Lessons From Black Monday
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: Inflation:
Washington Is Blind to Main Street's Biggest Concern
25 years ago, on
another Monday in late October, the financial world seemed to disintegrate
in a heartbeat. Though the 205 point drop in the Dow last Friday
(the technical anniversary of the '87 Crash) was somewhat reminiscent
of its 108-point drop on Friday, October 16, 1987, the real action
in '87 was on the Monday that followed. And while this Monday is
not nearly as black, it is important that we use the opportunity
to recall the circumstances that nearly sent the stock market into
cardiac arrest.
While there
were technical reasons that allowed the snowball to gather so much
mass, it was major economic problems that started it rolling. Those
issues remain to this day, but have grown much, much larger. But
while they terrified the market 25 years ago, they don't rate a
second look today. Whether investors have gotten wise, or merely
oblivious, is the question we should be asking.
Though most
simply remember the 1987 Crash as one panicked selling day, Black
Monday was just the largest drop in a string of bad days. On the
Wednesday before, the Dow sold off 95 points (then a record) and
dropped another 58 points on the Thursday. On Friday the selling
got worse, with the Dow setting another record with a 108 point
drop. After thinking about it over the weekend, investors decided
to preserve what remained of their gains by selling on Monday. Unfortunately,
everyone got the same idea at the same time.
It is true
that the Crash was in some ways a technical phenomenon. As of August
of 1987, stocks had surged 75% from January 1986, and 40% from January
1987. After such an upswing, it was inevitable that investors were
on edge. Rather than taking profits, many on Wall Street instead
hedged their positions using the new, and largely untested, trading
programs that were designed to put a floor under losses if the markets
turned south. But when the selling came in waves, the machines went
into overdrive. Selling begat selling and an automated rout ensued.
When the dust settled, the Dow was down 22% in a single day.
If that was
all there was to the story, we would be left with a neat cautionary
tale about the folly of placing too much faith in machines. But
that is a distracting sideshow. In truth, the market was spooked
by concerns over international trade and government debt, which
then became known as the "twin deficits." After widening earlier
in the 80's, investors had hoped that these gaps would come under
control. But as Ronald Reagan's second term wore on, those hopes
faded.
From 1982 to
1986, the U.S. trade deficit had expanded 475%from $24 billion to
$138 billion. Most economists blamed the trend on the dollar gains
in the early 1980's, which had apparently made U.S. products uncompetitive.
As it was assumed that a weakened dollar would solve the problem,
in 1985 the leading western democracies and Japan announced the
Plaza Accords to systematically push down the dollar against the
Japanese yen and the Deutsche mark. By 1987, the plan had "succeeded"
devaluing the dollar 51% against the yen. But by the second half
of that year it became apparent that the Plaza Accord had failed
in its real mission to cut down on the U.S. trade deficit. Despite
the plunging dollar, the deficit expanded that year by another 10%
to $152 billion.
At around that
time, the U.S. government budget deficits also became a major concern.
Everyone remembers Ronald Reagan as a small government champion,
but many conveniently forget that he presided over a significant
expansion in government spending. Federal deficits rose 199% from
1980 ($74 billion) to 1986 ($221 billion). Although the deficit
came down to $150 billion in 1987, many were frustrated that it
remained stubbornly high by historic standards.
As early as
August of 1987, concern over the twin deficits, which together accounted
for 6.4% of the nation's $4.76 trillion GDP became critical. Given
the prior run up in stocks, this was enough to convince many investors
to head towards the exits. Before Black Monday (October 19), the
Dow had already declined 18% from its August peak.
When we look
back at those events from the current perspective, it almost seems
comical. Government deficits now approach $1.5 trillion annually
and annual trade deficits exceed $500 billion. Today's twin deficits
now add up to more than 13% of current GDP (twice the level of 1987).
But today's investors are largely untroubled. Oftentimes news of
a falling dollar and wider deficits will spark a stock rally, and
the issues barely rate a mention in a presidential debate.
Are investors
today simply more sophisticated than they were then? Have they lost
an irrational fear of deficits? To the contrary, I believe that
we have arrived at a point where money printing and government stimulus
has replaced manufacturing and private sector productivity as the
foundation of our economy (see my lead commentary in the October
2012 edition of the Euro
Pacific Global Investor Newsletter for more on this). As a result,
most investors are now blind to the dangers of deficits. But that
does not mean that they don't exist.
When America's
creditors wake up, particularly those foreign governments now shouldering
the lion's share of the burden, concerns over our twin deficits
will return with a vengeance. As the problems now loom larger than
ever, so too will the economic and market implications when the
issues come to a head. Interest rates will surge and the dollar
will fall. But the U.S. economy is not nearly as well equipped as
in 1987 to withstand the stresses. Given the relative size of our
imbalances, the manner in which they are being financed, and the
diminished state of our manufacturing sector, higher interest rates
and a weaker dollar will exact a much greater toll.
Despite this,
I do not believe that the stock market is as vulnerable to another
Black Monday. With the Federal Reserve so committed to its current
course of quantitative easing, it seems to me unlikely that they
will allow such a steep one-day drop. Also, with bond yields so
low, domestic investors are currently presented with fewer attractive
options. If anything, the next Black Monday is more likely to occur
in the currency and/or bond markets, with safe haven flows moving
into gold not treasuries.
October
24, 2012
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is The
Real Crash: America's Coming Bankruptcy, How to Save Yourself and
Your Country.
Copyright
© 2012 Euro Pacific Capital
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