Thursday, November 27, 2008

Depressions caused by resource misallocations

On reading the first few pages of Garet Garrett's "The Bubble That Broke the World" (1931), available at
http://www.mises.org/store/Bubble-That-Broke-the-World-The-P437.aspx
or full text in .pdf format at:
http://www.mises.org/books/bubbleworld.pdf

it occurs to me that the primary cause of the three greatest depressions (beginning in 1873, 1929 and 2007) are all the same - a misallocation of resources due to a dramatically more efficient producer of essential goods coming on line.

In 1873, America's midwest farming, thanks to railroads and steam ships, could deliver food to Europe more economically than ever before. Leading up to 1929, America's industrial capacity delivered credit and goods to Europe more economically than ever before. Leading up to 2008, the far west (Japan, Korea and most recently China) are delivering manufactured goods to Europe and America more economically than ever before. In each case the new low cost producer, in order to have a customer able to consume all they produce, sells on credit.

This results in a world economy awash in too easily gotten capital, that promotes an escalation of greed and corruption and pyramiding financial schemes, until the bubble collapses into a depression. After a period of time, that depression not having really destroyed the broken structures, but rather just left them sputtering and broken, leads to a great war, which destroys the broken and gives birth to a new structure.

Wealth that is not disciplined by those who have a stake in it turns sour. Nations, as children, can be spoiled rotten.

As Mises studies the mechanisms by which excess money turns sour, so also must we study the means by which excess productive capacity turns sour.

Monday, November 24, 2008

A Wolf Pack runs our money.

[Originally posted on iTulip.com, to describe the nature of the Money Masters, aka Banksters.]

I suspect that a key organizing element of the Money Masters (and other such power brokers) is the tribe, the family (as in the Mafia), the team, the wolf pack, ...

A small group of like minded men, long used to working together and sharing much common background and viewpoints, but with flexible boundaries as people come and go over time and a definite sense of who is similar minded and can be trusted.

Within that group, some will have more power than others, and if push comes to shove, one man likely makes the call. But these are strong men, used to being in charge of major organizations and imposing their will. They are not underling staff who have to check with their Boss on every detail. There appears to be some definite picking and choosing of good future prospects, grooming and facilitating their development up the ranks.

Consider for example Timothy Geithner, who is Obama's choice for Secretary of Treasury, to replace Hank Paulson. Quoting from The Weekly Report by Mick P:
What of the US Treasury Secretary nominee Mr Geithner? Currently serving as the 9th President of the New York Fed, has he come from a background that would bring change? After he finished an MA in Failed Keynesian based International Economics he went to work for Henry "King maker" Kissinger at Kissinger and Associates in Washington, followed by a stint at the US Treasury, culminating as Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs until 2002.

He then moved onto the Council on Foreign Relations joining the International Economics department before being appointed to his current role in 2003, becoming the Vice Chairman of the Federal Open Market Committee as well as the President of the New York Fed. He is also the Chairman of the committee on Payment and Settlement Systems with the Bank for International Settlements.

Not bad for a man who is only 47 years old. He's one of the trusted Money Masters, or as they seem to be called here at iTulip, the Banksters.

Geithner also played important roles in the takeover of Bear Stearns by JPMorgan, and in the decision to let Lehman Brothers collapse. I suspect that these two events accelerated the Panic of 2008, which in turn improved Obama's victory margin. However my further tin foil hat "old fart republican rumblings" (to borrow friendly_jacek's nice turn of phrase to describe another post of mine) on that turn of events would be inappropriate to discuss in this forum.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

The debt behind our money became a Fuel-Air Explosive

[Originally posted on iTulip.com, in response to someone asking "Where will all the capital flight go to?" ]

Our capital is debt-based money, which is a gas, not a liquid. That is, it compresses and expands dramatically.

Debt based money monetizes future income streams, such as the tax collections of a government or the mortgage payments of a home "owner." When those income streams seem to be increasing, then the quantity of "money" expands. This happens when individuals, corporations and governments increase their debt.

When moreover we allow serious degradations in the quality of those monetized income streams (such as NINJA home loans - "no income, no job, no assets"), then the quantity of this "money" expands further and faster.

This expansion is inflationary. Ordinarily, in a closed economic system with honest and competent financial leaders, this inflation would be recognized as such and could be resisted.

But thanks to the Far East coming on line, taking up the manufacturing of the worlds goods with much cheaper labor over the last 25 years, and thanks to using a corrupted Consumer Price Index rather than a measure of all debt paper (and derivatives and swaps and other crap thereon) to guide our Federal Reserve Open Market operations (which attempt to throttle the creation of some of this debt based money), our Illustrious Financial Leaders missed seeing (or refused to see?) that inflation. They watched California housing prices double, and Wal-Mart prices halve, and thought we needed more fiat paper. Meanwhile, they turned a blind eye to the massive, stunning, outlandish, outrageous growth in derivatives and swaps and secularized debt piled in a Grand Pyramid on top of these NINJA mortgages. We were no longer just monetizing real income streams and fantasy income streams, but we were also monetizing the continuation of falling interest rates, rising asset prices, falling dollar exchange rates, stable economies and low debt default rates.

It resembles how one sets off a Fuel-Air Explosive [FAE]. Disperse an air cloud of fuel and ignite it.

So my opening analogy of a compressing gas is the wrong analogy. This is not merely an expansion and contraction of a compressible substance, but the transformation of liquid petrol into gaseous petrol into burnt carbon dust.

The final gas cloud dispersal occurred during roughly the years 2002 to 2007. The cloud has now ignited. Wealth is being burnt at a horrific pace, world wide, with no end in near sight.

That's where your nice liquid capital is going. Ouch.

The iTulip position - the Dollar goes Poom

[Originally posted on iTulip.com as a summary statement of the iTulip position.]

We have built a Great Inverted Pyramid of financial "wealth".

Right now, the largest floors, near the top, constructed from the leveraged debt of individuals, businesses and local governments, are in raging flames. People are racing from those floors to the next floors down, constructed from the debt of sovereign nations. This confuses our understanding, for it is the rent on these "soverign debt" floors (especially the U.S. Treasury floor) which backs the currency we use as the metric (the 'unit') of wealth on most of the other floors. Suddenly space on the "soverign debt" floors has become valuable, lowering the Dollar denominated pricing of most everything else. This pricing distortion will last only as long as the raging fires of financial collapse on the higher floors dominate the pricing.

It is likely that the raging fires of this deflating wealth will not stop at the floors of private debt, but rather continue down, into the "soverign debt" floors. I don't expect total destruction of the Dollar or of other sovereign currencies around the world. I do expect alot of FIRE damage, and some rebuilding using a wider mix of local and regional currencies based on various sovereign, regional (e.g. Euro), and IMF debt.

Of late, our esteemed American financial leaders have been building extensions to the Fire Break, in an effort to stop the raging flames before they destroy the Banks of their favored colleagues (of course, their sole motive is to protect the wealth of the banks customers .) Unfortunately, they build weak structures using paper thin woods, in bizarre formations. This so called Fire Break should burn nicely, if one is alert to watch it, for it could burn very very fast.

In the previous century, as America inflated the Mighty Dollar to its current position as the world's dominant "unit" (its reserve currency) of financial measurement, it first severed the domestic connections with the previous "unit" (gold) under FDR, and then later severed the international connections between the Dollar and gold, under Nixon.

As the Mighty Dollar now loses its esteemed status as the world's only reserve currency, we will work in reverse order. First the international status of the Dollar will fallback, later the domestic.

Already we are seeing the volume of international trade of both commodities and finished goods collapsing. Soon the global demand for U.S. Dollars and short term T-Bills from panicing deleveraging hedge funds and banks will slacken. Foreigners will scorn America's Golden Treasuries. We're talking the worlds most liquid, most watched markets here. The action will likely not be that of a gentle spring rain, but rather more like that of Colliding Worlds.

Americans will import less, and pay more. The laborers, diggers and farmers elsewhere in the world will lose their best customer (and worst "investment" .) Treasuries will partially default by having their terms unilaterally restated or just by having their prices fall (yields rise) to levels not seen since Paul Volcker. Sensible American investors are already abandoning long Treasuries.

Domestically, within America's borders, the Dollar will remain the undisputed currency. It probably will not massively collapse in the manner seen in the German Wiemar Republic (3 billion marks for a pound of bread in November 1923) or currently in Zimbabwhe. The Dollar has too much inertia, is too deeply embedded into the large American economy, for such hyperinflation to be a near term risk. Nor do I expect to be prying loose my gold teeth to bribe the border guard to allow my passage to Canada or Mexico.

Nor am I of the school that if we just abandoned fiat paper currency and fractional reserve banking, returning to "real" money that "is no one's liability" and that "has never gone to zero value", then all would be well. The Romans mucked up their metal currency just as thoroughly as us Americans are mucking up our debt-based currency. I invest in Gold neither as a short term trade (though I do what I can to time my gold trading to my advantage) nor as an ultimate survival currency, along side my guns, whiskey and cans of survival food. Rather I invest in Gold as an insurance policy, hedging unforseeable failures of my other investments. At times, gold has also been a nice medium term investment, as various asset classes rotate in and out of favor.

Though the Dollar will not die, it will once again grow weaker. Domestic American inflationary price increases, caused by the rising Dollar denominated prices of the imports on which America is now so dependent, will seep through American society.This will lower the value of pensions, savings and Social Security payments. This will lower the standard of living of most Americans. Stubborn and widespread unemployment of millions of former workers in various financial, service, real estate, construction, automobile, and other businesses will further lower the American standard of living. Many Americans are going to have to learn the hard way the merits of downsizing and frugal living and hard work at unpleasant labor.

I doubt that Americans will be receiving many sympathy cards from the rest of the world in the coming few years. The rest of the world will have their own burdens to bear,and the opportunities for blame are abundant and in some cases well deserved.

Advancing senility has so weakened the minds of the few remaining members of The Greatest Generation of Americans that they will let this new state of the worlds affairs pass with little complaint. They were never ones to beg for sympathy in any case. If any of them who are still left with clear minds are reading here today, I say a heartfelt Thanks.