2011 Year in Review: Signs of an American Spring and a Fourth Turning
by David Collum
ChrisMartenson.com
Background
"Governments
gambled on a return to growth solving all the problems. That bet
has failed."
~ Satyajit
Das
Every December
I write a Year in Review. Last year's was posted at several sites
including Chris Martenson’s [1].
What started as summaries posted for a couple dozen people accrued
over 13,000 clicks in total last year. It elicited discussions with
some interesting people and several podcasts, including a particularly
enjoyable one with Chris [2].
Each begins with a highly personalized survey of my efforts to get
through another year of investing. This is followed by a brief update
of what is now a 32-year quest for a soft landing in retirement.
These details may be instructive for some casual observers. I have
been a devout follower of Austrian business cycle theory since the
late 1990s and have ignored the siren call for diversification.
I vigilantly monitor my progress relative to standard benchmarks.
The bulk of the blog describes thoughts and ideas that are on my
radar. The commentary is largely stream-of-consciousness with a
few selected links that might be worth a peek. Some are flagged
as “must see”. Everything else can be found here [3].
So why do people
care what an organic chemist thinks about investing, economics,
monetary policy, and societal moods? I can only offer a few thoughts.
For starters, in 32 years of investing I had only one year
in which my total wealth decreased in nominal dollars; whatever
I am doing has worked. I also ride the blogs hard, am fairly good
at distilling complexity down to simplicity, seem to be a congenital
contrarian, and am pretty well connected (for a chemist). I am Joe
Sixpack, a 99er of sorts with a growing unease.
Every year
I feel like Bill Murray in ground hog day. Issues including the
housing crises, hidden inflation (of a kind that even John Williams
is not discussing), and interest rates have not disappeared, but
I hit them hard last year and will not rehash them. I spoke of civil
unrest in 2009 but not 2010. That topic has returned with a vengeance.
The temptation to say "I told you so" can be irresistible. I have
cordoned off a section to get it out of my system. Ad hominem
attacks are reserved for jerks and morons, and I will try to avoid
trite phrases of little content. I saw "risk on-risk off" so many
times that I thought the Fed had hooked the markets to The
Clapper. So let's quit kicking the can down the road and
get started.
Investing
Time for
this turtle to come home.
Mr.
Wizard
2011
in Review.
With rebalancing achieved only by directing my savings, I changed
nothing in my portfolio year over year. The total portfolio as of
12/31/11 is as follows:
Precious
Metals et al.: 53%
Energy: 14%
Cash Equiv (short duration): 30%
Other: 3%
It was a turbulent
year for all hard asset investors, eliciting wild oscillations in
my portfolio within a 20% range. An overall return on investment
(ROI) of -2% was edged out by the S&P 500 (0%) but bested Berkshire
Hathaway (-5%). Precious metals (largely CEF, FSAGX, and physical
metals) gyrated throughout the year but finished even over all physical
and paper forms (Figure 1). Gains in gold (10%) and silver (-10%)
were offset by a drop in the premium of CEF (Central Fund of Canada)
one too many shelf offerings and profoundly disappointing
results for the precious metal equities (-19%). The metals are discussed
in detail below.
A basket of
Fidelity-based energy and materials funds underperformed from -4
to -12%. These are represented emblematically by the XLE spider
(1%) and XNG Amex natural gas index (5%) in Figure 2. My own fund
foisted upon me by Cornell's Fidelity connection (FSNGX), although
10% annualized over the decade, was total garbage this year (-7%)
relative to its peers. I keep adding to an already chunky position
in natural gas equities for reasons discussed in detail last year
[1]; a secular global shift toward natural gas should reward patience
but this year was pure patience.
These results
were buffered by the cash (0%). In addition to the -2% return on
investment (ROI), personal savings equivalent to 29% of my gross
income added a couple more percent to sneak me into the black (1%)
in units of accumulated wealth (vide infra). College tuition and
a new car attenuated what would have been a stellar year for savings.
Alas, such exceptions seem to appear every year.

Figure
1. Precious metal-based indices (CEF in red, XAU in green, SLV in
purple, and GLD in yellow) versus the S&P 500 (in blue) for
2011.

Figure
2. Energy-based indices (XLE in green and XNG in red) versus the
S&P 500 (in blue) for 2011.
32 Years
in Review.
My imbalanced portfolio changed in decadal rhythms as follows:
1980-88:
nothing but bonds (100%)
1988-99:
classic 60:40 equities:bonds
1999-2001:
cash, precious metals, shorts (minor), tobacco (minor)
2001-2011:
cash, precious metals, energy, tobacco (minor)
My total wealth
accumulated through a combination of savings and investment as shown
in Figure 3. (I blocked out the absolute dollars.) Years ago I chose
to exclude physical precious metals from my analysis using classic
gold bug logic that I measure them in ounces not dollars. Over the
last dozen years, however, I have steadily bought gold (with cash)
a couple ounces at a time. I have been prompted to include them
in all analyses.
Avoiding 1987
and 2000 equity crashes and capturing the bull market in precious
metals proved fortuitous. You can see that 2008 and 2011 were the
only down years. Berkshire has dropped five years since 1991.

Figure
3. Total wealth accumulated (ex-housing) versus year of employment.
Absolute numbers of dollars have been omitted. Y-axis omitted intentionally.
I monitor progress
by what I call a salary multiple, which is defined as the total
accumulated investable wealth (excluding my house) divided by annual
salary (line 22 of on the 1099 form ex capital gains). Over the
31-year period my salary rose twelve-fold, which I can fairly accurately
dissect into a fourfold gain resulting from inflation and a threefold
gain (relative to starting salaries of newly minted assistant professors)
resulting from increasing sources of income and merit-based pay
raises. My accumulated wealth normalized to the moving benchmark
of a rising income is plotted versus time in Figure 4. The fluctuations
visible in Figure 4 but not in Figure 3 result from income variations.
A quick calculation shows that my 12-year accumulation rate beginning
01/01/00, a period in which the S&P returned almost nothing,
is annualized at 12%. My five-, ten-, and fifteen-year rate of wealth
accrual also beat Buffett's.

Figure
4. Total wealth accumulated measured as a multiple of annual salary
versus years of investing.
Just Thoughts
More than
any other time in history, mankind faces a crossroads. One path
leads to despair and utter hopelessness. The other, to total extinction.
Let us pray we have the wisdom to choose correctly.
~ Woody
Allen
2011 may prove
to be an historical turning point. In 2008 the visionary James Grant
asked “Why no outrage?” [4]
In the early spring of this year I sensed rage but thought maybe
it was only mine. As the year progressed, however, change was in
the air and protracted social crises seemed possible. Many issues
owing their origins to economics seem to be metastasizing into social
movements. One senses winter is coming. With rich irony, Arabs might
call it American Spring. Strauss and Howe predicted it in 1996 and
would call it a Fourth Turning.
All the
Devils Are Here
Look what
they've done to my song, Ma.
~ Melanie
I cannot get
that refrain out of my head as I watch the markets. This year the
Devils brought us a wealth of nauseating and irritating stories
that made you want to hurl (both lunch and laptop.) Here are some
of the highlights. Others worthy of elaboration have been allocated
their own subsections.
In an op-ed,
Joe Nocera (author of a book bearing the title of this section)
noted that one guy is in jail as a result of the entire mortgage
fiasco: he lied on a liar's loan. By contrast, Gary Cohn, COO of
Goldman Sachs testified to Congress under oath that Goldman went
to the discount window only once, for a nominal sum when in reality
Goldman went multiple times. I had occasion to ask Joe if Gary would
get charged. "No." Apparently, perjury in Congress is only a crime
if you are lying about baseball.
Thanks to Steve
Kroft's 60 Minutes episode we found out that Congress can
legally trade on all forms of insider information [5].
(It helps if you write the laws.) The frothy mix of money and politics
is simply too awesome to overcome. Congress shirked its stated job
of providing leadership by refusing to make even nominal budget
cuts. They set up a super committee to make the cuts (and to give
the lobbyists a much more focused target for their money cannons.)
They failed too. I am sure the money cannons worked.
The NY Bank-Mellon
(and, by the cockroach model, many more banks) got caught after
a multi-decade crime spree involving back-dating of Forex trades
of pension funds that would be us folks scalping 0.3%
on every trade. I am sure they will be fined pennies on the
dollar and not forced to admit guilt.
We found out
this year that the SEC destroyed 18,000 files of fraud cases over
many years because they were deemed "inactive", including those
emanating from the Madoff case [6].
The magnitude of this blunder, a generous term for absolute corruption,
can only be appreciated when you realize that all fraud cases
at the SEC are inactive. David Einhorn's book (Fooling
Some of the People; vide infra) includes horrifying tales
of SEC corruption. I imagine Markopoulos' book about Madoff is the
Bible on the subject.
There was a
brief glimmer of hope. Standard and Poors grew a spine and downgraded
US sovereign debt. I am not sure what rating you give to sovereign
debt in which the authorities have explicitly stated that they intend
to deracinate creditors with inflation, but it certainly is not
AAA. Of course, the CEO of S&P was promptly fired, and, in a
delicious irony, was replaced by the COO of the completely insolvent
Citibank.
In a wondrous
moment in journalism, Bloomberg pried over 20,000 documents from
the Federal Reserve using the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
The Federal Reserve fought the suit, but then agreed to "cooperate"
with the Supreme Court's decision. How magnanimous. There emerged
a cottage industry to dig nuggets from this treasure trove. We discovered,
for example, that most of the $800 billion of Quantitative Easing
II, money reputed to boost the US economy, went straight to European
megabanks. Matt Taibbi of Rolling Stone described how a few
hundred million found its way into the pockets of the wives of two
Morgan Stanley executives to purchase distressed assets and shoes.
The system sprang into action after Bloomberg’s score and initiated
legislation that will allow the Fed to deny a document exists
in an FOIA lawsuit if it should prove inconvenient. I guess that's
the FODA (Freedom of Denial Act).
I thought I
could get through a year without taking a whack at Alan Greenspan,
but I couldn't let this one go. The Maestro announced that we should
burn down houses to alleviate the supply problem. He seems to have
forgotten what historians have written about Federally sponsored
food destruction programs during the Depression to prop up prices
as people went hungry. This clown destroyed lives. Could somebody
at least put a sock in his face?
I try to stay
non-partisan, but the White House deserves a little scorn. White
House pressure to give solar cell company Solyndra $535 million
dollars backfired when they went bankrupt. I remember seeing Obama's
speeches and thinking that they were shameless infomercials. I must
admit that I like having an intelligent president who formulates
full sentences in real time, yet distrusted him from the start for
a simple reason: Nobody comes from the Chicago political
machine uncorrupted. Once elected, he filled his cabinet with establishment
thugs. Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel then left to become mayor of
Chicago and was replaced with the infamous mayor Daley's son. You
can’t make this stuff up.
Hank "The Hammer"
Paulson has done a credible job of looking like a good guy, despite
his nickname and Goldman roots. There's no way that an environmentalist
and avid bird watcher could be ruthless, right? We found out, however,
that Hank had tipped off a bunch of ex-Goldman hedge fund managers
about what the Fed and Treasury would be doing. Of course, Hank
let guys like Buffett and Gross help design bailouts and
then front run them, but a bunch of hedge fund managers? They don’t
even have Congressional appointments.
I would be
remiss by not noting that the investment bankers got a few IPO scalps.
It's nothing like the glory days, but they came out with Groupon
(flush), Pandora (unobtainium-induced flush), and Zynga (nouveau
flush). Buyers of GM and AIG, the newest GSEs, got pummeled with
50% losses this year. You should not buy what Wall Street sells.
Forget Bin
Laden, we got Rajaratnam! What a score for the authorities
a big-time hedge fund manager making money off leaked secrets. To
top it off, he's a foreigner, so we get a xenophobia boost. And
now for the rest of the story. The guy who leaked the information
the guy who should be credited with a massive breach of trust
was Gupta. He's a foreigner too so why did Gupta get a pass?
He works for Goldman (golf clap). One can only wonder how many more
breaches of trust can occur before we simply run out of trust.
Paul Krugman
knows how to make friends and influence people. He incessantly pleads
for another $5 trillion dollars. Please let it go. A 2002 op-ed
resurfaced in which Krugman had called for Greenspan to create a
housing bubble [7].
OK. It's not a crime to be wrong (or a buffoon), but somehow they
keep publishing his drivel. Krugman also suggested:
If we
discovered that space aliens were planning to attack and we needed
a massive buildup to counter the space alien threat and really
inflation and budget deficits took secondary place to that, this
slump would be over in 18 months. [8]
Jeepers Paul:
Put down the bong. This box-office-ready variant of Bastiat's "broken
window fallacy" illustrates what a complete Keynesian boob he is.
He also waxed philosophically about how the East Coast earthquake
in August could have stimulated the economy if only it had done
more damage. Why think small? How about global thermonuclear war
or an extinction-event asteroid? The earthquake quote is rumored
to be a fake, but how would you know? Since socks come in pairs,
put one in his face too.
Buffett
Takes a Bath
You should
thank God [for bank bailouts]…Now, if you talk about bailouts
for everybody else, there comes a place where if you just start
bailing out all the individuals instead of telling them to adapt,
the culture dies.
~ Charlie
Munger, Berkshire Hathaway
Let 'em eat
Twinkies, Charlie! (but I digress). Warren Buffett (WB) claims he
decided to invest $5 billion in Bank of America while taking a bath.
Total absurdity aside, the last guy who did his thinking in the
bathtub single handedly destroyed the global economy with his bubbles.
To pilfer Buffett's Wright Brothers logic, we should have drowned
that guy, but I digress (again).
Buffett lost
a little money this year no big deal but he took quite
a metaphorical bath. WB is possibly the most famous and successful
investor of the modern era a world-class stock jobber, Master
of Wall Street, and a hype machine. Come again? Yep. That sweet
little old grandfather buying banks while eating ice cream in Dairy
Queen in Too
Big to Fail is a world-class hoser. In 2009 I caught Buffett
in a big lie: he declared a bullishness for equities with interest
rates in the basement, completely contradicting his 1999 article
in Fortune Magazine declaring that rising interest rates cause
secular bear markets in equities [9]. While pondering a blog denouncing
this hypocrisy, I discovered Michael Lewis had scooped me by a mere
17 years. In 1992, Lewis’s Temptation of St. Warren excoriated
WB; it’s quite a read [10].
I stole Michael’s title, wrote my blog, and moved on [11],
but Buffett and the Buffettologists continue to irritate me.
This year WB
denounced low taxes on billionaires. Sounds altruistic, but it leaves
a bad taste given that his corporate attorneys protect him from
taxation while fighting underpayment of Berkshires' taxes. (Michael
Vick denounces dog fighting too.) WB also helped write bailout plans
for banks (including Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo) while scooping
up shares of bank stocks (including Goldman Sachs). He’s no Martha
Stewart, but this smells. WB defiantly maintains that he couldn’t
care less about Berkshire’s share price, yet he spent billions buying
Berkshire shares above book value, which smacks of a stock
pump (and it worked). He became Obama’s BFF (best friend for you
non-teenagers) and then, miraculously, two of WB's favorite companies,
Wells Fargo and Moody’s, somehow managed to slither out of Federal
legal actions targeting their peer banks and ratings agencies. It’s
good to have friends in high places (and a reputed $10 million dollar
lobbying budget.)
People around
WB didn’t help his image either. His long time partner, Charlie
“Let ‘Em Eat Cake” Munger, certainly displayed a tin ear with his
quote. David Sokol, WB’s anointed heir apparent at Berkshire, got
caught getting a little on the side to supplement his ample wealth.
Of course, you can’t have Buffett’s clone look like a crook so his
career at Berkshire was vaporized. Legendary hedge fund manager
Michael Steinhardt beat Warren like a rented mule in a must-see
interview on CNBC [12].
He said WB "conned the press", is "thoughtless", a “snow job”, and
even implied dishonesty while WB’s pregnant groupie listened in
stunned silence. When pressed about the Sokol affair, Steinhardt
indicated that “it is not common for Buffett to get caught.”
Steinhardt
also touched a topic that has me conflicted. Buffett and Gates have
pooled their gargantuan empires resources accrued from the
miracles of American capitalism into a single tax exempt
organization of unprecedented scale (Catholic Church aside). One
lobe of my brain says they are free to do as they please; another
thinks that American capital should be plowed back into American
soil for the next generation. I keep thinking about a strip-mining
metaphor. In any event, a tax-exempt organization will be allocating
this massive pile of capital for eternity (or maybe not). Let’s
hope it does so efficiently and for good causes.
Precious
Metals and Currency Wars
Gold standard
supporters are lunatics and hacks
~ Nouriel
Roubini
Precious metals
were in a Utopian bull market for almost a decade. The early bulls
lounged poolside, taking the occasional dip and enjoying returns
in the high teens. It was a leisurely path to wealth. Predictably,
the speculators showed up, a few at first but then in number, forcing
repeated chlorine charges of the pool. The high frequency traders
began playing digital Marco Polo, causing raucous turbulence. Now
the market is anything but leisurely. I miss the sane days when
only crazy people bought gold.
The volatility,
however, is not just the traders. There were some serious shenanigans
at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME). They are charged with
maintaining orderly markets, but apparently fell waaaay behind
the curve. Five margin hikes on silver in eight days isn't orderly;
it's a drive-by shooting. Just days later, the new Shanghai metals
exchange jumped in with its own margin hike, triggering a 15% flash
crash. Mysterious put buying on low volume in the wee hours of the
morning while most of Asia was on extended vacation elicited serious
gold sell offs. To ensure that commodity traders across the board
got the memo, 60 million barrels of oil were released from the strategic
petroleum reserve for no apparent reason. (Does anybody believe
that actual oil entered the market place?) The message was clear:
metals and commodity bulls will be dealt with severely. Those without
a position in metals are braying that the bull market is over and
have been energized by recent precipitous drops. Others see the
margin hikes as an effort to allow an orderly retreat for big-money
shorts. There may have been some serious collateral damage, however.
I suspect that some of MF Global's problems may have started from
this forced selling.
So where are
we, heading back to the barbequed relic era for gold or taking a
pause that refreshes? I labor over this question without a definitive
answer, but I suspect that we are somewhere in the middle of a secular
bull. The damage looks minor when placed in perspective (Figure
5). The retail customer is not yet in the game; I have dozens of
smart colleagues who listened to me squeal for a dozen years without
ever buying an ounce of gold. My local coin dealer still has only
2 or 3 steady buyers kept on speed dial. Sometimes he can't move
even a couple of ounces of gold. Japan is offering gold coins with
the purchase of government bonds, placing gold at the status of
a free toaster oven. In what was a spectacular Twitter flame war
between Rickards and Roubini, Roubini launched his "lunatic" quote
(vide supra). One intrepid reporter denounced gold, indicating that
"gold is unbacked whereas the dollar is backed by the US government."
(I blew a snot bubble on that one.) The symptoms of a blow-off top
are absent.
Meanwhile,
the supply-demand stats look great. HSBC estimates that only 0.14%
of investable assets are precious metals whereas Sprott says 0.75%.
Both are far cries from the 5% target of traditional portfolio theory.
Central banks are buyers after decades of selling. India, Korea,
Mexico, Russian, and Vietnam were visibly active. (Rumors abound
that big buyers are going straight to the miners, rendering the
Comex increasingly irrelevant.) Chavez repatriated his gold to Venezuela,
presumably to avoid rehypothecation (vide infra). Jim Rickards is
in Northern Europe at this moment discussing similar repatriations.
Why would any sovereign state keep their gold elsewhere? The 500
lb gorilla, however, is China. They are rumored to have 1,000 tons
of gold with a target of 8,000 tons. How do they buy 7,000 tons?
They bid for it like everybody else. Chinese citizens have been
encouraged to save using gold (a defacto gold standard and covert
accumulation). Although the gold bugs in the US occasionally discuss
confiscation, I think the Chinese proletariat are the ones being
set up. Last but not least, we have charlatans running the central
banks of the world. When they say they are going to debase their
currencies to help their banking friends, I take them seriously.

Figure
5
With timing
that would make Robert Shiller proud, Jim Rickards published Currency
Wars, a carefully reasoned description of past and future
mercantilism and currency debasement. The oddest thing about a currency
war, however, is that you are said to win if you inflict the most
damage to your own currency. This is akin to circling the wagons
and shooting inward. To stretch the wild west metaphor a little
further, I am reminded of the classic scene in Blazing
Saddles
when the sheriff (Bart) points his gun at his own head and threatens
to shoot himself if anybody moves. As the logic goes, everybody
debases their currency to make exports cheap and imports expensive.
Of course, consumers pay up, but nobody cares about consumers. Even
the Swiss the Swiss! debased the Swiss franc
by 10% in one Draconian swoop to energize sales of army knives.
I have no doubt that this form of mercantilism is driven by greed
and avarice of politically connected special interest groups. Those
who do not directly benefit but sign off on the ideas (economists
and journalists) are cranks in my opinion. (I am not completely
sure if that passes for an ad hominem attack.)
I must pay
lip service to the precious metal equities. Starting in late 2010,
equities and metals began diverging quite markedly as evident in
Figure 1. Some argue it's GLD sopping up demand, which I suspected
at the outset was the reasoning behind its creation. My best guess,
however, is that some big money players began placing spread trades
by going long metals-short equities. If so, this gap will eventually
narrow. Many bulls assert that the equities are dirt cheap, should
be levered heavily to metal price, and will eventually soar (possibly
all the way to the moon!) Despite a chunky position in these equities,
I am not so sanguine. I aggressively bought tobacco stocks in early
2000 with p/e's in the mid single digits and dividend yields of
8-12%. (My best bottom call ever paid for a college education.)
The gold stocks do not look dirt cheap by that standard.
The notion that there is gold in them thar hills (i.e., assets
in the ground) is meaningless if these miners can't get it out profitably.
The darker possibility is that the equities are foreshadowing a
downturn in the metal price. I don't take that too seriously because
markets seem pretty damned myopic.
I can't exit
a discussion of metals without talking about silver, a bi-curious
metal with both industrial demand and pornographic appeal for precious
metal investors. (I have spittle dribbling down my chin as I type.)
The world-renowned CPM group says that annual industrial demand
(approximately 900 million ounces) exceeds mine supply by 200 million
ounces. The shortfall is made up from above-ground bullion stashes
accrued through the millennia and from recycling. Gold-silver price
ratios of 16:1 are often cited targets based on 1:16 ratio of gold
and silver in the Earth's crust. The above-ground stashes, however,
tell a very different story. Smart guys like Sprott and Martenson
are now quoting 1:1 ratios of accessible above-ground supplies (1-2
billion ounces of each). It was claimed by a highly reliable source
(the internet) that the global above-ground silver stash has not
been this low since the 13th century. Here is the money line: an
estimated 14 billion ounces of silver bullion in 1900, bullion accrued
over millenia, has been gutted by 90% in one century. As we crank
out solar cells, cell phones, and any other electronic devices (all
of which demand silver), I gotta figure silver will have its day
in the sun. (Catch that solar cell pun?) I lack the bravado to pray
for dips; perpetually rising prices suit me just fine. Economic
malaise or not, price discovery is coming. (OK. That was the last
Game of Thrones play on words.)
Energy
and Resources
The stone
age didn't end because we ran out of stones.
~ Sheikh
Ahmed Zaki Yamani, former OPEC oil minister
That's a pithy
phrase with no content a duck-filled platitude by
an evasive oil minister. It is also a refuge for simpletons. I have
been pondering an impending resource depletion a profoundly
consequential global event for years now, a quest that began
with the simple notion of hedging inflation. I am essentially done
studying the problem and am sitting back waiting for it to play
out. To those not up to speed, there are numerous books and blogs
on "peak oil". The premier presentation is Chris Martenson's Crash
Course [13].
If you don't have three hours to listen to a vivid description of
a civilization-changing process, try his one hour seminar [14].
If you don't have an hour, then, by all means, put down this document
and focus on something important. There were a few contributions
to the debate this year that caught my eye. Robert Hirsch, author
of The Hirsch Report presented to Congress, recently discussed
our complete failure to respond to depletion-based risk [15].
Legendary money manager Jeremy Grantham wrote several reports pleading
with his investors and society at large to pay attention [16].
To those who hang on Daniel Yergin's soothing words, many believe
he has lost a step or two since his glory days as author of The
Prize.
I have also
wondered how one will distinguish two distinctly different causal
relationships: (1) a geologically mandated reduction in energy output
imparting an economic malaise, and (2) an economic malaise causing
decreased energy consumption. One might expect that geological constraints
should cause energy prices to rise in the face of economic stagnation.
The noise, however, will be deafening. Claims of evil speculators,
dastardly Arabs, and stagflation will certainly precede the awareness
that we are having trouble getting oil. There may also be subtle
hints like when the Saudis cut production this year claiming a glut
in the market while prices were rising. Does the massive spread
between the price of WTI and Brent (up to $25 a barrel) have any
information in it? I asked several prominent geologists and market
strategists, and they were completely dismissive of WTI as an indicator
of demand; Brent reflects world oil price. Of course, the media
focuses on the WTI because it makes oil look cheaper.
I am pessimistic
about alternative energy sources: Biofuel will destroy the soils
(unless ocean-based); solar is going to be a monstrous scaling problem
exacerbated by razor thin energy margins; nuclear looked promising
until Fukushima set the industry into meltdown (possibly for decades);
tar sands are brutal on the environment with only moderate energy
margins. I am wildly bullish on natural gas-based equities as discussed
extensively last year [1].
I would like gains now, but patience will be necessary as
society re-engineers for a natural gas-intensive world. I hasten
to add that fracking will only postpone, not eliminate, the energy
depletion issues.
Europe
If they
are lucky they will manage to [push back the Greek default] for
say three years. That will give the banks and insurance companies
time to unload this debt sell it off to national banks
and the European Central Bank so that when the default
comes it won't bring down the private banks and private insurance
companies.
~ Martin
Feldstein, Former Fed Governor
Preliminary
attempts to clean it up fail as they only transfer the mess elsewhere.
~ Wikipedia
on the bathtub ring in The
Cat in the Hat
There is so
much written on Europe it is hard to imagine adding more. I am with
Kyle Bass [17]
and every other bright bulb in this game: Europe must write down
their debt. Of course, Greece got most of the headlines at first,
but Greece has been in a perpetual default since the first debt
jubilee implemented by Solon in the 7th century BC. In this most
recent chapter, Goldman did their Jedi mind tricks (currency swaps)
to help Greece get into the whole Euro currency regime (and repatriate
some serious drachma to 85 Broad Street). That any banks ever
lend to Greece is the epitome of moral hazard; these bankers should
be euthanized not bailed.
Several years
ago I incorrectly predicted that Spain would be the first Club Med
collapse. Their real estate market was levered to the hilt, and
there seems to be no Spanish translation for "mark-to-market". I
first realized they could become the Rubes of Europe no small
feat when US banks sold toxic assets to Santander, one of
Spain's megabanks. I doubt Santander was chosen because it was so
well capitalized. Some Spanish bankers probably got some personal
doubloons (pocket change) for signing off on that deal. Spain is
coming.
Will the monetary
and fiscal cavalries save the Euro and, by proxy, Europe? Europe
spent 2011 in the "buy the rumor-sell the news" mode, except there
were only rumors, and the burst of confidence was always short lived.
The authorities kept drawing Maginot Lines in the sand. It seems
unlikely that Europe can save itself given that those needing the
bailouts are precisely those expected to contribute handsomely to
the bailouts. Some of the ideas were almost laughable. It was suggested
that the EFSF (European Fubar Slush Fund), a piddling few hundred
billion Euros largely funded by insolvent states, could be levered.
The circularity of this reasoning is dizzying. They tried to ban
debt downgrades (and world hunger). The Kabuki theater called "bank
stress tests" offered a few minutes of stability and a great punch
line: Megabank Dexia got the highest grade of all Eurobanks...and
then went from hero to zero (bailed). Serious dysfunction seemed
to emanate from the desire to avoid a "credit event", a euphemism
for cascading failures of credit default swaps (CDSs) that would
circumnavigate the globe. (In 2008-09, US investment banks briefly
delayed credit events by, quite literally, denying their existence.)
Successfully negating the protection offered by CDSs may prove a
cunning strategy to destroy the global CDS market. Good riddance.
It would be
unreasonable to hope for a prompt solution. The swat team charged
with putting together the first Basel Accord took 18 years to get
all the signatures during a period of relative calm. Coordinated
actions in Europe are largely restricted to military campaigns.
What about
help from outside to save the Euro? A concerted intervention by
a consortium of central banks bought them some time. There have
been discussions of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) fronting
the money. That would be largely us, fellow Americans. There was
a suggestion that the UK might help, but Prime Minister David Cameron
told the rest of Europe to take a hike because the UK is flat broke.
He's not very popular, but his reasoning seems sound. The Federal
Reserve is publicly saying they will not bail out Europe (again),
but they'll try (again) because they've got bazookas, printing presses,
and a "yen" for the kinky.
Oliver Sarkozy
(the brother of Merkozy) says European banking system is 4-fold
bigger than the US banking system, requiring a 4 trillion bailout
(0.80 Krugmans). Australian authorities told its bankers to get
ready for a collapse. Europe is starting to look like the board
game Risk
in which players are trying to get each others' cards. (Risk
players know all too well that nobody ever wins in Europe.) Greece
should ignore its bribed politicians and do a total write down.
Selling assets is for drug addicts and wusses. Heaven knows Greece’s
credit rating couldn't drop lower. The nuclear option occurs when
Germany opens the rumored warehouses of printed Deutschmarks and
heads for the hinterlands. Aside from some Slavic carnage, Europe
has been militarily calm for 60 years. The previous 3500 years,
however, have been relentless tribal warfare. Bright guys are starting
to speak in hushed tones of a pan-European conflict again. It could
get interesting in a catastrophic sort of way. Analysts might practice
typing in fetal position.
Federal
Reserve, Bailouts, and Bank Reflations
We’re
creating money because there’s not enough money in the economy.
~ Rudolf
von Havenstein
I was just
kidding: That wasn't said by Havenstein of Weimar fame but rather
by Mervyn King Mervyn King! current head of
the Bank of England! What does this have to do with the Fed? They
all suffer the Keynesian affliction. We are so doomed, but let's
refocus.
The Federal
Reserve has really been up to no good, using the global economy
as a gigantic laboratory for their cockeyed experiments. Unlike
some sealed virology lab, these guys release mutant strains into
the wild hoping for some positive effect. For starters, the Fed
expanded the dual mandate of maximizing bank profits and triggering
rampant inflation to include a third mandate of pumping asset markets.
And, of course, Ben Bernanke hails from Princeton. Academics should
not be allowed to handle sharp objects or run heavy machinery (like
a printer) let alone be put at the helm of the global economy. This
is folly at its finest.
Bank reflation
is a euphemism, which loosely translated means save the banks at
the expense of everybody else. When it is declared that the banks
either must recapitalize or have been recapitalized, there is no
large mattress from which this money comes. Existing money is already
on bank balance sheets. They are being called upon to contract credit,
which is a death spiral because of the debt-money supply paradox,
or central banks will be forced to create more. Just ask Mervyn.
Krugman may be right; we may not have inflation right now...but
we will...and then he will be wrong.
Here's my biggest
gripe in a nutshell. The Fed, whether it's a wholly owned subsidiary
of the banking cartel or not, is charged with protecting the banking
system. Period/full stop. The banking system is global. Period/full
stop. Ergo, one does not even know if the Fed's actions are in the
best interest of the United States. Period/full stop. What is to
prevent them from sending trillions to Europe, Asia, or any faraway
place because bankers got themselves in trouble? Absolutely nothing;
they do it relentlessly. (They even sent the missing pallets of
$100 dollar bills to Iraq for Christ's sakes!) Bloomberg's FOIA
suit showed how far off the reservation they had strayed, pumping
in at least $7.7 trillion. Bernie Sanders claims the audit
shows $16 trillion. The Levy Economics Institute claims numbers
approaching $30 trillion. We keep hearing that we made money on
the bailouts, including from General Motors! That's an OMG/LOL/WTF
all rolled into one. The $700 billion TARP was put on display for
public consumption. It was designed to be paid back in the
light of day. The rest of the money entered the system covertly.
They saved GM during the crisis by pooling their ample toxic assets,
named it Ally Bank, and bailed it. GM cost us a fortune. Bankruptcy
lawyers saw alternative strategies and better outcomes as described
in an Econtalk interview [18].
They are selling off assets and declaring profits (like junkies
selling blood), but have a balance sheet filled with dregs. Bank
of America recently dumped its enormous derivatives book into its
banking subsidiary to assist the Fed with another profitable bailout
in the near future. Hussman outlined in vivid detail the illegality
of a number of Fed's asset purchases [19].
(Stephen Roach had done so years earlier, but neither Stephen nor
I could locate the link.)
Occasionally
there is higher brain function at the Fed. Governor Poole expressed
angst when they attached low interest rates to a distant date on
the calendar:
I would
describe the [Fed] decision on August 9 as being simply unprincipled.
I know of no article, paper - professional paper in the last 25
years, 35 years perhaps, that would justify this approach to policy.
All the academic research, including research within the Federal
Reserve makes policy dependent on the state of the economy, not
the state of the calendar. So I'm flabbergasted, makes no sense
to me. [20]
We the People
are suffering Stockholm Syndrome in which we are empathizing with
our captors, the banking cartel. The Feds, by offering free and
unlimited capital, render our hard-earned capital of no value in
the market place while concurrently setting us up for destructive
inflation. The 0% interest rates are placing the burden squarely
on the backs of savers. The losses due to what Carmen Reinhart called
"financial repression" [21]
have been estimated at $400 billion per year on the treasury debt
alone (not to mention secondary costs stemming from other artificially
low rates). I could come to terms with such squanderous bailouts
if the flaws in the system had been corrected, but they haven't
and won't in the foreseeable future. As it stands, the diligent
will continue to fund the indolent. It is oppressive, wrong, and,
in the long term, destructive. An independent Federal Reserve has
gone rogue with no safeguards.
Incisive journalist
Evan Ambrose-Pritchard of the Telegraph asked, what will
bring the bankers to heel? There is no answer yet. On an early morning
Squawkbox, Joe Kernan said to Fed Governor Bullard, "I think you
guys should read the Hippocratic Oath a few times." Indeed.
MF Global
and Rehypothecation: Leverage in a Fractional Reserve World
We're
pretty darn f***ed.
~ Christina
Romer
John Corzine
and the MF Goldman MF Global story is big and getting bigger.
Although it is an Enron-scale collapse, it reminds me more of the
Refco bankruptcy IPO in August/bankrupt in October. Unlike
Refco, the Wall Street crime families are having a very difficult
time burying this story because Corzine is one of the Godfathers.
At first it appeared that MFG stole investors' assets to cover its
assets, but soon we were introduced to the previously arcane word
"rehypothecation." To understand this let’s begin with a definition:
hypothecate:
To pledge an asset
as collateral
on a loan
without the lender
taking possession of the collateral. It especially applies to
mortgages:
the borrower
hypothecates when he/she pledges the house as collateral for payment
of the mortgage [22]
Rehypothecation
is simply using the same collateral again (and again) for
different loans. They are now telling us that everything at MFG
may have been legal. I think there is at least one illegal part.
JPM anointed itself super senior creditor by confiscating a billion
or so, including allocated gold bars. Blogger Bruce Krasting may
have been the first to detect their little ploy in the form of suspect
reverse wire transfers [23].
(It is merely an optics problem that JPM sold the assets to George
Soros.) Some are saying that claw backs will correct this, but I
am not convinced.
Isn’t "rehypothecation"
just a shell game or Ponzi scheme by another name? Of course, but
it’s also the foundation of fractional reserve banking and our increasingly
fractional reserve world. Banks used to keep large reserves but
with the advent of the Federal Reserve (spawned in the wee hours
of December 24th in 1913), banks began shrinking reserves and relying
heavily on the lender of last resort. Insurance companies are also
fractionally reserved by design. The majority of pension funds are
grotesquely underfunded, representing big promises backed by a very
small reserves. CDSs are simply credit insurance backed by the good
faith and credit of large banks [sarcasm off] whereas others are
backed by two guys named Vinnie and Guido. There are still gobs
of synthetic CDOs (an estimated bazillion dollars worth) backed
by three mortgages in Camden, NJ that have been in default for years.
The Comex is a fractional reserve gold storage (backed 2.5% against
claims). The prospective for the gold ETF (GLD) I read
it indicated that the gold is stored "in lots of places,
don't worry, shutup" (although not quite in those words.) There
must be some serious hypothecating going on there too. Does anybody
seriously believe a bunch of broker-dealers could sit on a pile
of bullion without selling it repeatedly? Bob Pisani of CNBC recently
toured the GLD gold stash, assuring investors the gold is safe and
sound. Zero Hedge noted that the serial number on the bar he proudly
displayed was not listed in GLD's inventory [24].
The MF Global
story is very damaging to the public psyche. It showed us that no
collateral not even fully allocated gold bars is safe
in the hands of broker-dealers. When creditors raced for the exits,
the politically connected grabbed the loot and ran out the back
door, leaving depositors to fend for themselves. (Depositors become
junior creditors in this event.) This smash-and-grab tactic is not
new. US banks did it to the Europeans during the 08-09 crisis by
transferring billions out of German banks in the dead of night.
You would be a fool to assume this risk is unique to MFG, and investors
are catching on. I diversified my assets in 2006, not by asset class
but rather by brokerage in a buckshot pattern, avoiding those active
in proprietary trading.
Looking across
society you see more promises than assets, setting us up for wild
asset grabs going forward. This administration was handed a disastrous
economy and given a political mandate for change. Instead, they
followed Neville Chamberlain's lead by appeasing the banks to assure
"prosperity and peace in our time." It's not working this time either.
Nobody
Saw It Coming
Experience
is a wonderful thing. It enables you to recognize a mistake when
you make it again.
~ anonymous
From my investing
portfolio you can see that I smelled something and got out of harm’s
way. Rummaging through my email box I found an email dated 5/6/02
sent to Rick Sherlund, founder of Goldman Sachs software group.
I am succumbing to the dreaded blogger's disease, the undeniable
urge to yell "I told you so!" You can skip this part because it
is ten years old, but I think it is a rather extraordinary document
from a rank amateur and one that I am quite proud of.
The exchange
began when I briefly expressed concerns, which prompted Rick to
ask:
"There
have always been gold bugs and doom and gloom types and they are
right ?in pointing out the risks, but what is it if you put this
in a balanced or? most likely perspective that we should be most
concerned about?"
My unredacted
response was as follows:
Date: Mon,
6 May 2002 11:42:02 -0700
To:
"Rick Sherlund" <rick.sherlund@gs.com>
From:
"[David Collum]" dbc6@cornell.edu
Subject:
Re:
In response
to your questions, I worry most about debt, how it has been spread
throughout the system, the mechanism by which it will get unwound,
and whether the whole notion that one can insure against interest
rate risk through derivatives is even a theoretically sound construct
(let alone practically sound). Let me summarize what bugs me in
general and then try to get at what's got me jumpier than usual
at the end. (In the mean time, I enjoy consolidating my ideas, the
non-scientific writing, and pretending to know what I'm talking
about...which isn't new.)
General
Concerns
(1)
Mortgages and Refi's. I see a lot of potential defaults
in the housing market. Fannie and Freddie are growing an enormous
portfolio and are moving toward the sub-prime loan market during
a time of decaying economic fundamentals. Everybody rants about
the refi's being good for the economy (including the Fed) when,
to me, Fannie and Freddie look like very dangerous institutions.
I'm beginning to spot more main-stream thinkers articulating this
concern as well. As a segway to the next point...
(2)
"Short-term" Personal Debt. The "average family
is looking at a $50K salary and $9K on the credit cards (on top
of shrinking home equity). The resilient consumer is akin to the
avalanche that has not yet fallen; it looks very tranquil. It is
mathematically impossible, however, for the consumer to keep accruing
debt. The average family the heart of the bell curve
must either abruptly stop spending or declare bankruptcy (or both).
I don't think either of us can imagine the total sense of futility
and denial these guys are feeling right now. I've got a grad student
with $10K on his credit card and he keeps spending. The "resilient
consumer" is on a bungee jump in which we have no idea how elastic
(or strong) the bungee cord is. It is amazing to me that decades
after invention of the credit card, personal debt generation has
not yet plumbed some sort of equilibrium; it just keeps growing
as a percentage of income.
(3)
Corporate Debt. As some of these big telcos and
other conglomerates start drawing down their lines of credit, the
potential for a severe banking problem strikes me as quite high.
Is JPM a sitting duck? Maybe. If a financial crisis like the one
you guys wrote a big check for in 1998 picks up speed, JPM will
be up to their butts in problems. As more corporates (WCOM) head
to junk status, forcing re-balancing of bond portfolios, it seems
to me that a clamp down on liquidity problems should intensify.
(This may already be starting if statements by JPM are an indicator.)
A number of seemingly stable companies (like GE) are, in principle,
stabilizing their short-term interest rate risk (and investor jitters)
by moving into the long term debt market. Best case scenario is
that they have a drag on their profits for a long, long time. The
problem appears to be trickier than that, however. Bill Gross has
been pointing out that at least some (including GE) are doing some
pretty dicey-looking derivatives trading to undue this shift and
re-assume considerable interest-sensitive risk.
(4)
Balance of trade. This is the hardest for me to
grapple with. But if one follows the seemingly simple premise that
a change in sentiment on the dollar and dollar-denominated assets
could cause the foreigners to look elsewhere to put their wealth,
interest rates will rise. Then we will find out what really is interest
rate sensitive. Some (including Roach) suggest that the balance
of trade is at levels that have historically proven to be prefaces
to currency disasters. The international perspective on the value
of the dollar and the possibility of a fairly large decrease naturally
leads to the next topic...
(5)
Inflation. As I put all this together, it is hard
maintain some semblance of an outline since it is so connected.
With that said and quite contrary to popular (almost universally
held) opinion, I think inflation is here in a big way. The model
for inflation that I find to be most credible (almost a truism)
is the three-stage model: (1) rising money supply, (2) increased
prices, and (3) increasing interest rates. Inflation is really stage
1 money creation decreasing the value of existing currency.
Where this money goes is a very different story. The latter two
stages rising prices and rising interest rates are
consequences. Stage 1 inflation is undeniable; all metrics of money
creation point to serious inflation over the 1990's. I'll go a step
further and suggest that stage 2 inflation (rising prices) is not
under control at all either. The numbers coming out of the Fed look
fictitious to me. Measuring cost per gigahertz and gigabytes, hedonic
adjustments for consumption changes, and an emphasis on a basket
of goods that are weighted toward imports don't paint an accurate
picture. (The motivations for why the distortions are intentional
would be long, but keeping inflation-adjusted costs on federal payouts
under control would be near the top of the list.) I believe that
if you simply do a smell test on the cost of living, you find it's
higher than we are being told. I bet you health care costs alone
account for >1% per year price increases. Salaries at the university
rose 8% last year. Certainly the cost of the most important asset
of all, shares of publicly traded corporations, are outrageous using
numerical measures. (I stress numerical measures to distinguish
them from evaluations based on optimistic projections and just plain
old wishful thinking.) I think the bond guys are seeing inflation.
(6)
Derivatives. The model of any insurance is to spread
the risk of acute, but localized, events over a broader swath. As
long as the event is local and not too bad, the system works well.
The problem is that financial crises don't have to be localized
and certainly don't have to stay small. LTCM put the system in jeopardy,
causing you guys to bail them out "or lose billions of dollars in
the bond market" (to quote a famous tech analyst aka you). The system
seems more fragile now (especially looking at the absolute numbers
on the notional value of derivatives.) Everybody seems to be insuring
everybody. It's like a group of neighbors collectively pooling their
money to self-insure against floods. The banks raved about how derivatives
saved their butt after the Enron fiasco; who's butt got scorched?
Any model based on a cataclysmic financial event would have to be
centered on derivatives. I should add that I do not subscribe to
a model based on an abrupt change (unless you call 1-3 years abrupt).
I do, however, believe that this summer might be more interesting
than some.
(7)
Hidden costs. Any one of a number of items will
put a long term drag on earnings including: options expensing, accountants
getting religion, debt servicing, reversals in pension plan returns,
and a slow recovery.
(8)
Confidence. I own two stocks. I have fished around
preferred shares, small caps, limited partnerships, commodities
etc. etc. looking for investments. I see credible looking investments
that I don't buy. The harsh reality is I don't trust what I'm seeing.
I know what you're thinking; "Of course you don't, you've become
a total whack job." This is true. However, I think the average investor
is catching on as well. Spitzer is gonna do damage. Buffett, Greenspan,
and Gross are all going after options as being a consequence of
distortions of earnings resulting corporate greed. Joe six-pack
is getting an ear full now. (Joe Sixpack includes a lot of money
managers who were not smart enough to get out of the Joe Sixpack
classification.) The distorted realities are gonna be hard to hide
as companies like WCOM and TYC sporting single digit p/e's on the
Yahoo stock board head for the toilet.
(9)
The Dollar. Lord knows I don't understand this one.
I can say that dollars and dollar denominated assets look awful
to me during a period of enormous money growth.
(10)
Greenspan and rates. To loosely quote Gross: Greenspan
is toast. He can't raise rates to fight inflation without triggering
liquidity problems. Gross suspects there are some key trigger points
at some pretty low Fed rates. If inflation finally shows up on the
radar screens to the point where even the paid economists can see
it, we have potential for crises that will not be curable by Greenspan's
favorite toy loose monetary policy. I'm not sure Greenspan
can handle it. If you follow Buffet's reasoning, you can understand
bull and bear markets by simply watching interest rates. We are
at record lows. The rate cuts have not done anything. (Worse yet,
they may have done wonders and what we have now may be the result.)
Historians will write a very different chapter about Greenspan than
is currently being written (unless I'm wrong, of course!).
(11)
Avoiding recessions. To the extent that recessions
purge excesses, you can't avoid them. Greenspan's monetary policy
is akin to a drunk with a whopping hangover taking a few drinks.
It's akin to providing stimulus to revitalize a 24-hour long Roman
orgy. It's akin to...enough similes. The recession of late purged
nothing of consequence thanks to AG. I think we will discover that
the bone rattling economic events of last year were not "the big
one" because the pressures were not released. That is not the good
news. I believe that we will begin to come to this conclusion within
a few months. My concern is that we will finally test the stability
of all the debt instruments described above simultaneously. Either
Greenspan is flunking Econ 101 by trying to avoid the unavoidable
or he sees big problems (of his own creation) and can't fess up
without exacerbating them. His efforts to achieve a soft landing,
while explicitly designed to be non-Japan-like at the outset, may
be quite Japan-like in the best-case (soft-landing) scenario. The
Austrian economists would argue that there are a lot of ways to
purge booms (sharply or slowly), but if you integrate under curve
they all inflict the necessary pain.
(12)
Event risk. This is a straw-man risk. I fully concede
the long term consequences of non-financial events on the financial
markets appear to be irrelevant. (They can act as catalysts, however,
accelerating certain inevitable outcomes.)
What's different
right now? Why do I feel jumpy? This was a tough question that may
have illustrated my official transcendence from bear to whack job.
Here's my best answer.
(1)
Gold is rising. Gold is an irrelevant commodity
as long as the price stays low. I am not a gold bug, but do believe
that a rising gold price has practical and psychological consequences.
It also may be a canary in the coal mine.
(2)
The corporate problems in companies like WCOM
supposedly real, big-cap companies seem unabated. I suspect
that disruptions in the debt market must be glaring at this point.
JPM is tightening its lending best I can tell. Greenspan has no
tricks left. (Of course, he can start buying equities as one of
the other Fed governors suggested. Then I'm gonna join a militia.)
(3)
Issues number (1)-(11) noted above would be highly
manageable problems and easily placed in a "balanced perspective"
if they occur in relative isolation. However, it seems ("feels")
like they are coming to a head simultaneously. The risks are highly
correlated. This is why economic models based on Gaussian curves
fall apart right when you need them the most and you get your butt
whipped by fat tails.
In conclusion,
you may stop talking to me when I tell you this, but key events
that turned me bearish include:
(1) In 1997,
you said during reunion weekend that companies not yet starting
their y2k fixes may be too late. (Now there was a chapter I'd like
to forget.) That was the moment that I began looking at the market
through a different lens. (2) In 1998 (or 99), we discussed the
LTCM crisis and you explained to me why you guys bailed them out.
I saw an analogy with the Cuban Missile crisis that I couldn't shake;
another ratchet clicked. As an aside, in that same conversation,
I suggested that going off the gold standard may have sent us on
a long slow descent into a monetary mess. I believe the garbled
grunt you made was an agreement at least with the principle.
Since then,
I have been trying to understand the market as a series of interconnected
parts constituting either (1) a complex web with great stability,
or (2) a house of cards with great fragility. I guess it depends
on how you look at it.
So here we
are nearly three pages further and ten years later: Is it true that
nobody saw this coming? Let's put this notion to rest. And with
that as a segue, many are seeing the next phase of this crisis coming
too...
Apocalypse
Now The Sequel: A Casting Call for Colonel Kurtz
There
is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about
by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis
should come sooner as a result of a voluntary abandonment of further
credit expansion, or later as a final or total catastrophe of
the currency system involved.
~ Ludwig
von Mises
Precious few
people were taking cover in 1999 nor even in 2006. That is not true
today. The old doomers (James Grant, Doug Noland, Bill Bonner, Kevin
Phillips, David Tice, Stephen Roach, Doug Cliggott...) have largely
not changed their views. Thanks to the detailed analysis of Joe
Nocera and Bethany McLean in All
the Devils Are Here we find that even the old guard within
the ratings agencies and mortgage lending machines saw it coming
(and then were sent to pasture.) They also describe how Fed Governor
Gramlich tried, albeit unforcefully, to alert Greenspan and remind
us how Josh Rosner was all over the subprime crisis in the late
90's.
There is a
gaggle of new Prophets of Doom speaking apocalyptically, and they
have some serious street creds. There are measured voices, like
that of Mohammad El-Erian, quietly telling us the future will be
downsized. But in this putative sequel to Apocalypse Now,
who should play Colonel Kurtz, the quirky character driven to the
point of madness by the horror of it all? The rogues gallery is
listed below. The links are worth a click.
Kyle Bass,
Founder and CEO of Hayman Capital. Kyle would have been featured
in Lewis's The
Big Short, but Lewis thought he was way too Kurtz-like and
left him on the cutting room floor. Lewis recanted in Boomerang,
featuring Bass's dire view of the sovereign debt crisis. A 2011
panel discussion is a must-see, inspiring one my colleagues to start
accumulating gold that day [17].
(I was viewer #302; there have been 100,000 now.)
Ann Barnhardt,
CEO of commodities trading firm Barnhardt Capital Management.
Ann raised some eyebrows when she returned all of her clients
money explaining that MF Global has shown that their money is no
longer safe in the system. An interview reveals she is livid but
not nuts [25].
Charles
Biderman, CEO of TrimTabs. The CEO of a company best known for
following the flows of money within asset classes previously had
announced that the Fed overtly propped the market. This year he
announced that the European bank collapses will be accompanied by
a "...spiral type collapse of the equity markets, probably with
prices approaching the March 2009 lows" [26].
Dylan Ratigan,
CNBC. Dylan is the only mainstream network guy willing to call
out the liars and felons and crooks (oh my) for their misdeeds [27].
I think he is currently casting for the role of Howard Beale in
the sequel to Network.
Paul B.
Farrell, Marketwatch and former Morgan Stanley. Paul is the
real deal, the original Colonel Kurtz, Paul Craig Roberts's twin
separated at birth. He has morphed from mainstream Wall Street guy
to a character out of Road
Warrior. His writings at Marketwatch are not for the feint
of heart [28].
David Rosenberg,
Gluskin Sheff and ex-Merrill Lynch. As one of the big-gun economists
on Wall Street, "Rosie's" casual claims that we are currently in
the middle of another Depression are provocative [29].
Larry Lindsey,
former Federal Reserve Governor. In a recent interview on CNBC,
Larry broke from the script when he noted that the US debt problem
places us "about three years behind Italy" in the race to economic
and monetary collapse [30].
(I also remember his ramblings in Fed minutes from years ago muttering
about Greenspan's screwy thinking with phrases like "we shall see".)
Niall Ferguson,
Harvard's market historian and author of Ascent of Money.
Niall warns of the coming collapse of the American Empire using
vivid Thomas Cole metaphors [31].
He also warns that British Empire analogies an interminable
slide into endless tea parties is optimistic, instead preferring
a short-duration collapse as often happens in metastable systems.
Kenneth
Rogoff, Harvard economist and author of This Time It's Different.
As the world's most well known expert on sovereign defaults, one
must pause when Professor Rogoff questions the durability of capitalism
[32].
David Stockman,
Reagan's Director of Office and Budget Management. As Reagan's
wunder kid and current Wall Street insider, David witnessed the
entire American boom. He now tells an altogether different story
of debt and degradation [33].
Jim Quinn,
TheBurningPlatform.com and asset manager. Jim is a militant
predictor of societal unrest and the onset of a crisis phase and
proponent of Strauss and Howe's thesis in The
Fourth Turning. (My review of the book is there [34]).
Paul Craig
Roberts, Former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under Ronald
Reagan. (See Paul B. Farrell.) This Paul has been writing of
the decline in the American Empire for years [35].
Jeremy Grantham,
Founder of GMO. Jeremy, one of the white-haired visionaries
with $150 billion under management, sees a host of problems, including
low equity prices and dire resource shortages. His resource analyses
are must reads [16].
Ray Dalio,
Founder and CEO of Bridgewater Associates. The camera shy manager
of one of the largest hedge funds in the world painted a particularly
bleak picture for Charlie Rose [36].
Chris Whalen,
managing director of Institutional Risk Analytics and author of
inflation. Chris is a brilliant credit and bank analyst.
He suggests both privately and publicly that we may be setting up
for a pan-European armed conflict [37].
Felix Zulauf,
participant at the elite Barron’s Round Table. Felix sees 2012
ushering in multiple departures from the Euro, civil unrest, possible
revolutionary behavior, and excessive money printing, all described
in a King World News interview [38].
The Durden
Octuplets, Zero Hedge. Another hat tip to the multiple personalities
at Zero Hedge. These guys are miles ahead of the mainstream media,
offering a unique window into the world of finance and politics
a must-track site for all [39].
James Howard
Kunstler, author and peak oil theorist. Jim is a prolific author
with an eye on resource depletion and societal decay [40].
With remarkable dexterity and unique irreverence, he has wrapped
his ample brain around the financial consequences.
The e-Trade
Baby. In a sea of talking Bernank Bears and Hitler parodies,
I found this e-Trade Baby (spoof) to be particularly poignant [41].
The Constitution
and the Fourth Estate
I have
a right, even a duty, to resist, with violence or civil disobedience.
You should pray I choose the latter.
~ The
Great Debaters
Government
is a living, breathing organism that exists to perpetuate itself.
There is nothing that says evolution must create a pleasing government
better suited to individual liberties. History paints an altogether
different picture. Possibly the single largest selection pressure
is money. It has always bought political favor. When our government
was a few percent of GDP and the industrialists were buying favors
while building a nation, government had little power to wield. When
money commandeers the machinery of a huge government, however, you
have a monstrously expensive and intractable problem.
We should be
particularly nervous as money commandeers the press. The media is
a critical mechanism by which we transmit freedom of speech: it
is an essential tool of a democracy. Mainstream media has collapsed
like a dream sequence in Inception.
Fox News gets a disproportionate share of the blame. The
blogosphere discovered that Roger Ailes's formulated his plan for
Fox News in the 1970's. It sounds very Orwellian but so what?
Different news agencies are privately owned and, consequently, have
different angles. The problem I see is that they all appear
to be captured. With a remarkable regularity, The Daily Show
includes montages in which the different news anchors parrot identical
talking points. A severe affliction that first appeared during the
2008 presidential election Ron Paul Blindness continues
unabated. He's rocking in Iowa some claim he's leading at
this moment but the press want no part of it. Both he and
Howard Dean do not fit somebody's image of a viable candidate. Only
journalists with editorial control seem to provide a fair treatment.
I find credible news comes from some of the most unlikely sources:
Russia Today, Al Jazeera, Asia Times, the London-based
Telegraph, Zero Hedge, Rolling Stone, Vanity
Fair, and, of course, The Daily Show. That's pathetic.
Thank God for the internet.
At a more micro
level, a number of stories caught my libertarian eye and rubbed
some nerves raw:
(1) A number
of us read former money manager Martin Armstrong's monetary missives
hand published from jail. He was freed this year. Martin was held
for a contempt of court charge for 7 years, 5.5 years beyond the
legal limit. As he was about to be sprung free, he was finally charged
with the original crime (which he seems to have been guilty of)
and incarcerated for another 4 years. I would have dismissed the
details as internet legend if it had not been told by Pulitzer Prize
winning journalist Gretchen Morgenson [42].
(2) A wingnut
named Bernard von NotHaus was arrested in 2009 and his assets confiscated
because he dared to mint silver coins and recommended people use
them for legal tender. This was not counterfeiting, only competition...but
not anymore. He was convicted and faces up to 15 years in prison
[43]. Utah and several other states, however, have picked up and
advanced the ball by passing precious metal legal tender laws. I
believe there are significant tax benefits (no gains on inflationary
appreciation) when using gold as legal tender, which causes angst
in the Halls of Power.
(3) Sergey
Aleynikov was given an eight year sentence for stealing software
that netted him precisely $0 [44]. His 2009 arrest within hours
after the theft must have set a record for the FBI. The real crime
was heinous: he stole the software from Goldman. At his arraignment,
Goldman's attorney requested Sergey be held without bail, asserting
that he could "use the software to manipulate markets." That was
a world record for the fastest confession from a non-defendant.
(4) Spyware
showed up in the Nasdaq to monitor trades. There have been no indictments;
it's all just Wall Street hijinks (or somebody is Too Big to
Jail.)
(5) The highest
court in Indiana ruled that a guy could not defend himself against
a forced, warrantless entry into his house. How does one distinguish
the authorities from the criminals?
(6) JP Morgan
donated $4.6 million to the police department in NYC just as the
Wall Street protests picked up speed. They are taking cues from
Roman emperors who would immediately bribe the Praetorian Guard
to insure allegiance.
(7) Louisiana
banned cash transactions for used goods. If you remove cash from
the system, every transaction will go through banks mandatorily.
I'm sure they'll keep the fees low (or not). All snickering aside:
Cash is a civil liberty. It was protected in metallic form
under the constitution until 1933, at which point the Supreme Court
decided restricting the money supply infringed upon the civil liberties
of the money printers.
(8) The Senate
passed a law by a vote of 91:9 to allow US citizens to be detained
indefinitely without trial if they are suspected to be involved
in terrorist activities. The House passed it subsequently. Let me
be blunt here: the perpetrators of this law are treasonous. They
should be tried with full access to the courts. If you lock me up
for saying this, you had best throw away the key. Jefferson was
credited with the following:
The tree
of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood
of patriots and tyrants.
I am well aware
that fertilizing the tree of liberty is not a resume-boosting career
path and not easy for us old guys.
Where to
From Here?
Never
in the history of the world has there been a situation so bad
that the government can’t make it worse.
~ Henry
Morganthau Jr., 1939
We have a massive
global debt problem that will take years to unwind. Some think it
is a zero-sum game, but I disagree. The World is blanketed with
people fully aware of what has been promised to them but oblivious
to their share of the tab. The average tax payer in the US, for
example, is unaware that they owe $30,000 simply to pay off the
state pension liabilities to some average tax payers. Larry Kotlikoff,
the undisputed World's expert on unfunded liabilities, estimates
there are $211 trillion [45]. This is approximately $2 million per
taxpayer. Do you think taxpayers have budgeted for that one?
Let's go off
shore. Billions of nouveau capitalists in the emerging world are
expecting the American Dream, but who will provide all those goods
and services? Americans? The problem is one of a massive misalignment
of perception and reality on a global scale. Years ago I wrote a
blog on this and believe that it still rings true [46]. This impending
deleveraging will occur in the face of massively aging populations
in the industrialized world. Demographic shifts are considered a
profound determinant of future economic activity.
The student
loan crisis may seem small when compared with these global issues,
but it's a big one for us. The current graduates are starting out
in a hole from which it will be difficult to exit. Discharging debts
seems distasteful, but so do decades of undischargeable debt with
ballooning penalties hanging over a large portion of a generation.
I worry, however, about the select group of really brainy folks
expected to change the world. Think Steve Jobs. Some will be forced
to work for corporations to get a paycheck and "three squares a
day" rather than forge off into the great unknown and create wealth
on monstrous scales. How many of those guys do you need to divert
down a more conservative path before you hurt the economy? Possibly
just a couple.
The democratization
of the markets provided a cornerstone to this malaise we face. We
replaced defined benefit plans with defined contribution plans,
which, in conjunction with the wildly popular index funds, moved
both the risk and oversight responsibility from titanic pension
managers to countless millions of individuals. This sounds great
so far, but there was nobody of any clout to watch the store. The
shareholders have, in practice, no say whatsoever over corporate
governance. This, I believe, is the root cause of the considerable
corporate malfeasance. CEOs began stacking corporate boards with
friends and boards appointed their friends as CEOs, all sharing
the one common belief that compensation, not returns to shareholders,
should be maximized. It opened the floodgates of greed and avarice.
I had occasion to present this blasphemous notion to John Bogle
the creator of index funds and he agreed. Knock me
over with a feather.
Wealth disparity
(for want of a better term) is at record levels. Of course, even
mention of that will cause those with wealth to fear an imminent
government-based wealth redistribution that can't possibly work
well (because government can't possibly work well.) There are pragmatic
issues independent of moral concerns, however, that should not be
dismissed. A well-oiled economy distributes wealth in ways that
may seem unfair to some but are efficient. I suspect there are hallmarks
characteristic distributions that are emblematic of
growing wealth and prosperity. A decades-long growing disparity
is probably not one of those hallmarks. The clock is ticking.
The populace
is beginning to wake up to this reality. Unrest began with one incredibly
flammable Tunisian. While on foreign shores, we gave it cute names
like “Arab Spring”. When unrest migrated to London it became decidedly
less refreshing. Social change has now washed up on US shores superficially
as Occupy Wall Street (OWS). At its inception, OWS appeared almost
comical, but somehow it simply would not go away despite efforts
to dismiss it by those attempting to preserve the status quo. Take
a volatile mix of young adults the demographic at the center
of all revolutionary social movements add a little pepper
spray, stir it with some Billy clubs, post videos on YouTube, and
you have the beginnings of social upheaval. OWS is said to be a
highly disjointed group with no common denominator or even well-formulated
gripes. I completely disagree. Admittedly, some are asking to be
relieved of pain from self-inflicted wounds, but there is one theme:
They all perceive that the system has become decidedly unfair. It's
not about equal opportunity; wealth and power necessarily accrue
disproportionate opportunities. We all work hard to give our kids
an edge. It is about a perceived absence of opportunity for
a growing segment of the population. It would be incorrect to do
a head count at street level and conclude the movement is small.
Millions are watching from the comfort of their homes and offices
in what I believe is silent support. This movement could get legs
as it percolates up through the social strata.

Figure
6
Strauss and
Howe's predicted Fourth Turning crisis phase may have arrived. But
there is already a nasty mood in the air. Watch the following soccer
video [47].
The hooligan runs around the field and, when grabbed by the police,
gets roughed up a little. The players and fans beat the tar out
of the police. Something has changed. Some think maybe it started
on 9/11. This may be true for Iraqis, but not for us because we
dusted ourselves off and moved along. Others say it was the financial
crisis. Closer but that is still not quite right. I think the societal
rollover occurred when the financial crisis arrived and abated,
yet absolutely nothing changed. We are in a big hole as illustrated
by US employment stats in Figure 6. If this recovery stalls, promptly
unplug all fans.
To reduce my
concerns to traders jargon, I look at the S&P 500 over decades
and ask: Is that a head and shoulders formation? Is that just an
equity index, or is there something more ominous lurking? One should
be concerned because traders know that a head and shoulders eventually
gives way to knees and toes (knees and toes).

Books
An educated
mind can entertain a thought without accepting it.
~ Aristotle
For those who
made it this far avid readers to say the least I'd
like to offer thoughts on what books shaped my thinking. Despite
an overdose on crisis books for over a decade (beginning with crisis
foreshadowing books), I succumbed to the temptation a few more times.
The following are the notable ones:
All
the Devils Are Here: The Hidden History of the Financial Crisis
by McLean and Nocera.
This is a particularly poignant slice through this interminable
crisis by describing the slow, methodical mutations that morphed
the key players the ratings agencies, mortgage brokers, investment
banks, politicians, and GSEs into destructive forces. It
offers a great view of the mortgage world. McLean and Nocera deftly
illustrate how any barrier can be removed or corrupted given enough
political influence, financial resources, and persistence. One also
realizes, however, that regulation and enforcement would be like
enforcing drug laws at Woodstock.
Fooling
Some of the People All of the Time by David Einhorn.
After an hour meeting with the author, I read this 2008-vintage
book to understand the inscrutable guy and was blessed with much
more. Einhorn tells a horrifying tale of a multi-year effort to
short Allied Capital, a highly corrupt financial institution. The
complete and utter failure of the system to cleanse this cancer
reveals the corruption within the SEC, politics, the press, and
even the Small Business Administration. The take home message for
me was that Markopoulos was defenseless against Bernie Madoff and
the SEC.
The
Fourth Turning by Strauss and Howe.
This 1996 cult favorite discusses Kondratiev-like generational cycles
and predicted the onset of a protracted (several decade) cathartic
crisis a so-called fourth turning coming in...wait
for it...2005-10. Although the social science may be a little soggy,
their logic seemed secure and their predictions about the arrival
of the crisis phase proved hauntingly prescient.
Currency
Wars by James Rickards.
This treatise describing chaos in the currency markets arrived on
the bookshelves just as tremors shook Europe's foundations, fiat
currencies came under fire, and central bankers furiously fought
to debase their currencies. The book may serve as a roadmap going
forward. He describes the growing sense that we are working toward
some variant of the gold standard...the hard way. Excellent timing,
Jim. The only part of his book I had a gripe with was about SDRs
(special drawing rights). Jim makes a case for SDRs in the global
currency system of the future. Through the eyes of an amateur, SDRs
look like an über fiat currency of some New World Order. They could
name this currency "the crock.”
The
Collapse of Complex Societies by Joseph Tainter.
As an anthropologist Tainter takes a look at several complex societies
that collapsed (underwent marked simplification). It has a similar
feel to Jared Diamond’s Collapse but is more scholarly. Hat
tip to Rickards for recommending this one.
Inflated:
How Money and Debt Built the American Dream by Chris Whalen.
Despite the title, Whalen describes the monetary and fiscal history
of the United States. It is a very nice, admittedly typo-rich, treatise
of the slow march to the dollar’s current status as the reserve
currency. I inferred that reserve currency status is a suicide mission.
I followed up on this point with Chris but wasn't sure I got the
answer.
Endgame:
The End of the Debt Supercycle and How It Changes Everything
by John Mauldin.
John’s 2004 book, Bull’s-eye Investing, described in lurid
detail why we were headed for trouble. My only criticism was that
he said markets would get so crazy that we would all need hedge
fund managers, whereas I thought investors would simply take cover.
In Endgame, he paints a similarly vivid picture of how we
are now completely toast. He dredges up every ounce of his ample
optimism to describe admittedly ugly paths out of the mess. Sorry
John, but your critique was way too convincing; we’re toast.
Boomerang:
Travels in the New Third World by Michael Lewis.
Lewis returns to his style exemplified in Liar’s Poker with
hysterical descriptions of how those zany Europeans have managed
to completely self destruct (suicide by two shots to the head).
Some will recognize content from articles written in Vanity Fair.
Lewis is a hoot.
Unbroken:
A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption
by Lauren Hillenbrand.
This has nothing to do with markets but is brilliant. Hillenbrand
describes the truly extraordinary progression of Louis Zamperini
from directionless hooligan to world-class distance runner, WWII
bombardier, world-record holder of survival in a rubber raft (47
days), Japanese POW under the “tutelage” of the 18th ranked Japanese
war criminal, and a lifetime of salvation and healing. It’s gripping.
For those with
a particularly cynical view of the American Dream, you might try
the writings of octogenarian Peter Dale Scott of Berkeley. As a
youngster, he began studying drug cartels, only to discover nefarious
influences by Western powers. (Recall the BCCI scandal?) His writings
about Deep Politics, the pipes and infrastructure embedded deeply
beneath the familiar political structures, are scholarly, thoroughly
referenced, void of hyperbole, and terrifying to those with an Aristotelian
ability to entertain disturbing ideas. I have just begun American
War Machine. For those who call this "conspiracy theory" with
derision in your voice, you betcha. Trillions of dollars and the
quest for resources would never find a way to corrupt the system
(head slap), and building 7 fell due to fire [48].
Acknowledgement
I have had
the pleasure of exchanging ideas with money and hedge fund managers,
academic and Wall Street economists, journalists, authors, bloggers,
geologists, peak oil theorists, Federal regulators and TARP overseers,
central bankers, and historians, some of whom are mentioned above,
and many in the fever swamps called chatboards. I am exceedingly
grateful.
January
2, 2012
David B.
Collum [send him mail] is
a professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Cornell University.
In addition to his academic interests, Dave authors an annual macroeconomic
assessment.
Copyright
© 2012 Chris
Martenson
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