even more discouraged with
their own economies than they are with America's. German
shoppers have"stopped spending," says the BBC. Wages in
Japan are falling...along with unemployment. European
manufacturing is down for the 5th month in a row.
*** Investors who cannot stomach either U.S. equities or
foreign ones are turning to gold. The yellow metal has a
great advantage in tough times. Managed by no one...it
cannot be mismanaged. Nor does it lie to creditors...or go
broke in a crisis. And unlike Bernanke's dollar, it cannot
be inflated away when the managers feel the urge.
--- Advertisement ---
Make Profits of 435% in Less Than 90 Days up to 82% of the
Time
I've done it! I've invented a stock-picking system that
tells you if a stock is about to rise or fall by at least
30% in 90 days or Less. To date, it's been right 82% of the
time.
In the last several months my system has found stocks that
rose 54% in 55 days, 103% in 38 days, 147.4% in 84 days and
435% in just 33 days.
I'm so sure you will make Huge Profits, I'm willing to let
you try my system for 30 days...absolutely *Risk Free.
Check it out. You'll be glad you did.
http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/MST/Knowledge/
-----------------------
The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: As the U.S. current account
deficit approaches 6% of GDP, the chattering classes are
all aflutter. But what's the bottom line for investors?
Fleet Street's Lynn Carpenter offers a 'reasonable'
approach...
GOOD DEBT, BAD DEBT
by Lynn Carpenter
Scientists have rats. Economists don't.
We're the rats.
Scientists know exactly how many ultraviolet rays it takes
to burn a rat. Economists are still waiting to find out how
many imports it will take before holders of U.S. dollars
get burned.
America imports more than it exports. The current account
deficit is a dollar rendering of our trade imbalance. To be
accurate, the trade imbalance concerns only goods, and the
current account takes in financial transactions as well as
services. I'll just refer to the CA deficit to avoid
repeating"current account deficit" from now on.
Find a large CA deficit, and you will find deep worries.
But the very word"deficit" leads people astray in this
case. It is easy for the"America first" types to create
the illusion that when the current account is in deficit,
America is losing its way.
What happens when a current account goes too far in
deficit? Currency devaluation. Not gentle
slides...meltdowns, erosions, devastation. Foreigners don't
like to hold excessive amounts of other people's currencies,
and that's what they have when their trading partners are
far in deficit. And if the trade imbalance reflects a
weakness in the country's productivity or ability to trade,
foreigners can unload a currency faster than you can say
"Thai baht." But...there's always a but.
In America's case, the currency in question happens to be
the most widely used one in the world. It is involved in
90% of global trades. It denominates all oil trades. And in
a rough world, it is very stable. Yes, there's a lot in the
news about the dollar sliding this past year. But that's a
slide from overvaluation. For the previous seven years, the
dollar had risen 40% against major world currencies. Just
over a year ago, businesses and farm groups were traveling
to Washington pleading for help to weaken the dollar, as it
was hurting trade.
But even if large CA deficits cause problems eventually,
they don't necessarily cause problems immediately.
Countries begin to have currency problems at different
levels. For an emerging economy, a CA deficit of even 3-4%
of GDP tends to cause problems. But remember, those are
small and easily disrupted economies, and their currencies
have provisional stature. For major developed countries,
the limit seems to be higher, about 4%, up to 4.5% for
brief periods.
But the United States has been able to sustain deficits of
4.5% and higher for long periods without serious currency
devaluations. The economy here is huge, resilient and
backed with a currency everyone is still willing to accept.
The problem is that no one knows how far we might go, or
for how long. We've never been this far out of balance
before. In mid-2002, the U.S. CA deficit reached $127.6
billion, just over 5% of GDP. By September, it had backed
off only to $127 billion, and it may rise again. There's
genuine fear that this deficit is headed for 6%, and that
probably is too far.
When we look at this as investors, it's important to pay
attention to trends that affect the dollar's value. After
all, our stocks are priced in dollars. A declining stock
market, for instance, can undermine confidence. So can
foreign policy that other countries don't like, or
increasing strength in other areas (Asia for instance) can
lead the dollar lower. And overvaluation can be corrected.
These influences can come and go quickly.
But in the longer run, a continuing high CA deficit is very
important. It can lead to a worrisome slide, the kind that
the dollar suffered in the late 1980s. And that can hurt
your investments, even if you are a dollar-based investor
with only American companies in your portfolio.
We Americans cannot simply assume that the dollar will be
eternally popular, even if it is widely used. Maybe someone
is always willing to marry Elizabeth Taylor despite her
track record, but the dollar doesn't have violet eyes. In
the last year, the dollar has fallen 15% against the euro.
If you owned a European business that collected millions of
dollars by selling goodies to the United States and those
dollars were worth fewer euros every day, what would you
do?
Of course you would unload them.
Fortunately, much of the CA deficit is not dollars in
European hands. It is in Asian hands. Steve Hanke, a currency
expert at Johns Hopkins University, notes that 67% of the
deficit is with Asian countries. They are apt to continue
liking dollar investments. Both Chinese investors and Asian
central banks remain fond of collecting dollars, Hanke
points out. Still, we must worry if the deficit widens or
stays so huge and Asian economies improve so heartily that
the dollar no longer looks as attractive compared to Asian
currencies.
The world should pare back the price of the dollar. Some. But
if the world grows skeptical of dollars quickly, there's
trouble. The dollar's value would continue to slide and its
global purchasing power would melt like cheap ice cream.
Ironically, a fast devaluation can cure a big CA deficit.
The trouble is, nobody likes the results.
That's what happened in Thailand, 1997. Thailand's CA
deficit reached 8% of GDP. It got that high because the
government kept intervening to support the currency to keep
it close to 25 baht per dollar as trade soured. Speculators
attacked a system overdue to explode. When the baht broke
down, it not only lost half its value overnight, the
wreckage spread.
Realize that Thailand is a very small economy, yet...even
so, the effect was felt around the world. Thai companies
that might have sold their exports more easily since the
baht was now cheaper couldn't get credit to take advantage
of the opportunity; Japanese banks lost billions on loans to
Thailand. Other Asian currency crashed as a result. But,
just a couple of months later, the current account was in
surplus, as desired.
Another point to consider is the rise of imports into the
U.S. Every time we buy something from a foreign country,
the seller gets our dollars. Indeed, there are a lot of
U.S. dollars living outside the United States. But to
imagine that imports only debilitate our economy is wildly
uninformed. Imports also spark our domestic economy.
In 2000, for every $1.2 to $1.3 trillion of imports, our
economy grew another $2 trillion - because of those
imports. In fact, Daniel Griswold at Cato Institute
discovered that in years when the U.S. CA deficit was
rising, GDP went up an average 3.5% annually. In years when
it was shrinking, GDP rose only 2.6% on average.
Some imports are raw goods that get value added to them in
the manufacturing process. But the rest comes from our
domestic economy with its many layers. An importer buys a
candlestick from Taiwan for 50 cents. He sells it to a
distributor for $1. The distributor sells it to a retailer
for $1.25. And you pay the retailer $1.75 at the end of the
chain. Fifty cents went to someone in Taiwan, $1.25 went to
businesses in the United States. And that's not even
including the money other companies make on shipping,
advertising or packaging. The money made at home on such
markups after foreign goods hit our shores comes to about
20% of our GDP.
We most certainly do not want a sudden drop in imports. Yet
most commentary reads as though we Americans are either
inept overspenders or being duped by wily foreigners every
time we import goods. Not so. We are using those imports
productively.
There is another element in our CA deficit that has
similarly mixed implications. Not all of this importing and
exporting is in goods and services. Much of the deficit
comes from foreigners who are buying U.S. financial assets
- T-bills and bonds as well as corporate and muni bonds.
Which brings me to another mis-impression the media foster.
Alarmists always see the sky falling. Well, friend, the sky
generally stays on top where it belongs, although the media
do sometimes get lost in low-lying fogs.
Just because Sven and Igor and Hiro and Mustafa and Nigel
own a lot of dollars instead of Billy Bob, Joe and Jack
doesn't mean they're going to trade them in immediately.
For what? Yet almost all the coverage I've read on the CA
deficit makes it sound as though this were some kind of 90-
day loan that has to be repaid. It is not.
Let me put it this way: If a software millionaire buys
$2,000 worth of potatoes from the farmer next door and the
farmer only buys $20 worth of the millionaire's software,
the millionaire is still a millionaire. And the farmer is
still a farmer. The farmer is not superior to the
millionaire because he spent less. Nobody owes anybody
anything. The account is"settled" when the transactions
are paid in cash.
The current account balance is not an IOU, it's a tally...a
record of who sold the most. The current account balance of
the millionaire may be a $1,980 trade deficit with the
farmer. But the millionaire doesn't owe the farmer money.
He's already paid. And the farmer isn't going to demand he
get his potatoes back because they're uneven, either.
It is the same with the CA deficit. Nobody wants his
potatoes back. The currencies do tend to get exchanged back
to home currencies by corporations. A German axle maker
will have a limit on how many dollars it wants to hold
instead of euros. But there's more to trade than axles. The
flows in financial assets are strongly geared to dollars.
By choice. Much of it comes from investors, including
central banks, buying U.S. Treasuries, stocks and bonds.
There is a follow-on outflow of dollars with this financial
trade. Interest payments. But the larger risk comes not
from that. It comes from worry that this foreign liking for
U.S. assets and dollars should change suddenly.
So...for us investors, here's the first part of the problem
that may directly affect us. Should the U.S. stock and bond
markets badly lag those of competing countries, money could
rush out. This would happen even if there were no CA deficit.
Investors aren't staying where the results are bad. But
with the deficit so large already, such a big move would be
disastrous for the dollar.
But to fix it...The CA deficit is one area that is best
left alone to fix itself. We must hope that it is allowed
to. Political and deliberate monetary policy cures are
likely to do much harm. The most likely knee-jerk reaction
to this imbalance, if the politicians get it in their
teeth, is to restrict trade and raise tariffs.
I am opposed to that in theory and it has yet to have any
enduring value. All we ever got from protecting the steel
industry for so many years, to give one outstanding
example, is a broken industry that finally couldn't even
support itself on oxygen.
Tariffs are a stupid solution. That is especially so when
they're levied on things no one needs to survive. And that
includes most things for sale apart from oil. If bananas
are too expensive, we'll eat grapes. If two pairs of shoes
are too much, we'll only buy one pair. Or maybe skip it. If
steel and cement cost too much, building slows down.
But world currency traders are doing a nice job. Already,
the dollar is adjusting downward. It has dropped against
the euro in the past year and may drop more.
But there's another way that the CA deficit can be turned
without causing inflation. Savings. Money saved at home
reduces the money sent abroad buying imports without
competing with the incoming foreign money for U.S. assets.
It takes the pressure off demand. What's more, it provides
a pool for further capital investment.
As it turns out, Americans are saving more now than they
were two years ago. Almost as if they knew...
In its way, the now-burst tech stock bubble has helped the
situation as well, although jerkily. There is no longer a
three-headed boy in the carnival tent pulling foreign
investment into the U.S. stock market. The foreign
investment money that is here now is cautious money. It is
here because nowhere else looked much better. Interest
rates on safe investments are comparatively high here. Some
of this money will wander off looking for sexier returns
elsewhere.
As that money leaves, hopefully gradually, the dollar could
drop in value. But a somewhat weaker dollar would be no big
loss.
We had a similar situation in 1985-1986 when the dollar
dropped in value without doing great harm to the U.S.
economy. The magic formula in this puzzle is the nature of
the U.S. economy. It is very nimble. Both its labor and
capital are quite flexible. As a country, we don't have
massive problems laying off workers as the euro countries
do because of their labor laws. Nor do we have great
problems hiring up. And right now, we have a very low
capacity utilization...
If you are going to have a bad capacity utilization number,
the best time to have it is when the dollar is too strong,
as it has been. As the dollar drops, exports become easier
to sell and businesses can quickly gear up the selling
simply by using their existing capacity more fully.
The effect on trade is obvious. We Americans with fistfuls
of weak dollars won't buy as many imported goods. Most of
the world needs our trade to keep its own economies sound.
But the less obvious threat is the one to corporate balance
sheets worldwide. A lot of seemingly healthy companies will
show their cracks when their dollar assets lose value.
Every foreign company that collects dollars for what it
sells will see profits evaporate as those dollars they bank
are translated into lower and lower figures in their own
euros, rubles, and francs.
Regards,
Lynn Carpenter
P.S. As investors, this all means something to us. It is
good to diversify now. You will likely find the currency
exchange rates work in your favor. However, there's a limit
to how much you can expect. It is not time to flee the
dollar and all dollar-based investments. For one, there's a
dearth of choices outside Europe (still more economically
challenged than the United States), Hong Kong and Japan.
But more important, you will not find other countries
willingly allowing the dollar to slide too far. A very weak
dollar is not good for people collecting dollars. And
that's most of the world.
|