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To: $Mogul who wrote (617)9/24/1999 1:48:00 AM
From: Mohan Marette  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4187
 
Well mogul if this keeps up for a few more days I may have to think about getting back in again.<eom>



To: $Mogul who wrote (617)9/26/1999 5:41:00 PM
From: Tunica Albuginea  Respond to of 4187
 
$Mogul,so who's buying Mon @ 92 1/8 ? :) TA



To: $Mogul who wrote (617)9/27/1999 10:49:00 AM
From: Tunica Albuginea  Respond to of 4187
 
$Mogul, Wall St. Jour: Investment Bears Fret Over Goldilocks:

Is "Japan Visa" credit Card going to restrict credit on money-loose American consumer?"

TA
.
.
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September 27, 1999

The Outlook

Investment Bears Fret Over Goldilocks


NEW YORK

The U.S. and Japan have long been like an old married couple. The U.S.
likes to spend. Japan likes to save. And for nearly 20 years,
this strangely
symbiotic relationship has endured, but not without strain.

These days, there are fresh questions about whether the world's biggest
saver will continue to provide relatively cheap, abundant capital to the
world's biggest spender.

It's no secret that the U.S. economic expansion of the 1990s has been
fueled with wads of borrowed money. Corporations are issuing huge
amounts of debt, often to buy back company shares. American consumer
debt is enormous. And the spending boom here has generated record
trade deficits exceeding $25 billion a month. Squaring the current-account
shortfall has forced the U.S. to borrow nearly $1 billion a day. Most of it
comes from foreign investors.

For many years, only the gloomy fringe of economists and
investment bears worried loudly about this, to small avail. But now,
such worries are getting a larger audience. There is concern over
whether the Japanese and other foreign investors will keep funding
America's boom.


To Lawrence Lindsey, former Federal Reserve governor and currently
chief economic adviser to Republican presidential hopeful George W.
Bush, the huge funding gap is enough to call into question the future of
America's "Goldilocks economy." Speaking at an investment conference in
New York last Tuesday, Mr. Lindsey noted that "we're already taking in
$300 billion a year from the rest of the world to finance our spending
boom." Next year, the sum could be even larger.
Then he told his audience
if they can imagine easily raising well over $300 billion from world
investors next year, "then you can imagine Goldilocks continuing through
the year 2000." Mr. Lindsey made it clear that he is concerned about
growing tightness in credit markets.

The conference where he spoke was organized by the bearish firm of
David W. Tice & Associates of Dallas and titled "The Credit Bubble and
Its Aftermath."
Yet there is no question that he and the other gloomsters
see fresh signs of trouble.

The first beeping barometer of concern is the yen/dollar rate. Though
Group of Seven officials gave it a verbal nudge downward over the
weekend, the yen rose last week to a 44-month high against the dollar. To
most observers, this largely reflects a strengthening Japanese economy,
and a rush to invest there. But a falling dollar could, at least hypothetically,
reduce the appetite for U.S. assets by Japanese.

True, the dollar has slumped before, and Japanese investment has
continued to pile into the U.S. But it's possible that in the months
ahead, nervous foreign investors, especially Japanese, will require
higher interest rates to keep recycling their own huge
current-account surplus
. And the prospect of higher interest rates is
already spooking the U.S. stock market, down more than 9% from
its peak in August.

Compounding the issue is a belief among many Japanese investors and
policy makers that the U.S. financial markets are in a bubble.
In Japan,
understandably, people are highly sensitive to asset bubbles, having
suffered through the boom and bust of real-estate and equities prices
throughout the 1990s.
Most Americans are convinced that the U.S.
economy is far more resilient than Japan's was a decade ago. Yet
nervousness in Japan about the sustainability of America's bull market is
palpable.

By extension, Japan worries about the U.S. consumption boom. To the
Japanese, whose household savings rate has remained in the double digits
all through the perilous 1990s, the U.S. consumption machine looks
unsustainable. Some U.S. experts also fear the consumer boom isn't living
just on borrowed money but on borrowed time.

What's missing here is an acknowledgment that the equities boom of the
1990s has made tens of millions of Americans wealthier. Also, rising real
income has pretty much kept pace with spending.

Something else the gloomy analysts conveniently overlook, is a
powerful fact: that a portion of this foreign investment has been
used to finance American investment in competitive businesses. It
isn't just a matter of financing consumption.

Still, if there isn't an acute problem, there probably is a long-term problem
surrounding America's current-account gap. The U.S. has indeed served
as the consumer of last resort for a troubled world.
As emerging markets in
Asia and elsewhere descended into crisis in 1997 and 1998, one country
after another exported its way out of trouble. The No. 1 export destination:
the U.S. The legacy: huge U.S. trade deficits.

Looking ahead, some pessimistic analysts think this yawning trade gap will
prove stubborn.
Frank Veneroso, a veteran investment and economic
adviser, is convinced that America's trade partners are hooked on their
surpluses and will work hard to prevent them from shrinking. Of course, a
rapid deterioration of the U.S. economy could reduce the trade deficit
quickly. That's the most unhappy scenario.


On the other hand, if the U.S. economy slows somewhat, and if the
nascent economic recoveries abroad continue, the worst of America's
trade deficit worries could pass within a matter of months. By itself, this
wouldn't assure the continuation of the Goldilocks economy into the first
years of the 21st century. (It could heat up competition for capital.) But in
curbing America's voracious need to plug its yawning current-account gap,
it might be enough to undermine the bears' gloomiest prognosis.

--Bernard Wysocki Jr.