>REVISION TO THE MEAN, Part One 
>THE DAILY RECKONING 
>PARIS, FRANCE 
>THURSDAY, 27 SEPTEMBER 2001 
>* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 
>*** Rally halted...no hat trick on Wall Street 
>*** Is the age of irony over? 
>*** Profits collapse...stocks go down...CMGI a penny 
>share..."Buy Gold!"...and more... 
>* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * > We've been following the great"river of no 
>returns" stock, Amazon.com...all the way down. 
>Yesterday, it lost another 10% - closing at $6.35. CMGI, 
>which once traded at $162, became a penny stock, trading 
>as low as 98 cents yesterday. > These stocks once represented the golden future of 
>American capitalism and modern information technology. 
>They were supposed to go up, not down. Meanwhile, gold 
>shares - which were supposed to go nowhere - are up 73% 
>so far this year. 
>("Buy the gold shares," said Harry Schultz, as we 
>enjoyed the sun at the Paradis Caf‚ a couple of days 
>ago."They've already gone up a lot, but they have a lot 
>farther to go.") 
>But irony is underappreciated these days."The Age 
>of Irony Comes to an End," declares Roger Rosenblatt 
>sourly in Time magazine. 
>To save you some time, I read his piece. Now I 
>have doubts that he even knows what irony is."The 
>ironicists, seeing through everything, made it difficult 
>for anyone to see anything." Rosenblatt goes on to 
>complain that Ironicists even made fun of such heartfelt 
>expressions as"I feel your pain". 
>To Rosenblatt, irony suggests that"nothing is 
>real." Now he says that irony is dead because the nation 
>knows that some things ARE real: real pain, real 
>anger...and, of course, the real greatness of the 
>country. 
>Okay, Roger, let me ask you: was the productivity 
>miracle real? The"new era", the social security"lock 
>box", the never-ending economic expansion? What about 
>the ever-rising stock market or the federal surplus? 
>Ironically, life is still full of lies, myths, 
>hypocrisies, wishful thinking and twists. About which, 
>more below... 
>Eric...what's happening over your way? > ***** 
>Eric Fry in New York: 
>- A stock market"hat-trick" was not to be. Stocks could 
>muster no better than two consecutive days in the plus 
>column before fading yesterday. The Dow dropped 92 
>points to 8,567, while the Nasdaq lost 2.5%, to 1,464. 
>- Adam Lass and Bryan Botterelli, our colleagues at the 
>Options Underground, nailed this one on the head 
>(again!). Tuesday morning, they urged their subscribers 
>to buy puts on the Nasdaq 100 Index (betting that the 
>market would fall). One day into the trade, things look 
>pretty darn good. The Nasdaq 100 has dropped about 3% 
>since midday Tuesday. (see: 
>Options Underground 
>http://www.indxtrader.com/your_wealth 
>- Last week, Wall Street analysts made 3,390 changes to 
>their revenue or profit forecasts for specific stocks, 
>according to Thomson Financial/First Call. An unsettling 
>84% of those forecasts were revised down. Brokerage 
>stocks typify the trend: Goldman Sachs, Bear Stearns and 
>Lehman Brothers all posted quarterly declines in net 
>income yesterday...Goldman's profits fell 43%, Bear 
>Stearns' slid 26%, and Lehman Brothers' dropped 32%. 
>- Bad news for the stock market was good news for gold. 
>The monetary relic mounted another of its stealth 
>rallies - rising $3.50 to over $393 per ounce. 
>- Immediately after the World Trade Center attack, gold 
>rallied about $15. But the advance quickly reversed as 
>many dispirited, would-be gold bulls threw in the towel. 
>Since then, gold has been tiptoeing higher. And now, 
>more than two weeks after the attack, spot gold has 
>managed to climb to its highest closing price in more 
>than one year. 
>- Ironically, investment demand for gold coins appears 
>to be the driving force behind the move. Greg Weldon of 
>Weldon's Money Monitor reports that retail demand for 
>gold coins is"through the roof." Mike Tordella, a 
>wholesaler of precious metals, bars, and coins tells 
>Weldon that his sales volumes are up 500% over last 
>month. 
>-"We are getting calls from financial planners who are 
>looking for half-a-million or even one million dollars 
>worth of gold for their clients," says Tordella."That 
>represents a small portion of an individual portfolio, 
>but it is a lot more than what people had been 
>considering previously." 
>-"The Mint was caught unprepared for the run on coins, 
>having maintained minimal inventories due to lack of 
>demand," says Frank McGhee, a coin dealer at Alliance 
>Financial in Chicago. This new demand"has created 
>problems with getting enough planchets (blanks) for the 
>making of bullion coins." 
>- Something less extreme than impending Armageddon may 
>be whetting the appetites of all these gold buyers. Like 
>plain vanilla inflation, for example. The recent sell 
>off in the 30-year Treasury bond seems to suggest as 
>much. 
>-"Fed easings have been unusually aggressive 
>(inflationary?)," observes the ISI Group."The attack 
>has opened the door to wartime government spending 
>(inflationary?). The dollar could decline persistently 
>as foreign investors unwind unprecedentedly [large] long 
>positions in U.S. stocks and bonds." These trends may 
>all add up to rising inflation...at least, as ISI sees 
>it. 
>- Still, the price of oil dropped again yesterday. 
>"Crude prices have declined 25% in the past week," 
>writes John Myers of Outstanding Investments,"and is 
>now hovering around two year lows. One reason? Demand 
>for jet fuel is dropping dramatically as airlines cut 
>back on their traffic by as much as 25%. The industry 
>accounts for as much as 1.8 million barrels a day of jet 
>fuel - almost 10% of the U.S. oil consumption. War, of 
>course, could make the price turn around in a hurry." 
>- John, by the way, is having his own string of luck 
>with The Resource Trader Alert. He recently added 145% 
>to his readers' portfolios with this interesting twist 
>on the surge in demand for gold: a"call" on the Swiss 
>franc (betting the market would go up). This currency, 
>seen by many as a safety play in times of strife, is 
>largely backed by gold reserves. {see: 
>Resource Trader Alert 
>http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/HOTS/ProfitWithRTA/ 
>- Life in lower Manhattan, while far from normal, is at 
>least moving in that direction. Yesterday's spectacular 
>fall weather seemed to put a shine on everything. > ***** 
>Back in Paris... 
>*** I stopped in at the famous auction house Drouot 
>yesterday. If you want to buy antiques, this is a good 
>place to go - it's the wholesale market, where Paris 
>antique dealers get their inventory. 
>*** At an auction of modern art...I felt as though I was 
>glimpsing the future. 
>*** Two men in suits held up a large tableau covered in 
>brown paint with purple figures. It looked as though it 
>might have been done by a 5th grade art class in a bad 
>neighborhood. 
>***"We will begin the bidding at 5,000 francs," said 
>the auctioneer. 
>Silence. 
>***"Well, let us reduce the opening bid to 4,000 
>francs..." 
>Silence. 
>***"Two thousand francs. Do I hear 2,000 francs...?" 
>No one spoke. 
>***"Okay...1,000...?" 
>***"500 francs...? Does anyone in this room want to bid 
>on this painting?" 
>Dead silence. 
>* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 
>REVERSION TO THE MEAN, Part One 
>by Bill Bonner 
> 
>"Patriotism...is the last refuge of scoundrels. It also 
>occasionally can be the first resort of shills, not 
>excluding those peddling stocks." 
>Alan Abelson 
>Barron's 
> 
>Widely reported is the idea that Islam abhors violence 
>and the Koran specifically forbids suicide missions. 
>But great religions all have one thing in common. They 
>lay on such a light yoke that their adherents can run 
>off in almost any fool direction they want to. 
>How else can you explain so many mullahs and Muslim 
>clerics throughout the Middle East who seem to support 
>bin Laden and other terrorists? 
>And is it not at least ironic that in a nation of more 
>than 200 million Christians, hardly a single voice 
>suggests turning the other cheek to terrorists? There it 
>is, about as unambiguously stated as anything Jesus ever 
>said: 
>"Ye have heard that it hath been said, An eye for an 
>eye, and a tooth for a tooth...But I say unto you, That 
>ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite thee on 
>thy rich cheek, turn to him the other also." 
>As I have explained, the Daily Reckoning is a free 
>service. But if I had the same views as Time magazine, 
>what would be the point of reading? (Not that I am 
>advocating turning the other cheek to murderers. It is 
>just that an unnoticed irony is a dangerous irony.) 
>The entire American press agrees: the nation has been 
>rocked by a tragic and catastrophic attack, but it seems 
>to have brought out the best in America. Americans are 
>united as never before and prouder than ever...of 
>themselves. 
>But here at the Daily Reckoning, we are a bit 
>disappointed in our fellow Americans. Just when they 
>seemed to be coming to their senses, after a long spell 
>of overconfidence...they seem to have slipped into even 
>greater fantasy. 
>The ordinary man seems to have suddenly taken up a vast 
>and unhealthy interest in military affairs and politics, 
>just as he was beginning to recover from his interest in 
>stocks. And now he can scarcely tell the difference. 
>"If you believe in our great country - that we will 
>survive and prosper - then spend a little money," urges 
>Louis Navellier."Buy that new sofa. Go out to dinner. 
>Take a weekend getaway. It'll do your psyche good and 
>help grease the wheels of recovery, as well. AND ONCE 
>YOU'VE spent a little cash on yourself and your family, 
>invest a little in America, too. The stock market 
>represents our future - a bright future, I believe. 
>But don't invest just to be patriotic. Invest the right 
>way now - with great companies selling at flea market 
>prices..." (Uahhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!, J.)  
>History will some day record that following the 
>terrorists' strike in September of 2001, God, Mammon, 
>and the State curled up so tightly together in 
>Americans' minds that separating them was like trying to 
>pull apart mating snakes. The nation's blood is up. Now 
>is the time to act. To speak out. We will have plenty of 
>time for regrets later. 
>"Wake Up, America!" comes the clarion call from Ben 
>Stein in Barron's. The terrorists' attack gave us a 
>wake-up call just like Pearl Harbor, Stein believes. 
>How did America's Greatest Generation react?"We didn't 
>worry a lot about hurting anyone's feelings. We bombed 
>their cities from the air...we won and saved the whole 
>future of mankind." 
>Bombing cities is a popular theme."Bomb them all," said 
>one New Yorker, as I reported yesterday,"Let God sort 
>them out." 
>"Strike hard and fast," adds Stein. 
>This sentiment has already triggered streams of refugees 
>pouring out of Kabul. Residents of Delray Beach, Florida 
>are said to be packing up too. 
>If Simon de Montfort had had bombers, he would have used 
>them to crush the Cathar heresy in 1208. Cathars lived 
>in towns in the southwest of France...where they 
>practiced their form of"pure" Christianity. They 
>believed that work was good but that all matter was 
>evil. Why were they considered such a threat? Eight 
>hundred years later, it is hard to imagine. Perhaps it 
>was because they did not eat meat; vegetarianism has 
>always been regarded with alarm in France. 
>Blessed by the Pope, and joined by men in search of 
>paradise in heaven or confiscated lands on earth, Simon 
>de Montfort led a campaign against the heretics. 
>St. Dominic despaired of trying to talk sense into them. 
>"I have preached, I have entreated, I have wept...the 
>rod must now do the work of benediction." 
>In the ensuring campaign whole towns were wiped out - 
>with every man, woman, and child put to the sword...many 
>tortured before finally being put to death. A favorite 
>means of killing heretics was to burn them alive at the 
>stake..."with a small, slow fire", the chroniclers 
>report. Those who escaped ran and hid in the forests. 
>There, they starved...other towns were forbidden to give 
>them food or shelter, under penalty of death. 
>How could de Montfort tell the difference between 
>heretics and the honest Catholics who lived in the same 
>towns? He was as ignorant of an individual's guilt or 
>innocence as a smart bomb. So he killed them all."Slay 
>them all," was his instruction (attributed to Papal 
>Legate Arnaud Amaury)."God will recognize his own." 
>The ruthlessness paid off. Scarcely a hundred years 
>later, the last known Cathar, Guillaume Belibaste, was 
>burnt alive, and - in the eyes of the church - the 
>future of mankind was saved. 
>For Stein too, the time for modesty and cautious 
>thinking is over."Back to reality..." he says. 
>"Reversion to the mean is a law, not a choice." 
>Long suffering Daily Reckoning readers will recall too 
>that"reversion to the mean" is a law that rarely goes 
>unenforced for long. A bear market had already begun on 
>Wall Street before the terrorists finished flight 
>school. Stocks were already reverting to the mean and so 
>was the U.S. economy. Those trends still have a long way 
>to go. 
>But your editor wonders whether there isn't an even 
>bigger bubble waiting for deflation...and whether, in 
>some ironic way, a bear market in confidence might cost 
>the nation even more than its bear market in stocks. 
>More tomorrow... 
>Bill Bonner 
 
393$/Unze, hach wär das schön! Aber irgendwann werden auch diese 393$/Unze kommen. 
 
Gruss:-) 
 
Pancho 
 
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