Showing posts with label money printing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label money printing. Show all posts

Friday, September 21, 2012

The Technical Picture for Gold and Silver


 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The world is awash in central bank money printing, with Japan this week joining the US and the EU central banks in announcing new stimulus efforts. As long as these programs continue, investors should be bullish on gold, silver and their miners and look to accumulate on any pullback (the same can be said for other inflation-related assets as well).

While there are a number of options for buying gold, silver, and their mining stocks it is best to analyze them using the GLD for gold, SLV for silver, and GDX and GDXJ for miners. All are ETFs with GDX representing a portfolio of senior miners and GDXJ junior miners (companies doing exploration and those in pre-production). More aggressive investors can buy leveraged products such as DGL and UGLD for gold, AGQ and USLV for silver and NUGT for miners.

Technically speaking, the charts for gold, silver and the miners are strong and getting stronger. The 50-day SMA (simple moving average) of GLD crossed the 200-day SMA on Thursday. This is considered a major buy signal among technicians and ironically it's known as the golden cross.  SLV hasn't made this cross yet, but it is a mathematical certainty that it will do so. This will most likely happen by the end of next week. The miners GDX and GDXJ are somewhat behind SLV and it looks like the cross might not take place until the beginning of October. As long as the 50-day moves above the 200-day and stays above it, the bull move is confirmed.

The DMI technical indicators however already gave buy signals for GLD, SLV, GDX and GDXJ in late August. The positioning of the indicator was bullish and the trend line moved up sharply. The RSI and MACD were also properly situated to support a bullish interpretation for all the daily charts. In the last few days, the trend line has gotten too high and has moved sideways or slightly down for GLD and SLV. It is still moving up for GDX and GDXJ.

While the DMI is indicating some pullback should be coming soon, the RSI offers even more support for this view. The RSI on SLV became overbought in late August and really overbought in early September. It reached the overbought point for GLD twice in September and recently for GDX. It is high, but not overbought for GDXJ. This pattern is bullish in the intermediate term and indicates a multi-month rally is likely, but it is bearish in the short-term. Too much buying has taken place too quickly and some pressure needs to be taken off. A drop down to the 50-day SMA would be healthy at this point.

There is also a very distinctive chart pattern for GLD and SLV that should be noted by investors. So far, GLD has made a textbook perfect cup and SLV has almost as good a match (GDX and GDXJ need to build the right side of the cup more). Ordinarily, this would be followed by a handle and then a breakout from the handle and the ensuing rally should last for some time (seasonally gold tends to peak around March). A drop of say 3%-7% soon would complete the textbook pattern. 

Investors have every reason to be bullish on the monetary metals and their miners. Both the fundamental backdrop (money printing from here to eternity) and the technical picture look good. This doesn't mean that they will be going straight up without occasional drops. Just use the drops to increase your positions. Of course, like all rallies, this one too will eventually come to an end. Until then, I will be tweeting daily updates with the charts attached from my twitter account which is @nyinvesting.


Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Why You Must Invest for Inflation From Now On

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.


The Fed made history today by announcing an open-ended money printing policy — a policy heretofore unseen outside of history's hyperinflation havens. The news conference that followed the announcement revealed a central bank acting out of extreme desperation.

While the Fed is doing another round of quantitative easing, QE3 is not the same as QE2. The previous QE involved the purchase of U.S. Treasuries. This time around, the Fed is buying MBSs (mortgage-backed securities). In QE1, various types of securities were bought. The previous QEs also had specific limits to the amount of money that was going to be printed whereas QE3 doesn't. QE3 is supposed to be ongoing until somewhat after the economy and employment situation have been improving for a while. How long that will be is anybody's guess.

Despite several questions in the press conference that followed the announcement, Bernanke made only vague statements about how the Fed would determine when enough money printing was enough. The purchase of mortgage-backed securities is likely to continue for some time because doing so is supposed to reduce unemployment. How that will work is not clear other than perhaps reducing unemployment in the construction industry. The Fed's actions should lower already historically low mortgage rates and Bernanke specifically stated more than once that getting the price of homes up was one of his major goals (he seems to have forgotten that the global financial collapse in 2008 was the result of the collapse of the housing bubble).

Anticipating the obvious objections, Bernanke tried to head off the major criticisms of the Fed's new plan at the beginning of his news conference. While he admitted that the Fed's action hurt savers and would make it difficult to prepare for retirement, he said that if you don't  have a job you wouldn't have any money to save anyway. So, apparently the large majority of people who have a job should risk having their retirement unfunded in order to pursue Bernanke's high risk policies that have been tried for the last five years, but haven't worked. I wouldn't have been surprised if a couple of retired people were brought up to the podium and Bernanke kicked them a few times to emphasize his point.

Bernanke also denied that the new round of money printing will cause inflation. The basis of his argument was that the members of the FOMC aren't prediction inflation in their projections, so obviously it's not going to happen (these are the same people that failed to foresee the subprime crisis coming). Also Bernanke claimed inflation has been around 2% for years, so there is no problem. Even a casual perusal of commodity prices since 2009 shows increases of 100%, 150%, 200% and sometimes more however. It is true the government isn't reporting inflation, but that isn't the same as it doesn't exist. The head of the Weimar German central bank also claimed inflation wasn't a problem as he printed more and more money. Eventually, inflation reached 300 million percent.

One of the real eye-openers of the Bernanke news conference was his admitting the impotency of the Fed and monetary policy. Over and over again Bernanke stated that the Fed's actions were, "not a panacea". He said that, "We [the Fed] can't solve the problems by ourselves". He also emphasized that the Fed's, "tools are not so powerful that they can solve the problem". If the chances of success are so limited, why is the Fed taking a course of action that could have serious negative consequences for the American people?

In addition to his desire to reinflate the housing bubble, Bernanke was also proud that when the Fed speaks, economic forecasters change their numbers and that, "markets respond to [the Fed's] guidance".  This was a blatant admission that the Fed purposely manipulates the stock and bond markets and financial news. Obviously, this destruction of free market mechanisms is not something that he considers shameful, even though this represents a major power grab on the part of the Fed.

Bernanke was much more coy however when the question of whether or not the Fed's money printing decision was base on political considerations. One reporter mentioned that Romney was not planning on reappointing Bernanke and asked if the policy shift was an attempt to help reelect President Obama. Bernanke denied this of course, his voice almost breaking when he stammered out, "our decisions are based entirely on the state of the economy." I must admit that I am personally surprised that the Fed did this before the election because this question is only going to be the beginning and the Fed has now made itself an ongoing issue in the presidential campaign. I didn't think Bernanke was so foolish to take this risk, but obviously I overestimated his political awareness.

Earlier this month, ECB head Mario Draghi promised unlimited bond buying. This is different from what the Fed is doing because those purchases are supposed to be sterilized (new liquidity put in is neutralized by liquidity being removed). Many people however believe that the ECB will have to engage in money printing despite its claims. Added to the Fed, this means inflation investments will have a bid under them for some time to come.  Investors should be looking at gold and silver, energy and agriculture. Ironically, shorting Treasury bonds also look like a good bet now as well, since the Fed is not buying them as part of its QE program (Operation Twist though will be going on to the end of 2012 however and this acts to lower interest rates around the 7 to 10-year maturity level so be careful). Keep buying as long as the Fed keeps printing.


Disclosure: None


Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, August 17, 2012

If an EU Leader Says It, Don't Believe It





The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

German leader Angela Merkel revved up the markets on Thursday by saying once again that she and the other EU leaders would do everything possible to save the euro. If traders realized how reliable previous official statements concerning the Eurozone debt crisis have been, markets would have experienced a major selloff.

When the debt crisis first appeared in Greece, Merkel said there would be no bailout and the Greeks would have to solve their own financial problems. ECB President Trichet made it clear that Greece wouldn't receive any special treatment. It wasn't long before they both backtracked on their public statements. On April 11, 2010, a €30 billion bailout was agreed to and this was raised to €45 billion on April 16th. By May 2nd, a total package of  €110 billion had been arranged. This amount was meant to fix Greece's debt problems once and for all. The Washington Post reported that IMF director, Dominique Strauss Kahn, and EU Commissioner Olli Rehn stated, "the plan would lead to a more dynamic  economy that will deliver the growth, jobs, and prosperity that Greece needs in the future". If there were a worst-forecasting-prediction-of-all-time award, both Strauss-Kahn and Rehn could be potential winners.

Not only did the Greek economy not prosper, but it went into a tailspin. Other claims made by the EU proved to be equally absurd as well.  As reported by BBC News, the Greek debt to GDP ratio was supposed to rise from 115% at the time of the bailout to 149% in 2013, when it would then fall. Instead it rose to 165% in 2011. Greece's budget deficit was expected to be down to 3% of GDP (the EU target rate that all members states are obligated to meet). If Greece is lucky, it's deficit will only be 7.3% of GDP this year. It is expected to rise again in 2013 however to 8.4%. So much for that.

Even though Greece missed the EU and IMF's projected targets by a mile, this was only possible because a much bigger bailout took place in 2012. Greece received an additional €130 billion  and got to effectively write off almost 75% of its government debt held by private bondholders (the ECB and IMF were exempt from the write down). Certainly Greece must be better off after €240 billion in bailouts and writing off a big part of its debt, isn't it? Well, no it isn't. Before the first bailout in 2010, Greece had around €300 billion in government debt. Just released figures indicate in now has €303 billion in debt. While debt is no lower, GDP has collapsed, falling over 9% in 2011 alone and currently on target for an over 6% drop this year. Unemployment has skyrocketed with the someone under 25 being more likely not to have a job than to be working. By almost any criteria you wish to chose, the EU, IMF and ECB program has been a complete failure.

Now the EU and its partners are preparing to bailout Spain. Already a €100 billion loan has been committed for Spanish banks. This doesn't include any funds to bailout the government. How bad is the situation in Spain?  Well, Reuters has reported that one of Spain's regional mayor robbed a number of supermarkets last week and distributed the stolen food to the poor. As a member of  a regional parliament, he is immune from prosecution. Government stealing from those that have is of course nothing new, but apparently in Spain there's no attempt to hide it.

It looks like Spain will be asking for a full-fledged bailout soon. The EU will then directly take over its finances.  The total bailout could easily involve a trillion euros or more, unless some EU country stops it after realizing the damage this is going to cause the EU itself, let alone Spain. The long-term implications are likely to be quite ugly for both.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, August 10, 2012

How Much Stimulus Will Be Done by China, the EU and UK?





The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Much weaker than expected trade data out of China on Friday indicates more economic stimulus will be forthcoming there soon.  Even bigger stimulus is expected from the ECB as it revs up the printing presses to bail out Spain and Italy (unless Germany stops it of course). According to a recent released report, the recessionary economy in the UK may need massive doses of quantitative easing to recover.

Exports in China rose by only 1% year over year in July and this was well below forecasts of an increase of 8.6%. Imports were up 4.7%. For a country that has an export-based economy like China does, this is a serious problem. Like the U.S., Europe and Japan, China engaged in a massive amount of stimulus during the Credit Crisis in 2008/2009, spending $586 billion or 14 percent of its GDP in addition to cutting interest rates and lowering banking reserves.  This led to a big expansion of local government debt, a major housing bubble that has yet to burst and consumer inflation. Apparently, there are unfortunate side effects when governments apply a lot of economic stimulus (notice you rarely read about them in the mainstream media).
This time around, China has already cut interest rates twice and reserve requirement ratios for banks three times since November. Its economy has slowed for the last six quarters and probably by much more than official figures indicate (China's economic numbers should be taken with a grain of salt).
China is still in spectacular shape though compared to Japan, which had a massive trade deficit in the first half of 2012. Japan has been economically troubled for 22 years and despite zero percent interest rates and an unending number of stimulus measures its economy remains in the doldrums. While all the stimulus hasn't solved Japan's economic problems, it has led to a debt to GDP ratio of over 200% (worse than Greece's).
One reason China's exports are doing so poorly is the weakening economy in Europe. On Thursday, the ECB cut its growth forecasts and is now predicting the eurozone economy will contract by 0.3% in 2012.  They are still hopeful of slight growth in 2013 however. Maybe they think it will come from all the money they plan on printing to bail out Spain and Italy. The Eurozone is basically tapped out from all the bailouts it has already done in Greece, Portugal, and Ireland (Cyprus and banks in Spain are now on the list as well). Greece needs a third bailout and is struggling to make it through the month until it receives its next welfare payment in September. The situation there is potentially explosive. The IMF has stated Ireland will need another bailout by next spring.
When ECB President Draghi said on July 9th that the central bank will take any measures within its mandate to save the euro, the inevitable conclusion was that he was willing to engage in massive money printing. The amount of money needed for the huge bailouts that Spain and Italy would require simply doesn't exist so it has to be created out of thin air. The Draghi proposal is for the ECB to buy bonds, but the ECB has already tried buying bonds under the SMP program.  The moment the buying stopped, interest rates shot right back up. This approach is costly and only effective in the very short term — a typical government program. It won't prevent the Eurozone's failure, it will merely delay it and make it worse when it happens.
The UK is not part of the Eurozone, but its economy is also contracting. Citigroup economists have stated that the UK will need to print an additional £500 billion and lower interest rates to 0.25% to prevent continued stagnation. Apparently, they don't think there are serious risks if this approach is taken. Neither did the Weimar Germans in the early 1920s, the Zimbabweans in the 2000s, the Chinese in the 1940s, the Brazilians for most of the 20th century, the Yugoslavians in the 1990s or the Hungarians in 1946. In fact, countries that create hyperinflation always claim the risks of money printing are minimal before it takes place. And there are usually a large number of top economists that support this view.  

There are serious structural problems in the major economies today. The usual Keynesian quick fixes that have been applied since World War II no longer seem to work, nor will they. These have led to a world drowning in debt and all debtors eventually reach their borrowing limit. When this happens with countries, they then try to print their way to prosperity. History makes it quite clear that this doesn't work either. 

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, July 20, 2012

The EU May Have Reached Its Bailout Limit




The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Today, yields on Spanish 10-year sovereigns tested their yearly high yield of 7.28%, while Italian rates reached 6.16%. This was after funds for the Spanish bank bailout were approved by the EU, although the money won't be going directly to the banks. Earlier in the week, the IMF admitted that  the only solution to Europe's debt woes was to run the printing presses at full speed.

The situation in Spain is ugly and getting worse. Unemployment is almost 25% there and the country is in a recession. The Spanish economy is dependent on public spending and building empty houses that no one buys. The government has recently announced severe spending cuts and higher taxes, both of which will lower future growth. Yet, until today Spain was forecasting GDP growth of 0.2% for next year. It now thinks that GDP will decline by 0.5% in 2013. This is not just an optimistic scenario; it's a Harry Potter fantasy scenario. As is the case with Greece, Spanish economic and financial numbers cannot be trusted. Greece in the early stages of its bailout also produced optimistic projections of how easily and quickly everything would be fixed. Instead, its financial problems escalated out of control.  The same outcome should be expected in Spain.

Bailed-out Bankia is a good example of the how reliable the books are for Spanish banks. Bankia claimed to have earned a 300 million in profits in 2011, but in late May revised that to a €3 billion loss. Now Spain is in line for a €100 billion bailout from the EU, although it has claimed that it needs less. Based on how Bankia did its accounting, Spanish banks are likely to need more, maybe ten times more than that amount. This does not include money for bailing out the bankrupt Spanish government.  

Originally, the EU planned on providing the bank bailout money (structured as a long-term loan) directly  to Spain, who would in turn distribute it internally. When this caused Spain's sovereign debt rating to be downgraded, creating greater fiscal problems for the struggling government, the EU then decided to route the loan directly to the banks. Yesterday, the German parliament refused to go along. They were only willing to approve a loan directly to the Spain itself. It wasn't easy to get even that passed. Twenty-two members of Angela Merkel's coalition voted against it. The leader of the Free-Democrats described the bailout as "a bottomless pit". It doesn't look like German legislators have an appetite for any further bailouts and this is bad news for Spain and Italy as well.  

The IMF has an idea of what to do instead, but its solution could hardly be described as constructive. In a report issued on Wednesday, the organization essentially advised the EU to engage in every type of money printing possible, do a lot of it, and to start doing it immediately. The ECB has already expanded its balance sheet by more than the U.S. has and it hasn't solved the EU's problems so far. Massive money printing as suggested by the IMF would debase the euro significantly. So, in order to save the currency union, the currency it issues must be destroyed. Somehow, there seems to be a logic flaw in this line of reasoning (sort of like, a debt crisis can be solved by incurring more debt).

The bailout news today was disastrous for Spain and Italy. The Spanish IBEX index was down 5.79% dislocations  — a mini-crash and the worst drop in the two years. The Italian market was down 4.4%. The euro hit a new yearly low. The ETF FXE traded down to 120.78. This is below its bottom during the Credit Crisis, but still above the 2010 low made when the debt crisis first appeared. As the situation continues to unravel, more selling should be expected.


Disclosure: None
Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, June 29, 2012

EU Summit Implies Massive Money Printing on the Way

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Perhaps the EU is finally realizing that a debt crisis can't be solved by issuing more debt. The proposals emanating from their recent summit in Brussels will require massive money printing instead, especially if the EU doesn't wind up issuing eurobonds.

While EU leaders didn't state that they were going to start running the printing presses at full speed, it is the only way they can produce sufficient funds to actually implement their new policy initiatives. They may not be willing to do so however. Until there is an actual big increase in money printing, there is no reason to believe that the EU will implement any of the proposed fixes for its financial problems.

All the ideas that came out of the summit have been bandied about before. Some, such as direct recapitalization of banks (described as a "breakthrough"), had already been announced before (perhaps it should have been called a re-breakthrough). This was done in response to the EU's disastrous bailout of Spanish banks that went through the Spanish government causing significant downgrades to its credit rating and thereby raising its borrowing cost significantly. A joint banking supervisory board is now going to be added though. This seems sort of late in the game, considering the teetering insolvency of many EU banks.

As a summit attendee stated, lending money directly to banks means the loans won't have to be put on a government's books. He should have followed up with, "at least not immediately". The way Ireland got into serious trouble and required its first EU bailout was that its banking system failed and the debt had to be assumed by the government. The IMF now says it will need another major bailout soon. As long as the EU is willing to commit unlimited bank bailout funding this will not happen in other EU countries.

One new approach that did come out of the summit was a relaxation of conditions for receiving bailouts. This was not described as applying to all bailouts however. Only countries that are "well-behaving" will not have stringent conditions applied to them when they ask for a handout. This of course begs the question of why a "well-behaving" country would need a bailout in the first place. While this is an attempt to treat Spain and Italy better than Greece, Portugal and Ireland, it will not work in practice. All the previous bailout countries will demand that they be allowed to spend more money and run bigger budget deficits. Since they can't raise funds in the bond market, the EU will have to increase the amount of their bailouts. This will require a continual stream of additional payments from the EU. Where will the money come from?

The short answer is sharing debt through jointly issued Eurobonds. Not that this can happen in the near future. First a report on its feasibility will be issued in October. Then all the EU countries will have to agree to it. Whether Germany will be willing to do so remains to be seen (Angela Merkel supposedly said that this would take place over her dead body). Even if this eventually happens, and 2013 would be the earliest that it would, can bonds that mix subprime borrowers and prime borrowers be successful?  The history of this is not encouraging. This is what created the housing bubble and led to a massive financial system collapse in 2008. The issuing of eurobonds means the entire EU could default as a single entity as opposed to just the weaker members. That doesn't exactly sound like an improvement over the current state of affairs.

One interesting note from the summit was the declaration from Italian premier Mario Monti that Italy did not intend to apply for a bailout. Greek and Spanish leaders said the same thing just before their countries applied for a bailout. As the French say, "the more things change, the more they remain the same". Perhaps the EU should adopt this as their new motto. At least it sounds better than "bailouts are us".

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Europe Wrap Up Going Into the Greek Elections

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

As Greeks go to the polls in a pivotal election, trouble is escalating all over the EU.
Spain is rapidly becoming the new trouble spot, with Italy not far behind. Ireland's debt problems have resurfaced and tiny Cyprus needs a bailout. Markets are confident though that the same people who have failed to solve the problem so far with their various money-printing schemes will now be successful solving it with new spinning straw into gold approaches.

Interest rates in Spain and Italy continue to climb and in the case of Spain remain at destabilizing levels. The 10-year bond has gone over 7% in Spain and 6% in Italy. When rates stay above 6%, it creates the danger of a downward financial spiral because of the heavy debt burden of the countries involved. Things would be no different in the United States.

Spain has suffered a number of credit downgrades recently. This week, Egan-Jones downgraded Spain's sovereign debt to CCC+,  a rating lower than Uganda's. Moody's cut Spain to Baa3, one notch above junk. Fitch had previously cut its rating for Spain to two notches above investment grade. Moody's further warned that it could cut Spain's rating to junk within three months. The downgrades are a direct result of the ECB bank rescue plan. Technically, this is structured as a loan to the Spanish government, so it increased the country's indebtedness significantly. A lower credit rating of course means higher borrowing costs. So the EU's plan to rescue Spain's banking system has wound up damaging the ability of the Spanish government to fund itself. Genius, pure genius.

A recently released IMF report was fairly hopeful about Spain's prospects however. It cited Ireland as a bigger worry. The IMF is urging the EU to help Ireland refinance its bank debt and consider taking equity stakes in Irish banks. Otherwise, it thinks Ireland will need a second bailout. While the average person might consider option one to be a bailout as well, the IMF obviously has a very narrow operational view of the word bailout.

The Spanish bank bailout itself has become an issue in the Greek elections. The leader of Syriza has pointed out that it came with no harsh conditions, but Greece is suffering terribly because of the austerity imposed on it. If Syriza wins on Sunday, it should thank the EU leadership for handing it the election. What is actually going on in the voters' minds is hard to discern. Polls cannot be published in Greece within two weeks of an election. There have been independent polls leaked to the press outside the country that show either anti-bailout Syriza or pro-bailout New Democracy ahead. There seems to be a steady stream of propaganda as well indicating how much the Greek people love the euro.

The G20 meets on Monday in Mexico and one of the major items on the agenda will be how much additional money should be printed now. The markets rallied strongly much of the week on just such "hopes". Not that this has stopped the crisis from continually getting worse so far and there is no reason to believe that it will. Apparently, while money may die, fantasy never does.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Bidirectional U.S. Stocks, Spanish Bonds and the ECB



The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The new mantra for the U.S. markets appears to be "if it's Tuesday, it must be bidirectional market day".  Once again the Dow went up strongly, while the Nasdaq was trading in negative territory. Events in Spain seem to be connected with this unusual and bearish market action.

At one point during the trading day, the Dow Industrials were up 123 points. Nasdaq on the other hand was down by 20 points at its worse. The S&P was caught in the middle. The same strange behavior took place last week. Spanish bonds and the euro rallied both times and money pumping from the ECB (with perhaps some dollar swap activity from the Fed) explains these seemingly unrelated events.

The yield on the 10-year Spanish government bonds exceeded the dangerous 6% level last week and suddenly heavy buying came in and drove yields back down to around the 5.86% level. Today, the yield on the Spanish 10-year reached 6.049% and suddenly buying came in and drove the yields down to 5.86%. The Euro rallied both times. As measured by the ETF FXE, it rose to 131.19 today. There is no reason investors should be buying either one. Spain is at risk of developing a full-blown debt crisis just like Greece and the Dutch government fell and the French election went badly over the weekend.

Money pumping causes markets to rally. It is directly being aimed at the Spanish bond market and the euro however. It spills over into other markets though. Since the Dow consists only of very liquid big cap stocks it will be impacted the easiest. The rest of the U.S. market has serious problems though. Tech stocks have led it up and now they are struggling. The ECB money pumping isn't enough to counteract the forces driving them down.

Money pumping can't go on forever and every time there has been a pause, stock prices have suffered. Problems in Spain are merely part of a much larger ongoing debt crisis in Europe. The balance sheet for the ECB has already been increased by much more than has been the case in the U.S. and the chart line is going straight up. A pause will eventually take place and when it does stocks will weaken globally -- and this includes the Dow.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Remerging EU Debt Crisis in Spain Will Damage Stocks



The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

The yield on Spanish 10-year government debt was as high as 6.16% on Monday. Credit default swaps on Spanish debt hit a record even though the peak yield on the 10-year was 6.70% on November 25, 2011. After a big selloff on Friday, stocks were rallying on Monday despite the new emerging crisis in Europe.

The 6% yield level is watched closely because when rates went over that level in Greece, the Greek debt crisis emerged. Spanish 10-year yields were over 6% three times last year. Prior to last November they reached 6.32% on July 8, 2011 and 6.28% on August 4, 2011. The ECB (European Central Bank) has intervened directly in bond markets under its Securities Market Program (SMP) to hold down interest rates in the peripheral countries. At least one Spanish official has called for a renewal of these efforts.

The ECB also established the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) and the European Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSM). Massive money-pumping operations have also been conducted through the two LTROs (Long-Term Refinancing Operations), one for $645 billion and a second for $713 billion.  The massive liquidity coming out of Europe has led to the recent global market rally. This will be just one of its unintended consequences. Later on we will be experiencing a large uptick in consumer price inflation as another.

While the inflation caused by the ECB is likely to last, the lower interest rates aren't. Spain has now broken above the 6% line in the sand four times. Portugal has never even gotten down to that level. Its 10-year governments were yielding 12.7% on Monday. So far they have peaked at 17.4% on January 30th. Italian 10-year governments have also yielded over 7% last November and this January, but were driven back down to below 5%. They are now rising rapidly again and heading toward 6%.

European stock markets were damaged significantly on Friday and the U.S. markets to a lesser degree. Despite the ongoing bad news markets across the pond were rallying today. And why shouldn't they. Another bailout (and another bailout and another bailout and another bailout and even another bailout) is expected. So far, even with the massive amounts of printed money thrown at the bond markets in the peripheral countries, the debt problems keep emerging . And now the global stock market rally looks like it is beginning to fray around the edges.


Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

How Today's "Deflation" Can Turn Into Tomorrow's Hyperinflation

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.


Since the 2008 Credit Crisis, deflation has been the primary worry of mainstream economists and monetary and fiscal policies that utilize various forms of “money printing” have been implemented throughout the world to try to stop it. Unfortunately, money printing combined with deflation can potentially lead to hyperinflation.

Hyperinflation is a little understood and little studied phenomenon. Even inflation itself is only partially understood and traditional university economic programs devote minimal attention to it (just ask someone with an economics degree what courses they took in inflation). Almost no one seems to have made the connection between deflation and hyperinflation, which are intimately related. Hyperinflation in fact could actually be defined as a self-feeding cycle of severe deflation combined with escalating money printing.

Historical analysis shows that hyperinflation is a creature of damaged and dysfunctional economies. It does not come from overheated economies that continue to grow out of control resulting in ever higher inflation rates.  This mythical view may have been created because government stimulus measures the employ money printing in its various guises to deal with   deflation can briefly make the economy fervent because of a declining currency. This creates high export demand since foreigners can buy the country’s goods cheaply and high internal demand because the population becomes desperate to get rid of any currency it holds. This phase does not last however and it takes place just prior to the final hyperinflationary spike. It was seen in Weimar Germany in 1922 because Germany had a developed manufacturing economy and most of the rest of the world wasn’t experiencing currency devaluation.

In many cases in the past, war preceded hyperinflation. This happened in Germany and Eastern Europe after World War I and in Eastern Europe and Japan and East Asia after World War II.  It also occurred in the United States after the Revolutionary War (arguably the first case of hyperinflation in history) and in the South at the end of the Civil War. Demand can collapse after a war and this will cause prices to drop (the U.S. had sharp deflation after World War I for instance). Governments, who were already printing money to support the war effort, then frequently print more to stimulate the economy.  If the economy isn’t brought back to real functionality however, a country’s currency loses its value and an ever-increasing amount of money has to be printed to create the same amount of stimulus.  

Even if there is no war, hyperinflation can exist just because an economy is dysfunctional. This would describe the cases of hyperinflation in South America, post-colonial Africa, and in Eastern Europe during the collapse of communism.  When an economy just can’t create enough demand on its own, the authorities stimulate demand by printing money. This leads to the same cycle of currency devaluation and ever-increasing money printing in an attempt to keep up with the loss of value taking place. In reality, the economy is continually shrinking, even though prices start heading toward the heavens.

While this has happened in a number of countries over time, mainstream economists continually make the claim that inflation can’t exist if there is slack in the economy. Hyperinflationary economies actually have maximum slack, with Zimbabwe in the 2000s being the extreme example. Unemployment reached 94% there, while the inflation rate was climbing to the sextillion percent level (a number so huge it might as well be infinity). Despite this real world example that took place right before their eyes, a number of economists had no trouble looking right into the TV camera and telling the public that inflation can’t exist if there is excess capacity in the economy. If they had been testifying in court, they would have been arrested for perjury.

Since hyperinflation has only occurred in certain countries at certain times, it is important to ask what it the key factor or factors that lead to it. The short answer would be: deflation created by demand destruction, followed by money printing that is taking place because the ability to borrow doesn’t exist or has been exhausted. Since developed countries have better credit and can borrow more, hyperinflation is less likely to occur in them than in more marginal economies – at least until their lending sources dry up.   

Deflation in and of itself does not lead to hyperinflation. It depends on what the root cause of the deflation is. There were deflations in the late 1800s and in the 1920s in the U.S. due to technological innovations and not demand destruction as commonly takes place after wars. Lack of demand was not the cause of falling prices, rising supply was. The exact opposite situation takes place after a destructive war or in an economy in a post-bubble era (as is the case currently in the U.S., the UK, Europe and Japan).  In the latter case, demand needs to be stimulated, in the former it doesn’t.

Countries also don’t print money if they can borrow it. Less developed countries have limited and sometimes no borrowing ability and this means they turn to money printing early on and this makes them more prone to hyperinflation.  Since developed countries can borrow money, they do so for as long they possibly can. This has allowed Japan to get its debt to GDP ratio to an astounding 229%. The U.S. is already over 100% (based on official numbers, the ratio using more realistic numbers is much worse) and rising rapidly.  Despite its twenty years of economic malaise, Japan has managed to support demand by running huge and continuing budget deficits funded by the massive savings of its people (money printing has been relatively minor).  It is not likely any other developed country will be able to accomplish what Japan has done.  Japan also seems to have reached the end of the borrowing road and will have to start revving up the printing presses in the near future.

In contrast to the Japanese, Americans save little and haven’t been able to fund their budget deficits internally for decades —the U.S. relies on foreign sources for this money. When the Credit Crisis arose, foreign lending became inadequate and money printing began in earnest. The Federal Reserve increasing its balance sheet by over $2 trillion is only one example of this. While foreign lending might have continued to fund $400 billion dollar annual budget deficits, it was not adequate to support the $1.42 trillion, $1.29 trillion and$1.30 trillion deficits that occurred in 2009, 2010, and 2011. Trillion dollar deficits are going to with the U.S. for many years into the future and the only way they can be completely funded is by printing more and more money.  The EU isn’t in much better shape either and has been unable to fund its peripheral country debt by borrowing. Its current solution is to print money through massive credit expansion.

Claims that money printing won’t be harmful in the 2010s because inflationary policies were utilized during the 1930s Great Depression and they worked well back then are moreover completely misleading. The debt level of the U.S. government, businesses and consumers were minimal at that time compared to what exists today. Huge amounts of untapped borrowing capacity existed then, but this is no longer true. Consumer credit expanded so much in the intervening years that during one month of the Credit Crisis it dropped more than the entire amount outstanding at the end of World War II. An apt analogy might be one drink of alcohol won’t be harmful. If you haven’t had anything to drink yet it isn’t likely it will be. If you have already had twenty glasses, it might cause fatal alcohol poisoning. The global financial system now risks being poisoned by money printing.
The monetary authorities worry about deflation and attempts to handle it with money printing are nothing new. The current actions are disturbingly similar to what took place in Weimar Germany in the early 1920s. They handled their deflation problem with money printing as well. As prices rose, instead of facing reality, the economics establishment acted in concert to deny the obvious. Deflation was cited as the biggest danger to the economy until it became laughable. When inflation exploded, the usual scapegoats — foreigners, speculators and minorities — were blamed by the government. Unless human behavior has changed in the last 100 years, the same scenario is likely to play itself out again in the 2010s.


Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Can the EU Solve Its Debt Crisis with More Debt?

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

European and U.S. stocks were rallying on Friday in what appears to be a liquidity frenzy supplied by the central banks. The market is once again hopeful now that EU leaders are beginning six days of meetings on how to save Greece and the euro. Based on their previous track record, which has led to the current crisis, there is little reason for long-term optimism.

Stock prices have not been the only thing rising lately.  Interest rates have been too in the credit- challenged Eurozone countries. While yields of Greek one-year governments have fallen back to only 180%, they were as high as 189% on October 19th. Greek two-years are at a more manageable 77%. Rates keep increasing in Greece despite the bailouts and this indicates the bailouts aren't nearly large enough and will have to continue and get bigger to keep the country out of default.  The political will for ongoing and ever-larger amounts of bailout money doesn't exist in the EU or does it?

While the EU voting public doesn't approve of spending more rescue money, the EU has created the EFSF (European Financial Stability Facility) a 440 billion euro fund to help bail out its member countries that have debt problems and to bail out the banks that lent them the money that allowed them to have those debt problems. Much remains to be decided on how the EFSF will actually function. There is disagreement of how to use it to bail out failing banks for instance (this is currently being referred to as recapitalization since bank bailouts are also unpopular with voters). There is also a proposal to leverage EFSF funds up to five times, so there will be more than two trillion euros available. This idea is apparently a "helpful" suggestion made by the U.S. monetary authorities.

While the stock market is showing almost as much enthusiasm for the leveraged bailout proposal as it did for the great innovation of triple A rated subprime mortgages in the mid-2000s, such financial trickery ended badly the first time and is likely to fall apart even faster this time. Mainstream media coverage, at least in the U.S.,  rarely looks at where the money is coming from for the EFSF. Technically, the money is being borrowed. So in order to deal with a debt crisis that is wreaking havoc on the financial system because of too much risk, more money will be borrowed and then that money will be leveraged (a form of borrowing in and of itself) to magnify the risk of the new borrowing. If this appears not to make any sense at all, that's because it doesn't. When the default comes — and there is 100% chance that it will —  the end will be much, much worse.

A case can be made however that the EFSF money isn't really borrowed, but a form of money printing instead. If governments borrow without the ability to actually pay back the money without inflating their currency, they are printing money. EU countries are already highly indebted just like the United States (Japan is in even worse shape). The fact that there is a debt crisis in a number of Eurozone countries is confirmation that the level of debt is beyond the point of no return. So a more accurate portrayal of what is going on with the EFSF is that money will be printed, this counterfeit money will be leveraged by borrowing against it and this will solve the problem of too much debt. 

The world has already lived through a debt binge in the early 2000s. The current crisis centered in Europe is simply a continuation of the unraveling of that debt. Governments handled the first implosion with trillions of dollars of bailouts, by running trillions of dollars in budget deficits, and by printing trillions of dollars of money. Debt problems keep resurfacing however. Could it be that engaging in additional reckless and irresponsible financial behavior isn't a solution for reckless and irresponsible financial behavior? EU leaders may wish to ponder this before going forward. 

Disclosure: None


Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

BOE Kicks Off New Global Money Printing Cycle

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Markets like money printing. The Bank of England (BOE) today announced its own QE2.  Statments from Fed Chair Ben Bernanke and talk of the EU recapitalizing its banks was already juicing up global stocks before the BOE took this earlier-than-expected action.

In its latest round of quantitative easing, the BOE will be purchasing 75 billion pounds in bonds. While some news reports euphemistically described this action as the BOE will be "spending" the money, the correct phraseology is that it will be "printing" this money. The BOE has previously printed 200 billion pounds to buy bonds starting in 2008 during the first credit crisis. The U.S. Fed has already engaged in two rounds of quantitative easing (only one of many ways that money can be printed) and a third should be expected.

Stocks had already turned around on Tuesday with big rallies. Fed chair Ben Bernanke made a statement that he was willing to do more to help the economy. Bernanke has been "helping" the economy since he started lowering the fed funds rate in September 2007. While he has helped the economy, the U.S. has experienced the worst recession and worst bear market since the Great Depression in the 1930s, the official unemployment numbers have remained close to double digits, the U.S. has had the largest number of bank failures since the Savings and Loan crisis, and thanks to his quantitative easing, the U.S. has been able to run a series of trillion dollar plus budget deficits that are going to lead to serious problems in the future.  Why shouldn't markets rally with more of that in prospect?

In the short term, markets don't care about dire consequences that are somewhere down the road. They rally based on liquidity and money printing provides it for them. While the news that the EU is going to recapitalize its banks sounds positive, there is little if any discussion in any article about where the money is going to come from. For the answer, picture a giant printing press spewing out fresh euro bills at break net speed. Investors should also expect a lot of nationalizations as part of this process. Belgium has just announced it will take over failed bank Dexia (described by the news media as "troubled"). Dexia is the largest bank in the country.

Market volatility is common during credit crises. Investors should expect continued market selloffs interspersed with big rallies. Ultimately, money printing will not save the day however because real value can't be created out of thin air. The day that will happen, is the day that PIIGS will fly. 

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

The Twisted Logic of the Fed's New Policy Move

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

At the end of its September two-day meeting, the Federal Reserve announced it latest attempt to revive  the U.S. economy -- Operation Twist. This Fed launched its first program to stimulate the economy four years ago at its September 2007 meeting and the economy is still in the doldrums. While the Fed hasn't yet begun QE III, the Bank of England looks like it is about to return to this form of money printing.

The Operation Twist announcement didn't come as a surprise to the markets. It was obviously leaked to the press days ago and articles about it were common in mainstream news outlets earlier this week.  The name comes from a dance popularized by Chubby Checker in the early 1960s -- the last time the Fed engaged in a similar policy move. The rotund Mr. Checker is an appropriate symbol for the bloated U.S. national debt,  the bloated U.S. budget deficit and the bloated Federal Reserve balance sheet, which has been swollen by huge amounts of money printing. The Twist itself involves expending lots of energy going back and forth, but getting nowhere -- the very picture of the 2011 Fed.

In the current Operation Twist, the Fed is planning on selling $400 billion of short-term debt and buying treasuries with 6 to 30 year maturities. The idea is to drive down longer-term interest rates in order to stimulate the economy. Many mortgage and credit card interest rates are set based on the yield of the 10-year U.S. government bond. The 10-year interest rate is already at a record low after falling below the low of 1.95% established 70 years ago in 1941. Real U.S. interest rates (those adjusted for inflation) have been negative for some time. Thirty-year and 15-year fixed mortgage  were already at their lowest historical rates earlier this month. There is no evidence that interest rates are holding back consumers from making purchases. Lack of jobs and income are the problem and the Fed's latest move isn't likely to improve either.

Across the pond, the Bank of England looks like it will start another round of QE (quantitative easing) later this fall. The BOE already printed 200 billion British pounds in 2009 and 2010 for its initial program. This is small compared to the $2 trillion increase in the U.S. Fed balance sheet.  It is universally acknowledged that the UK economy is weakening and the BOE is willing to take this risky inflationary approach even though British consumer prices have increased by 4.5% in the last year. Real interest rates are negative there as well.

The Fed is probably anxious to start its next round of QE as well, but political pressure is holding it back.  Republican leaders in congress sent a letter to Ben Bernanke to "resist further extraordinary interventions in the U.S. economy". Apparently, they are worried that money printing and negative real interest rates will lead to serious inflation -- just as they always have throughout history. The anemic Operation Twist certainly isn't in the category of extraordinary. If anything, it's sub-ordinary. Apparently the stock market thought so with the Dow Industrials falling 284 points or 2.5%, the S&P 500 down 35 points or 2.9% and Nasdaq closing 52 points or 2.0% lower.


Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Should Stocks be Rallying on Hopes of QE3?




The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.  


Stocks have rallied significantly since August 10th on the hopes that the Federal Reserve will engage in a third round of quantitative easing (QE) -- a form of money printing. While QE1 and QE2 were successful in juicing stock prices, this is not what the Fed is supposed to be doing.

The Fed's current mandate was established by the U.S. Congress in 1977 in the Federal Reserve Reform Act. This legislation requires the Fed to establish a monetary policy that "promotes maximum employment, stable prices and moderate long-term interest rates". Manipulating stock prices is not supposed to be on the Fed's agenda. Quantitative Easing was unknown in 1977 and was therefore not specifically addressed by Congress.


If anything,the Fed has significantly overshot in its goal to keep long-term rates moderate. The Fed Funds rate has been kept at around zero percent since December 2008. The Fed has stated it will maintain this rate until 2013. The interest rate on the 10-year treasury fell below 2.00% at one point this August -- a record low. Two-year rates fell below 0.20%, also record lows and well below the bottom rate during the Credit Crisis. Low interest rates indicate an economy in recession and not deflation as is commonly claimed in the mainstream press. Maintaining interest rates at a low level for too long is inflationary however.


The Fed announced its first quantitative easing program in November 2008 (according to an analysis of its balance sheet, it was begun somewhat earlier). The second round ended this June. How has the employment situation changed during the two rounds of QE?  When QE1 started in November 2008, the official U.S. unemployment rate was 6.8%. When it ended in June 2011, it was 9.2%. The high was 10.1% in October 2009. The post-World War II average has been 5.7% and unemployment has fallen to the 3% range when the economy is strong. With respect to employment, quantitative easing seems to have been a failure.

So what about price stability, the Fed's other mandate? While the inflationary effects of quantitative easing are most evident in commodity prices, the typical American consumer has seen them in gasoline, food and clothing prices. The average price of gasoline was as low as $1.60 a gallon when the Fed started QE1 and it almost reached $4.00 a gallon during QE2. A number of commodities, including cotton and copper, hit all-time record-high prices during QE2. Gold, the ultimate measure of inflation,rose to one new price high after another. Silver went from under $10 an ounce to over $48 an ounce. Quantitative easing obviously hasn't led to price stability. In fact, it has resulted in much higher prices and is therefore counterproductive to the Fed's goal of limiting inflation.

There is no question that quantitative easing has helped the stock market and resulted in higher stock prices. This is not exactly a secret however and all Wall Street traders are well aware of it. They will therefore push stock prices higher if they think more quantitative easing is on the way and much of any rally that results will occur before it even takes place. Quantitative easing is also no panacea for stock prices. It doesn't insulate the market from external shocks. While it doesn't make crashes more likely, it will make them worse when they occur. A default on Greek, Spanish or Italian debt and any number of other crises will have greater impact than they would have ordinarily because the market has been pumped up to artificially high levels. The market has also become dependent on quantitative easing and has not been able to rally since late 2008 without it. Almost as soon as it stops, the market drops and those drops will become more serious after each succeeding round.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Economists Don't See The Recession That Has Already Started



The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

A just released survey of 43 mainstream economists polled this month by the AP pegs the chances of the U.S. falling into recession in the next year at only 26% (one in four). As a group, the economists predict the economy will expand by over 2% in the second half of the year. Other news that appeared with the survey results included an article about how food stamp use in the U.S. is skyrocketing - a highly unlikely occurrence during an economic recovery.

When deciding how much credence should be given to the current recession view of the economics profession, investors should consider how accurately they predicted the Great Recession - the worst one since the 1930s. The recession began in December 2007. That same month a survey of 54 mainstream economist was published by Business Week under the title, "A Slower But Steady Economy" (AP could have used the same title for its current survey). How many of these highly-paid top economists realized that the U.S. was in recession?  None, zero, nada, zilch. How many thought that the U.S. was about to experience the worst recession in almost 80 years? None, zero, nada, zilch.
Unless you have reason to believe that establishment economists have been regularly taking handfuls of smart pills in the last three years, it's unlikely that their views are any more accurate today.

Instead of listening to the miss-opinion of mainstream economists constantly being shoveled out by the mainstream media, investors would be wise to look at the hard evidence of what is actually taking place in the economy.  Approximately 46 million Americans (15% of the population) are on food stamps. The number has increased by 74% since 2007. One wonders how big the increase would have been without the economic "recovery" that has supposedly taken place. Many of the people who receive food stamps are employed part-time and sometimes full-time in low paying jobs. If so, they are not part of the unemployment statistics and are considered successful examples of the U.S. pulling itself out of recession.  

Of course having a large part of the country on food-aid is an expensive proposition. How exactly has the U.S. paid for this?  Well, one way is through the approximately $2 trillion in money that the Federal Reserve has printed since 2007. Two trillion dollars of phony money can really juice up an economy. Without it, the GDP would still be in a deep hole from its 2007 levels and the illusion of  economic recovery wouldn't exist. If it turns there's no free lunch after all, the U.S. is going to be hit with a very big inflation bill in the future. Don't expect Fed Chair Ben Bernanke to see this coming though. After all, the Fed remained oblivious to the Great Recession long after it had started. Even in the spring of 2008, their meeting notes indicate that they were still hopeful about avoiding the recession that had begun months before.  

Investors should expect an ongoing stream of articles in the next several weeks or even months about how the U.S. is not going to experience another recession. The stock market is sending a very different message though and even the fluffed up economic statistics the government produces are likely to  look a bit anemic this fall. But don't worry, establishment economists are optimistic as they always are when a recession begins.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security. Investing is risky and if you don't think you are capable of doing it yourself, seek professional advice.