
RECESSION POSTPONED
The Fed, the Treasury, the European Central Bank and the British National Bank
are all pumping in hundreds of billions of new money to bail out the banks not
the economy. But the economy will certainly get “stimulated” by all the new
money.
Since the $300,000 is still in circulation (and you can multiply this by
millions of other home loan examples) and the Central banks are adding even more
money and credit to the economy, what is going to be the outcome of all this? It
is going to be incredibly inflationary. It is also going to assure that the
economy will avoid a recession because there is now so much money sloshing
around the system that it will get spent or saved or used by someone else and
therefore a recession will be postponed. The way a recession could happen is
that if the economy actually has finally petered out and all the mal-investment
of the last cycle (real estate being first on the list) is now creating
dislocations that cannot be handled. But with all the new money being pumped
into the system and with continuing low interest rates this recession has surely
been postponed.
The dollar will continue to go down as the Fed has decided to save the banks and
flood the country with as much money as is needed to handle their crisis (the
banks).
Gold is going up because this “crisis” handling means inflation is going to
come back, possibly at the highest levels we have ever seen in modern times.
A SLOW ECONOMY
The home building melt down is very real. Many homes were bought by unqualified
borrowers and speculators who are now in trouble. With home building crashing
(this is a key sector of the economy) how will this effect the U.S. economy? It,
so far, has just slowed the economy down but because there is now so much more
money in circulation some other areas of the economy appear to be taking up some
of the slack.
My guess is that instead of a 4% growth economy like we had because of the
“housing boom”, we may have a 1.5% growth economy. With the dollar so low
tourism will increase and foreigners will come in and buy our goods and
services. Our real estate prices are not only going down but to someone with
Euros our real estate is now at bargain prices. European yacht manufactures
cannot now compete with U.S. boat builders and at the recent Fort Lauderdale
Yacht Show (the largest in the world) U.S. yachts and boats were bargains if one
owned Euros. Boeing Jets are also tempting to European airlines with Euros
selling for a 30% discount (in Euros) from just a few years ago.
MONEY AND INVESTMENTS
If there is a credit crisis, why is MZM money supply up almost $1 trillion in
the last year? Why are Aaa Corporates only at 5.3%? Why was Industrial
Production up 1.5% year over year in December? Employment up 1%. These are not
recession or crisis numbers. The Crisis is a smokescreen used to rationalize
rescuing an investment management crisis for the banks. The big institutions are
being bailed out and the guy in the street is going to pay for it.
In 1987 the U.S. stock market had its worse year since 1929 and 1974. Trillions
of dollars of wealth was destroyed in stock and bond values in 1987. But we
never had a recession. This was because the losses were investment losses. Money
in circulation actually went up. Money, credit, and investments are three
related but distinct animals.
In the present environment the banks investment portfolios are losing hundreds
of billions and maybe as much as a trillion dollars eventually but the amount of
money in circulation is increasing not decreasing. Therefore the so called
“economy” will move on and the inflationary impact of all this new money on
top of all the old money that has been shoved into the system will make
inflation take off.
When Wall Street comes to it’s senses and realizes that the economy is now
being flooded with money and none of the old money has disappeared and the Fed
is indeed going to keep interest rates as low as possible, the U.S. stock market
should not crash. The banking system will not collapse. Unfortunately what will
happen is an explosion of inflation and that will be a crisis. Every lower and
middle income earner in this country will pay for this bail out because their
paychecks will now buy less and less in the future. Their standard of living
will decrease. As usual the insidious paper money system will rob the poor and
the lower and middle income earners (via inflation) and redistribute that wealth
to the rich (the banks and the Wall Street firms that are being bailed out).
There is no free lunch. But whenever one shows up, know that someone is paying.
The authorities have no choice but to inflate or have some major institutions go
down. Eventually this will be an inflationary disaster. Gold will most likely go
to $1500 within a few years. If one takes $850 gold and allows for only a 7%
increase a year for 5 years – the price is $1200.
BOTTOM LINE
The stock market already was overvalued and a 10-20% correction is expected.
With all the money floating around some sectors will probably do OK. I do not
like the stock market but do not feel a crash is coming. That happens when
interest rates are high not low and when inflation returns forcing interest
rates much higher. At that time the Fed won’t be able to stop it. Then the
market will crash.
A recession is most likely postponed because of all the money injected recently.
How long is difficult to predict and we will have to see how the economic
statistics unfold in the coming months to evaluate.
Gold and silver are obviously the safest and best investments in a world that
has the authorities with only one option. Print money. They have to bail out the
banks and Wall Street and they have to pay for trillions of promises to their
citizens that they cannot keep. This is global not just in the U.S.
The money supply increases in India, China, Brazil and England are now almost
beyond belief averaging 19% a year. These four countries are in the top 12 GDP
countries in the world, contribute almost 30% of the world’s goods and
services and employ 47% of the world’s work force. The future of gold and
silver as an inflation hedge is definitely going global.