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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RealMuLan who wrote (49893)5/12/2004 9:13:46 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
<<Is there a pattern of the US abuse of POWs>>

... I do not know, but brian h wants me to teach China how to behave in a civilized world. Taking the measure of the US, I would guess that China is doing fine, sometimes ahead of the learning curve and sometimes behind.

Jay



To: RealMuLan who wrote (49893)5/12/2004 10:30:07 PM
From: BubbaFred  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
"Napoleon once said that when China awakens, the world will
tremble."

The Daily Reckoning
London, England
Tuesday, 11 May 2004

*** Dow falls below 10,000...
*** Global boom... of sorts... buy oil!?
*** Gold, euros... disappointment coming? An autopsy... and more!

And he was right. They're on the verge of becoming a global
superpower like the world has never seen.
Its unstoppable growth will result in the greatest grab for oil and gold ever. I've just found a $2 stock that
can ride this unstoppable wave all the way to the bank. Here's the fascinating story few know...

agora-inc.com

---------------------

If we have any virtue here at the Daily Reckoning, it is
modesty. And even that is insincere.

We admit that our ignorance is boundless. Still, we can't
help but have a hunch...

Our hunch has been that the stock and bond markets were
beginning to break down. Consumer spending, too, was about
to head lower... with house prices not far behind.

The drop in asset values, we thought, would undermine the
collateral that under-girds trillions in consumer and
financial debt. People would be forced to sell; almost
everything would fall in price.

But what do you buy when everything goes down?

We posed the question to a group of London-based fund
managers, economists, strategists and investment
professionals at our monthly MoneyWeek Roundtable last
night.

Came the answers: The cheap. The solvent. The productive.
The periphery.

And nothing at all!

"We may be coming to the end of a global economic boom ... albeit it a strange one," began Pelham Smithers. "It is one accompanied by huge amounts of debt. Almost all European governments are running deficits at or beyond the
level allowed by the Maastricht treaty. And in America, no
one has ever seen so much debt."

And now interest rates are rising.

We know when this global growth phase will end: when
interest rate increases make the debt unmanageable. Or,
when the collateral that backs it up - residential housing, stocks, bonds - loses its value.

In the U.K., house prices have become an obsession. When
will the property boom end? Is it already too late to buy?

The Bank of England raised rates a couple of weeks ago - to 4.25%. The gross rental yield on residential property is about the same.

"After expenses, the average property investor is probably
already losing money," said James Ferguson. "He just hasn't realized it yet."

Real estate agents say they cannot find enough houses to
sell. But owners report that they can't find buyers.

"The crash might have already begun," continued Ferguson,
"and we won't know it for months."

In stock, bond, gold and currency markets, awareness comes
quicker. Yesterday, the Dow lost another 127 points,
putting it below 10,000. At this level, it has been a long
time since investors made any money.

Gold, too, went down... to $378, far below where we thought it had found its floor.

So, what do you buy?

"Nobody ever really made money in stocks or bonds when
interest rates were rising," said Ferguson.

What does that leave?

Oil!

The world is not running out of stocks, or bonds, or debt,
or hunches about what will happen in the markets. But oil
is in short supply. Experts believe oil production,
worldwide, is topping out now - just when the Asians were
starting to develop a taste for it.

"If this is a long, hot summer," Pelham observed, "stocks
of oil are almost certain to be drawn down... and prices
will go up."

Here's Eric with more news:

---------------------

Eric Fry, from the corner of Wall and Broad...

- Manhattan treated non-investors to an absolutely
delightful day yesterday... every flowering tree and shrub
in Central Park seemed to be blossoming, while swarms of
laptop-pecking yuppies and stroller-pushing nannies basked
in the springtime sunshine. For the minority of New Yorkers who wouldn't know a common stock from a common stick, May 10, 2004, was a day to savor.

- Unfortunately, Manhattan was not so kind to its stock-
buying citizenry yesterday. The city's downtown stock
exchanges buffeted investors from mid-morning until late
afternoon. The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled below
the psychically comforting 10,000-level for the first time
this year - losing 127 points to 9,990 - while the Nasdaq
Composite slumped 1.1% to 1,896. Bond prices also fell,
pushing the yield on 10-year Treasury notes up to a new 22-
month high of 4.79% from 4.77% on Friday.

- Gold did not escape unharmed from yesterday's selling
frenzy, but did manage to recover from its worst levels of
the day. The wobbly precious metal fell to $371.30 in the
morning, before recovering to $378.70 by the end of New
York trading - a loss of only 40 cents. For those keeping
score at home, the gold price has dropped 13% since
touching a 15-year high of $433.00 on April 11th.

- Yesterday's panic and pandemonium in the stock market did not seem to result from any one specific cause. Rather, the sell-off was caused by everything and nothing. The not-yet-successful Iraqi campaign seems to be unnerving investors as much as the way-too-successful reflation campaign waged by General Greenspan and his minions at the FOMC.

- Skyrocketing interest rates testify to Greenspan's
"success" - vanquishing deflation by cultivating inflation.

But over in the stock market, where share prices are now
deflating instead of inflating, investors aren't sure
whether to hoist Greenspan atop their shoulders or to tar
and feather him.

- Rising interest rates may be scaring the daylights out of stock market investors, but Mr. and Mrs. Consumer aren't flinching... the New York Times recently presented the stereotypical tale of Philo Thompson, a single 28-year old male, who, like many Americans, is "not afraid to stretch when it comes to buying a house."

- Thompson is a management consultant from Denver who
recently bought a $500,000 townhouse in the suburb of North Cherry Creek. When buying his new townhouse, did Thompson lock in a fixed-interest rate on a 30-year mortgage, as Grandpa Thompson might have done? Heck no! Thompson the Younger put no money down, while borrowing 100% of the purchase monies at short-term floating rates. "[Thompson] took out a first mortgage for 80 percent of the purchase price and paid the rest by taking a home equity loan against the new house," the Times reports. "To reduce monthly payments, and to qualify for a big enough loan, he took out an adjustable-rate mortgage that requires him to make only interest payments."

- Thompson's mortgage arrangement - called an "interest-
only ARM" in the parlance of the mortgage industry - is a
nifty loan, as long as rates stay low. But it is decidedly
less nifty when rates go up.

- "People like Thompson could get squeezed if interest
rates start to rise," the Times blandly observes. Truth be
told, people like Thompson could get crushed. Yet Thompson
betrays no fear. "I'm too young to be scared," he says,
betting that both the value of his house and his income
will keep rising. On the other hand, it is possible that
both the value of his house and his income will cease
rising. Indeed, it is possible - in theory - that they
might both FALL.

- But let's not lie awake at night worrying about Philo
Thompson. He has girded his psyche with an ironclad
philosophy of personal finance: "There is a difference
between being poor and being broke," he explains. "Being
broke is more of a temporary condition. Donald Trump has
been broke a couple of times."

- The frightening truth of the matter is that Thompson's
fearlessness is partly justified. As a homeowner who owns
none of his home, Thompson has no "skin in the game." In
the event of a default, he has little to lose, other than
his credit rating. The mortgage lenders - and the housing
market itself - have far more at risk than the Philo
Thompsons of the world.

- But the mortgage lenders have only themselves to blame
for the precarious predicament in which they find
themselves. The increasingly aggressive mortgage industry
has admitted an increasing number of marginal borrowers to
the homeowner ranks.

- "There are an incredible number of loans that get
approved now that would have been way out of bounds a few
years ago," Ruben Ybarra, president of the Chicagoland Home Mortgage tells the Times. "I may think a person is being allowed to borrow too much. But if the computer tells them they're approved, what can you tell them?"

- Evidently, "the computer" has a tough time saying "No."
The statistics tell the tale: household debt climbed at
twice the pace of household incomes from the beginning of
2000 through 2003. During that period, Americans took on a
staggering $2.3 trillion in new mortgages - an increase of
50% in just three years.

- Despite these troubling trends, Chairman Greenspan
insists that rising household debt poses little problem,
partly because Americans are richer - on paper - than they
were at the peak of the stock market in 2000. Thanks to the runaway housing market, the collective net worth of
American households is now higher than it was before the
stock market bubble burst four years ago.

- Unfortunately, asset values don't pay the bills; income
(or borrowed money) does. So if borrowing costs rise faster than incomes, bad things can happen. When incomes fall short, cash-strapped folks must try to borrow more money to stay afloat. But if the would-be borrower has no equity remaining in his home and if he has also maxed out his credit cards, where does he next turn for relief?
Bankruptcy court is a time-honored option.

---------------------

Bill Bonner, back in London...

*** "An honorable man," noted Charles de Gaulle, "pays his
debt with his own money."

But Americans don't have enough of their own money. How
will their debts get paid? At some point, someone is going
to get stiffed. We have presumed it would be the foreign
lenders. The dollar will fall, we've predicted, wiping out
trillions in debt. Gold will rise - as people seek refuge
from paper currencies.

We still believe it. But we worry; it is almost too
convenient. Americans borrow the world's savings. Will they really be able to walk away from all that debt so easily? Can you and I, like Warren Buffett, avoid the worst debt contraction in human history simply by buying gold and euros? Is that how the world OUGHT to work?

Rick Ackerman:

"[Warren] Buffett - and millions of other investors, most
particularly precious-metals bulls - could be very much
mistaken in assuming that a weak or even worthless dollar
cannot soar, at least for a while, for reasons wholly
unrelated to its fundamental value. As a floor trader, I
saw this happen time and again when the shares of a poorly
run or even criminally mismanaged company went ballistic.

"Many of them - after initially falling for fundamental
reasons that were widely recognized - soared 30% or 40% in
mere days. The cause, almost invariably, was unrelated to
the company's fortunes; rather, it was the result of
egregious, fleeting imbalances between supply and demand.
The demand came from shorts who, having bet the stock would fall, were stampeded into covering their positions when the stock started moving against them. As for supply, it dried up almost completely when shareholders realized they had the bears on the ropes.

"I have seen this occur on the trading floor too many times to ignore the possibility it could happen to the
dollar... Most of the world's hundreds of trillions of
dollars of debt is denominated in dollars, and this debt
represents, implicitly, a massive short position against
the dollar. As such, all borrowers of dollars should be
praying for inflation, since it would allow them to pay
back what they owe in cheapened money. They could also pray for the one other thing that might do the trick - a
dramatic rise in incomes over and above the rate of
inflation. Miracles do happen.

"But unless Murphy's Law is suspended for the next ten
years, we can be reasonably certain that borrowers are not
going to get off quite so easily, especially since all it
would take to crush them is a rise in lending rates. I'm
not talking about 15% mortgages, either, or even 10%. If
residential property values and incomes were to fall even
slightly, a five- or six-percent mortgage would, for most
homeowners, become a crushing burden.

"This is the very crux of the coming deflation as well as
the basis for a potentially sensational rise in the dollar
that almost no one expects. As a mechanism to cleanse the
economic system - to cleanse capitalism, if you will - the
scenario has the 'virtue' of outfoxing not only gold bugs
who trust that the dollar's inevitable decline will make
bullion far more precious, but also financial world-beaters like Warren Buffett, who perforce do not come naturally to the notion that cash may be the best asset to hold for the next several years.

"A strong dollar - one impelled by uncontrollable market
forces rather than by Fed whim - seems the most likely
catalyst for a deflationary collapse, albeit the one least
expected. What it implies is dollar rates rising to
extraordinary levels in real terms, with foreign money
pouring in to take advantage. If this should come to pass,
there will be a dearth of double-your-money bets, and even
financial wizards like Warren Buffett will be challenged to withstand the violent, tidal shifts in asset values. For gold bugs, such a volatile period would pose a particular dilemma, since bullion's eventual rise, though absolutely assured, would come only after the pain of deflation had caused the central bank to shovel money out the door.
Meanwhile, we should not pretend to be mystified if the
dollar's supposed bear rally steepens and bullion remains
leaden. A 'worthless' dollar may yet have the last laugh on all those who have rightfully disparaged it."

[Ed. Note: Christoph Amberger and our colleagues over at
the Taipan Group think gold is a sell, and have found an
excellent way to capitalize. The profit window won't be
open for very long. Follow the link:

agora-inc.com ]

*** The credit cycle, like life itself, begins in joy and
ends in sadness. Bankruptcy rates in America and Britain
are near records. Correspondent Byron King, in Pittsburgh,
takes us to the morgue:

"Preparing and filing a federal bankruptcy petition is a
lot like performing an autopsy on a deceased economic
entity. As I go over the lists of creditors, assets,
collections and income statements, it drives home the point of how much even a little bit of bad business practice can cost the economy. And one can blame a lot of the cost to the economy on liberal grants of credit to non-creditworthy borrowers.

"If some credit is good to have, which I certainly think is true, more credit is not necessarily better. Too much
credit can enable bad behavior and bad business practice
just like cheap booze enables the alcoholic. The creditor
can act as a co-dependant to a bad business risk. Too much
credit can fund projects (and lifestyles) that do not merit the support, and can take an untenable situation and make it far worse... " [Ed. Note: For Byron's full comments, see his article on the DR Website:

Economic Autopsy
dailyreckoning.com ]


The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: The Fed issued a 'deflation
scare' to harness Wall Street's awesome speculative
firepower. The E-Z credit gushed. But if you play with
fire, sooner or later, you'll get burned...

IMBALANCES AND DISLOCATIONS
By Kurt Richebächer

Attempting to assess the U.S. economy's further outlook,
one should first ponder the main causes that have been
thwarting a stronger and healthier recovery, even though
the Fed's monetary and fiscal policy has achieved
aggressiveness without precedent in history.

For most American economists, sufficiently easy money is of infallible efficacy. The few instances in history when
record-low interest rates persistently failed to work, like recently in Japan and during the 1930s in the United
States, are summarily discarded with the argument that
central banks failed to act fast enough.

During the whole postwar period, it has, in fact, been
typical that depressed economies promptly took off once
central banks eased. Yet for us, this was never proof of
the efficacy of monetary policy. Since all postwar
recessions had their cause in monetary tightening, it was
only natural that economies promptly jump-started when
central banks loosened their brakes.

But the situation today is radically different. For the
first time in the whole postwar period, the U.S. economy
slumped against the backdrop of rampant money and credit
growth. But if tight money or credit did not break the boom in 2000, it is hard to see how easy money can be the cure.

Identifying the true causes of the U.S. economy's poor
economic performance in recent years is certainly a most
important task. During 2003, leading Fed members propagated the idea that the U.S. economy was mainly suffering from an "unwelcome fall in inflation" - according to the title of a speech by Fed Governor Ben S. Bernanke, on July 23, 2003, at the University of California, San Diego. In more detail, Bernanke said that lack of pricing power was seriously impinging upon corporate profits, which in turn had strangled business capital investment.

Considering that the U.S. economy had been booming with the most rapid money and credit growth in history, this was an absurd conclusion. But several Fed members managed to exploit the temporary deflation scare they had raised, the better to implant expectations for sharply lower long-term interest rates into the markets - with the desired effect that the financial community, with its huge speculative firepower, quickly obliged with prodigious carry trade.

What, then, brought the U.S. economy down in 2000? In
short, several years of unprecedented credit excess. We
realize this is unthinkable for many people, yet it is a
notorious historic fact that serious depressions are always preceded by extremely loose money and extraordinary credit excess. Tight money is too easily reversible to cause a deeper crisis. Ironically, it was always low inflation rates that misled central banks to excessive credit accommodation.

The two worst cases of this kind in history are, of course, the U.S. boom-bust from 1927 to the 1930s and Japan's boom-bust since 1987. In both cases, extraordinary asset bubbles played a key role in escalating credit excess. The third, and probably worst, case of a "bubble economy" is the United States for the past several years.

Credit excess thwarts economic growth even in the absence
of monetary tightening, through effects ambiguously known
in Austrian theory under different labels: structural
maladjustments, distortions, and imbalances and dislocations.

The imbalances most often cited are a rock-bottom national
savings rate of 1% of GDP, record levels of personal indebtedness, a record current account deficit, a record-
high budget deficit, a record ratio of household indebtedness and an unprecedented shortfall of employment
growth and labor income generation.

But there are important other imbalances that are totally
ignored. One of them is the tremendous gap that has developed in the United States between virtually stagnating production of goods and soaring demand, as measured in retail sales. While the latter have been going from record to record, manufacturing production, which should deliver most of the goods sold in the shops, has been badly lagging. The soaring difference went, of course, into the soaring trade deficit.

For more than two years, the Fed has been holding its
short-term rate at 1%. That is, below inflation. But
instead of spurring economic growth directly, it stimulated sharply rising prices in almost all major asset classes, which in turn stimulated spending, mainly consumer spending. Rising property values and the increasing ability and willingness of homeowners to tap accumulated housing wealth became the major pillars of support both for the economy and also - given minimal personal savings - for the asset markets.

The all-important question now, of course, is whether this
ultra-loose monetary policy and the associated development
of asset prices have laid the foundation for a normal,
self-sustaining economic recovery.

Good luck, Dr. Greenspan.

Regards,

Kurt Richebächer
for The Daily Reckoning

Editor's note: Former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker once said:
"Sometimes I think that the job of central bankers is to
prove Kurt Richebächer wrong." A regular contributor to The Wall Street Journal, Strategic Investment and several other respected financial publications, Dr. Richebächer's
insightful analysis stems from the Austrian School of
economics. France's Le Figaro magazine has done a feature
story on him as "the man who predicted the Asian crisis."

Dr. Richebächer is currently warning readers to beware the
wiles of Alan Greenspan - for unchecked, they can sabotage
your investments. To learn how to avoid them, read the good doctor's latest report:

Don't Get Caught in the Greenspan Trap!
agora-inc.com