The Battle on Wall Street |
By Bill Bonner |
Published
01/23/2008
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Currency , Futures , Options , Stocks
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Unrated
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The Battle on Wall Street
The big guns came out on Monday. Mr. Market shot down almost every stock in the entire world.
He would have caused U.S. stocks to crash and burn too, but it was a holiday behind the American lines. U.S. shares never raised their heads.
And then, at dawn on Tuesday, the other side opened up with its big guns. The Fed made a “once in a generation” rate cut – taking two key rates down 75 basis points each. Now, it’s official. Favored borrowers can get money for substantially less than the rate of consumer price inflation.
After this volley, it was still early morning in the Eastern Standard Time zone. We sat on the edge of our chair waiting to see how Mr. Market would react. Would the rate cuts be enough to stop him? Or would he still do to U.S. stocks what he had already done to those in Japan, India and France – that is to say, roughly what Sherman did to Atlanta?
In the event, the fireworks from the Fed slowed Mr. Market’s advance, but did not stop it completely. The Dow retreated down as much as 400 points, staged a counterattack, and ended up with a 128-point loss.
Which was enough for most commentators to pronounce the Fed’s counteroffensive as a success. We’d call it a draw.
The bigger news is that the forces of deflation – led by Mr. Market – are on the move. They’ve wiped out $5 trillion of value from equity markets all over the world in just the last three weeks.
This is the “biggest finance crisis since WWII,” says George Soros.
“Wall Street is in deep trouble,” says TheStreet.com.
The trouble now comes in waves – like a Soviet army assault. There are the ARMs, then the SIVs, then the SWAPS, then the credit cards, then the home equity loans, then corporate debt. One problem after another and one loss after another.
Each assault takes its toll on the defenders. Fannie and Freddie – two of the largest mortgage lenders in the nation – could see losses of $16 billion, says Credit Suisse. Wachovia has seen its earnings “vaporize,” says TheStreet.com. Bank of America’s net has been cut by 95%.
Mortgage defaults in California are running 114% ahead of last year. They’re at a 15-year high.
And dispatches from the front lines suggest that pockets of real estate holdouts are being overwhelmed and wiped out. The national figures show declines of only about 10% so far. But in some areas, the damage is said to be catastrophic. Houses go up for auction and no one bids. Banks are taking back thousands of them. And when a house sells, it goes for only half of what it costs to build .
Against these crushing attacks the authorities seem to be both out-gunned and out-maneuvered. Mr. Bush’s rebate package is only $145 billion. U.S. stocks lost more than twice that much in the first few seconds of trading yesterday. And the whole idea of providing more cash and credit is the wrong strategy anyway. These efforts at Keynesian stimulus were designed to overcome a different kind of enemy, a case where consumer demand was low or where consumers saved too much money. Keynes worried that people had a “propensity to save,” which needed to be corrected by reducing the returns to savers. But the real rate on savings now is less than zero. And the savings rate is down to minus 0.5% of disposable income.
No, dear reader, the problem is not that consumers spend too little, but that they spend too much they don’t have. Nor is the problem that consumers save too much, but that they don’t save enough. And while the feds might slow down Mr. Market’s deflationary campaign with more cash and credit, they will not be able to stop it.
In the meantime, the battle rages on.
*** What happened to gold, oil and commodities yesterday?
If our theory is right, when Mr. Market was knocking the stuffing out of stocks, gold and oil would get beaten down too, but not as much. What happened was that gold fell $25 and then bounced back. At the end of the day, it was ahead $8.60 cents, closing at $890. Oil held at $89.
So far, so good.
*** But what will be the effect of the feds’ attempt to stop a recession and reverse the bear market?
We expect the bear market on Wall Street to continue, almost no matter what. But the recession is another matter. Surely consumers could be encouraged to spend more? And surely, enough consumer spending would stop a recession. Currently, the U.S. Congress is considering the alternatives. At the top of the list – at least among Democrats – is the curious idea of giving tax “rebates” to people who never paid taxes in the first place. The nation already has plenty of circuses, say the deep thinkers in the imperial capitol; what is needed is more bread. And the people most likely to consume their bread are those who have the least of it. Barely half the people in the United States pay any taxes anyway, so it is not hard to find non-taxpayers. And it’s not hard to encourage them to consume. Most live hand to mouth; just put something in their hands. And if you put enough bread in their hands, would not a recession be averted?
That’s what most people think.
But where does the manna come from? Ah, there’s the rub, isn’t it? Yes, a recession could theoretically be sidestepped. But it would be like dodging a bicycle and stepping in front of a bus.
Colleague Dan Amoss sent these words of advice yesterday:
“Emotion – not rational decision-making – is driving the selling this morning, so don’t panic with the crowd and sell quality stocks when they are cheap. This is not 1987. Thirty-year Treasury bond yields are not spiking toward 9%, as they were in the months leading up to the 1987 crash. Instead, they have been plummeting toward 4%:
“The Fed’s emergency 75 basis point cut sparked a late morning recovery, but it’s more of a psychological move than anything. Investment banks must still take losses on toxic mortgage-related securities that they had assumed were covered by bond insurers MBIA and Ambac. It remains to be seen whether these companies will be able to pay claims as they arise.
“But those banks with access to the discount window now have access to Fed credit that’s nearly a percentage point cheaper this morning and will get even cheaper in the coming weeks. The yield curve is still flat after this rate cut, but it will eventually become positive. Inflation is coming down the pike, but right now, the market is fearful of unknown financial sector write-offs.
*** And Byron King sends us this:
“‘I’m just a broken down old disc jockey,’ said Jim Quinn this morning on his Pittsburgh-based radio talk show. ‘I've been spinning records and running my mouth on the radio for 45 years, so what the hell do I know?’ he asked.
“‘But even I can tell you that cutting interest rates is the exact last thing that the U.S. economy needs right now.’
“Quinn was reporting the news that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke had just announced a cut in interest rates of 75 basis points. ‘Most of the problems of the U.S. economy have been caused by too much easy credit,’ said disc-jockey Quinn. ‘And the solution to the problem is not to pump out even more easy credit. The Fed ought to just let whatever is going to happen, happen. Let things run their course and clean the rot out of the whole system. If people are going to get foreclosed and lose their houses, then that kind of stuff happens. It is what happens when you take on too much debt, and bet the wrong way in life. But no, the Fed and the Washington politicians are just going to drag this whole thing out. Instead of a sharp correction over a period of months, they will drag this thing out so that it lasts for years.’
“Not bad analysis for a broken down old disc jockey,” says Byron.
*** On the home front, everyone is hard at school. Elizabeth is at the Sorbonne, taking exams for the equivalent of a master’s degree in history. Sophia is studying nutrition here in London. Henry is studying hard to pass his exams for his final year of the French equivalent of high school. And Edward is studying off and on, too, in order to move on to the 10th grade next year.
But here at The Daily Reckoning headquarters we are doubters. We do not share the public’s great appreciation of formal schooling – at least, not in the usual sense. It is true that certain subjects lend themselves to formal, disciplined study. Building a bridge involves knowable formulae, measurable quantities, forces and distances, proven components, reliable circumstances and precise numbers. You can learn to build bridges by studying these things in a structured way.
Most of life, on the other hand, does not fit to an engineer’s discipline. And trying to learn about it in an artificially bounded and organized way could lead to misconceptions and false precision. Economics, sociology, psychology, literature, poetry, film, politics, finance, and business...in fact, most of what people study are better learned as they are lived, in our opinion. The ground shifts, perceptions are twisted, rules are broken and people always come to believe what they want to believe when they want to believe it. No use in dressing them up as though they had the stiff discipline of a marine lieutenant. They are all unruly misfits, disorganized personalities and social deviants. Better to observe them up close in the hurly burly of real life. You’ll have a much more realistic picture of what they are really like.
Bill Bonner is the President of Agora Publishing. For more on Bill Bonner, visit The Daily Reckoning.
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