SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (7543)9/27/2002 4:07:22 PM
From: elpolvo  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
jw-

i think you bolded the wrong sentences from that
article. (see new bolding below)

...all the rest is economic gobbledygook. the author looks
at the symptoms, effects and indicators of what's going
on economically and tries to peg them as causes...

it's almost like saying that my sneezing and coughing
caused my cold... and they're making it worse as they
increase... and if i can just stop the sneezing and
coughing, the cold will be gone.

the cause is OUTSIDE of economics. economics is just one
of the areas where the symptoms are manifesting. there
are no economic tricks or maneuvers that will affect
or cure the cause.

something has happened to the spirit of growth and
enthusiasm we had as we approached the end of the
millennium. it's not just the economy that's ill...
the human family is ill, afraid, mistrustful and
angry too.

i've been fingering the whitehouse with their world
bullying, spreading of fears and building a climate of
mistrust in the human family... but perhaps i'm being
shortsighted too. perhaps there's something OUTSIDE of
humanity that's causing these symptoms in the whitehouse.

maybe it's jupiter. i don't know.

...then again, maybe it's just poor leadership.
i'm certainly willing to try a "regime change". <g>

yer fren,

-polvo

The growth dynamic of the global economy continues to be amazingly US-centric. When America boomed in the late 1990s, the world was quick to follow. The reverse has been the case in the past two years, as a slump in the US economy has been more than matched by growth shortfalls elsewhere in the world. Lacking an alternative growth engine, an unbalanced global economy is now on increasingly precarious footing. What will it take to rebalance the world?

The numbers speak for themselves: At market exchange rates, the United States accounted for fully 64% of the cumulative growth in world GDP from 1995 to 2001. That’s essentially double America’s 32% share of current-dollar world output in 2001. And that’s only the direct contribution. A US-led global trade cycle has also played a powerful role in driving world growth since the mid-1990s. The surge in global exports over the 1995-2001 interval explains 51% of the cumulative growth in world GDP over that period. To be sure, some of this outsize growth contribution reflects the impacts of an appreciating dollar. Using the IMF’s purchasing power parity (PPP) metric, which attempts to adjust for currency fluctuations, our estimates suggest that the US accounted for approximately 40% of the cumulative growth in PPP-based world GDP since 1995 (direct US GDP effects plus trade impacts, combined); that’s also about double America’s 21% share in PPP-based world GDP. Consequently, no matter how you cut it, it’s safe to say the US has been the sole engine of global growth for over seven years.

This conclusion has been validated once again by this summer’s pronounced slowdown in global growth. America’s flirtation with a double-dip recession -- an anemic 1.1% increase in 2Q02 real GDP -- has reverberated quickly around the world. A surprising vulnerability in the European growth dynamic has been unmasked. With domestic demand accounting for a mere 0.1 percentage point contribution to Euroland GDP growth in 2Q02, a weakening in the external growth climate has brought the region to the brink of its own double-dip scare. Since stabilization policies are lined up in a disturbingly pro-cyclical fashion, European growth risks are skewed very much to the downside. The lagged effects of an earlier strengthening in the euro won’t help matters either. Nor will politically inspired setbacks to reforms.

Meanwhile, the Japanese economy is also feeling renewed pressure. Long lacking support from domestic demand, a US-led deterioration in external demand is worrisome, to say the least. Japanese exports fell for a third consecutive month in August, with shipments to the US especially weak. Moreover, while the cyclical growth climate has improved elsewhere in Asia, there are increasing signs that export and production comparisons are now in the process of peaking out. All in all, it didn’t take much to expose the fault lines in a US-centric global economy this summer. Which, of course, raises an obvious question: If the world weakens so much in response to a mere double-dip scare in America, what would happen if the dreaded double dip actually came to pass?

As I travel the world, I find that most investors would be delighted if this US-centric global growth dynamic were to be sustained. They’re happy to have their respective economies grow by exporting products to America and her suppliers. Who needs domestic demand if you have access to the richest and deepest markets of all, as well as the opportunity to tap the voracious appetite of the overly indulgent American consumer. My answer: Such a lopsided global growth dynamic is simply not sustainable. It leads to huge imbalances in the world economy that can only end in tears. That’s certainly the message from America’s massive current-account deficit, a direct by-product of this global misalignment. With America’s external gap already at a record 5.0% of GDP in 2Q02, another surge of US-led global growth could easily take the current account shortfall to 6.0% over the next year. That, in turn, would compound an already huge external-financing burden on the US -- taking it up to close to $2 billion of capital inflows per day by 2003. While that wouldn’t be such an onerous requirement if Nasdaq were back at 5,000, at Nasdaq 1,200 it could well be a different matter altogether. It raises the distinct possibility of a correction in relative asset prices -- with a weakening of the over-valued US dollar at the top of my list.

In its latest assessment of world economic prospects, the IMF sends a clear warning about this ominous build-up of global imbalances (see the IMF’s World Economic Outlook, September 2002). Three data points drive the message home: First, there is now an extraordinary gap amounting to 2.5% of world GDP between the current-account surplus economies (mainly Europe and East Asia) and the deficit countries (led by the US). Second, as scaled by the trade flows, America’s current-account deficit and Japan’s current-account surplus have, in the IMF’s words, "risen to levels almost never seen in industrial countries in the postwar period." Third, and a by-product of the first two points, the US economy is now importing 6% of total world saving, whereas Japan is exporting about 1.5%. The IMF goes on to conclude that the biggest risk of these extraordinary imbalances "is the possibility of an abrupt and disruptive adjustment of major exchange rates." This is policyspeak for sounding the alarm on the vulnerability of an overvalued dollar.

In my opinion, the imbalances of a lopsided world are a by-product of a fundamental misalignment in relative prices. This shows up in the form of an overvaluation in the world’s most important relative price -- the dollar. At the start of 2002, our currency team estimated that the dollar was overvalued by at least 15%, maybe more. While the trade-weighted dollar fell by 6% in the first half this year, it has since recouped half that decline and currently stands just 3% below its peak. Moreover, in a climate of heightened uncertainty -- both economic (double dip) and geopolitical (Iraq) -- the dollar could well move further to the upside. That would leave the world’s most important relative price as overvalued as ever. Given the imbalances this currency misalignment has fostered, I continue to favor a weakening of the dollar as a major policy initiative of US authorities.

My suggestion for a weaker dollar has been met with great consternation in official quarters. I have been accused by some of endorsing a strategy of competitive currency devaluation that could lead to ever-treacherous beggar-thy-neighbor trade policies -- smack out of the 1930s. That is the furthest thing from my mind. But I am struck by the obvious: An unbalanced world needs a realignment of relative prices, and a weaker dollar is the most sensible way to achieve this, in my opinion. It also happens to be the one option with the greatest potential to stave off America’s deflationary endgame by arresting the ongoing deflation of US import prices. But a rhetorical shift in America’s "strong-dollar policy" may not be enough. Aggressive Fed rate cuts, possibly on the order of 75 basis points, may well be required to trigger and reinforce this long overdue adjustment in the US currency. Such an easing would also be helpful in putting a floor on American domestic demand -- yet another advantage in the battle against deflation. Which takes us to the biggest risk of all: Global imbalances are all the more treacherous for a world on the brink of deflation. A lopsided world is in increasingly desperate need of a policy fix. That won’t happen, in my view, without a weaker dollar.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (7543)9/28/2002 11:38:46 AM
From: pogbull  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Pension Hole to Hit S&P 500s in 2003
Saturday September 28, 7:48 am ET

By Thi Nguyen

biz.yahoo.com

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks slumping for the third straight year will leave large portions of the pension funds of hundreds of top U.S. companies underfunded at the end of 2002, investment bank Merrill Lynch & Co. (NYSE:MER - News) said.
ADVERTISEMENT


These companies, which include General Motors Corp. (NYSE:GM - News) and some other big names in the broad Standard & Poor's 500 index (CBOE:^SPX - News) , will take a hit to their 2003 cash flow and earnings as they will be forced to contribute billions of dollars to their pension plans -- waylaid by the stock market's spectacular decline since 2000 -- to comply with U.S. laws that protect employee retirement funds.

Merrill Lynch estimates that the traditional pension funds, also known as defined benefit plans, for 98 percent of 346 S&P 500 companies are expected to be underfunded at the end of 2002. Those companies make up 70 percent of the S&P 500.

On aggregate, the pension funds of these 346 companies are expected to be underfunded by $640 billion -- or 69 percent of the total assets in their pension plans, according to a Merrill Lynch analyst's study.

Excluding post-retirement funds, pension funds are underfunded by $323 billion at the companies, a sharp drop from an overfunded position of $0.5 billion at the end of 2001, the investment bank said.

At the end of 2000, the reverse was true: The funds were overfunded by $215 billion.

So far this year, the S&P 500 has fallen 28 percent. It has tumbled about 46 percent from its all-time high reached in March 2000. Among the stock slide's biggest victims were pension funds, which typically invest a large portion of their cash in stocks.

A BRUTAL REALITY CHECK

Even as the U.S. stock market suffers its third straight year of heavy losses, S&P 500 companies currently still assume that their long-term returns on pension fund investments will be 9.3 percent, according to Adrian Redlich, director of Merrill Lynch's global analytic and thematic research.

The expected returns on plan assets, however, will likely fall to between 8 percent and 8.5 percent, Redlich said.

"Indicatively, these changes could lead companies and analysts to downgrade earnings, over the coming six months, by 5 to 10 percent," Redlich wrote in a research note.

Cash flow and earnings in large companies, especially major industrial manufacturers with big labor forces and huge pension plans, will be hurt the most by pension issues, according to Standard & Poor's Corp., a financial services and information company owned by The McGraw-Hill Cos. (NYSE:MHP - News)

Among the most underfunded companies in absolute terms for pension and post-retirement plans are GM and Ford Motor Co.(NYSE:F - News), the world's top automakers; International Business Machines Corp. (NYSE:IBM - News), the world's largest supplier of computers and computer services; SBC Communications Inc. (NYSE:SBC - News), the No. 2 U.S. local phone company, and The Boeing Co. (NYSE:BA - News), the world's largest maker of commercial jets.

Merrill's estimates are based on the assumption that the actual return on plan assets will be a negative 10 percent this year, and that company contributions and benefits paid this year are in line with 2001 payouts.