The Last Dead Bull on Wall Street
By Mike Whitney
11/11/07 "ICH" --- - Whew! What a week for
the stock market. On Wednesday the market
took a 360 point nosedive followed, two days
later, by a 220 point belly-flop. By the
time it was over, the trading pits looked
more like a sausage-packing plant than the
world’s financial epicenter. After the bell,
downcast traders could be seen tiptoeing
through the carnage on their way to the
local liquor store to load up on "Stoly" and
boxes of Franzia---anything that would
steady their nerves and put the week behind
them.
Everyone could see it coming; the
train-wreck. It was mostly carry-over from
the night before when Asian stocks took a
thumping on reports of slower growth in the
US and growing troubles in the credit
markets. That put the first domino in
motion. Fed chief Bernanke’s announcement
that the
economy will face “a sharp slowdown from the
housing market's contraction” and an
“inflationary surge from sharply higher oil
prices and the weaker dollar”, didn’t help
either. His remarks triggered a blow-off in
the currency markets while equities were
frog-marched to the chopping-block.
The Shanghai market took the worst hit
dropping nearly 5% before the trading-day
ended. Taiwan and Hong Kong followed suit,
sliding 3.9% and 3.2% respectively. Share
prices in Japan fell 2%. The next morning,
Wall Street crashed. It was a massacre.
This is a bear market now. The last bull was
dragged from the Street on Friday with a
harpoon in its chest.
The subprime contagion has now spread
beyond the US and Europe to markets in the
Far East. No one is fooled by Bernanke’s
sunny predictions that the economy will
bounce back next year with a strong showing
in the first quarter. That’s baloney and
everyone knows it. The economy has stumbled
down the elevator shaft and is just waiting
to hit bottom. Consumer confidence is
flagging, housing is falling, foreign
capital is fleeing, and the greenback is one
flush away from the sewage-treatment plant.
Bernanke’s soothing bromides are
meaningless.
"I don't see any significant change in
the broad holdings of dollars around the
world. Dollars remain the dominant reserve
asset and I expect that to continue to be
the case," Bernanke said to the
Congressional Economic Committee.
Really? So why is the greenback
plummeting if people aren’t dumping it, Ben?
What an absurd comment. The dollar has lost
63% against the euro and dropped to record
lows against a basket of world currencies.
Foreign central banks and investors have
been ditching it as fast as they can before
it loses more value. The dollar’s tumble has
been the most dazzling currency-flameout in
modern times and Bernanke is acting like
he’s still asleep at the switch. It’s
madness.
The greenback is getting clobbered by the
Fed’s "low-interest" snake oil and the
gargantuan current account deficit. If
Bernanke clips rates again to bail out the
stock market, the dollar will slip into
irreversible respiratory failure. Food and
oil prices will shoot to the moon overnight
and the remains of the greenback will be
carted off to the nearest boneyard.
September’s trade deficit was another
blow to the waning dollar. The Census
Bureau reported on Friday that the deficit
clocked in at $56.5 billion. That’s $684
billion per annum! Bush has been crowing
about the “shrinking deficit”, but the
numbers are nothing to boast about. We’re
still borrowing more than we’re producing.
We’re still living beyond our means. The
lower numbers just reflect the decline in
home construction which is import-intensive.
The fact is, we’re addicted to debt-fueled
consumption and forgotten that, eventually,
the trillions that we’ve borrowed from
foreign creditors, will have to be repaid.
If the dollar is replaced as the world’s
reserve currency, then we’ll have to pay
back $9 trillion of outstanding debt. We
might as well hang out the “Foreclosed” sign
right now and get fitted for Chinese
workers-suits.
This is from Bloomberg News:
“As the dollar tumbles, concern is
growing that its weakness may augur the end
of the U.S. currency's 62-year reign as the
world's specie of choice for trade,
financial transactions and central-bank
reserves…..The dollar owes its position as
the world's premier international currency
to its status as a haven during times of
turmoil, the absence of a suitable rival,
weak domestic demand in other countries and
plain old inertia. Geopolitics also play a
role.”
Nonsense. Who believes this rubbish? The
dollar is the so-called “international
currency” because the Federal Reserve and
its well-heeled patrons are the directors of
the US-Euro-Japan banking cabal which is at
the center of the global Fiat money scam.
There’s nothing more to it than that. Notice
the recent “unilateral” clamp-down on Iran
by the US-led banking syndicate. The action
was initiated without UN approval for the
simple reason that the UN, the World Bank,
the IMF, the WTO and thousands of NGOs are
just more of the Central Banks’ prime
properties. Don’t expect the father to ask
the child for permission to punish one of
his errant children. The banks are the one’s
who really call the shots and—behind the
curtain of feigned respectability---they are
the driving force behind the endless wars.
The Fed’s plan to “devalue” our way to
prosperity appears to have hit a few
ill-placed speed-bumps. The stock market is
hanging by a thread and consumer confidence
is at its lowest ebb since the start of the
Iraq War. The falling dollar is expected to
put a damper on Christmas spending and knock
equities for a loop. That can’t be good for
economy---especially when 72% of GDP comes
from consumer spending.
We’ve already begun to see the telltale
signs that the consumer is loosing ground
and about to slip into a debt-induced coma.
According to data from the University of
Michigan:
“Consumer confidence reached its lowest
level in more than two years this month amid
concerns over record-high oil prices,
continued trouble in the housing market and
higher inflation…Although consumer attitudes
deteriorated across the board, the
substantial drop in expectations contributed
heavily to the sizeable decline in the
overall index.”
The average working stiff doesn’t put any
stock in Bernanke’s palavering. He sees
what’s going on for himself every time he
pulls up to the gas pump or goes the grocery
store. He doesn’t need the University of
Michigan to tell him he’s getting screwed;
he knows it! The economy is sinking,
inflation is skyrocketing, and the country
is adrift. Every farthing in the public till
has been shoveled into a black hole in the
Middle East. Does Bernanke really think
working people don’t know that? Everyone
knows that. Everyone knows the economy is on
life-support; just like everyone knows the
country is collapsing from mismanagement.
Even the flag-waving, war-mongering maniacs
on the Wall Street Journal’s op-ed page are
starting to shutter from the avalanche of
bad news. They see what’s going on and
they’re scared---scared sh**less.
Unfortunately, the sudden shift in
consumer sentiment is the hurting retailers
who depend on Christmas to carry them
through the year. We’ve already seen the
sluggishness in housing and auto sales. Now
it’s showing up in retail. Abercrombie,
American Eagle, Ann Taylor, Chicos, Dillards,
The Gap and Nordstrom are all reporting
sagging sales. Walmart, Lowes and the other
big-box stores are lowering their
projections as well. It’s going to be a lean
Christmas.
The poor US consumer is finally maxed-out
and can’t tap into his home equity anymore
for presto-credit. He’s mortgaged “to the
hilt” and he’s already run up 6 or 7 credit
cards to their limit. In fact, credit card
debt is a growing concern for the banks,
too.
The commercial banks are the victims’ of
their own success. After years of seductive
promotions and saturation mailings the
credit card industry is at its zenith
leaving consumers with a staggering bill of
nearly $1 trillion. ($915 billion) More and
more customers are finding themselves unable
to make even minimum payments on their
balances and defaults are piling up at a
record pace. This is the next phase of the
subprime fiasco and it has the potential to
be nearly as disruptive as the housing
meltdown. The problem is complex, too. After
all, most credit card debt in the last 6
years has been “securitized” and passed on
to investors in the secondary market.
(pension funds, hedge funds etc.) That means
we can expect more tremors in the stock
market as corporate earnings go south after
credit card-backed bonds are downgraded.
It’s just more of the same “structured
finance” chicanery; debt stacked on debt,
until the whole edifice caves in.
It’s looking more and more like Reagan’s
“shining city on the hill” was erected on a
mountain of toxic debt. It’s a wonder it
hasn’t sunk already.
The country is headed for recession and
there’s nothing that Bernanke can do to stop
it. The only question is whether we’ll be
facing a colossal economy-busting meltdown
like 1929 or a milder 5 or 6-year slump.
That’s up to the Federal Reserve. If the Fed
chief decides to pit himself against the
falling markets by slashing rates and
destroying the currency; then we are likely
to be digging-out for years. But if Bernanke
steps aside, and lets the chips fall where
they may, then the pace of recovery will be
quicker.
Whatever choice he makes, there’s no
avoiding the inevitable downturn. The hammer
is poised to strike the anvil. The stock
market will fall, the over-extended banks
and hedge funds will collapse, and the
country will go into a protracted, economic
tailspin. That much is certain. Economic
fundamentals can only be shrugged off for so
long. When markets correct it's like a
tidal-surge that sweeps-away the deadwood of
bad bets and over-levered investments
leaving behind a broad-expanse of empty
beach.
Recession is a normal part of the
business cycle. It can’t be avoided. The
economy needs to unwind so debts can get
written off and businesses can retool for
the future. The upcoming recession is
shaping up to be worse than its
predecessors---a real doozey. The damage
caused by the Fed’s excessive credit has
been considerable. It’ll take years to mop
up the red ink and set the house aright. The
markets are in a shambles, investors have
been battered and confidence is gone.
Structured finance has been an unmitigated
disaster. It needs to be scrapped. We need a
new financial system for a new epoch; a
system that is heavily regulated and
supervised to discourage the crooks and
con-artists; a system that it maintains its
essential link to the real, productive
underlying economy and avoids the galaxy of
complex derivatives, “securitized”
liabilities, and opaque debt-instruments
that have brought on the present crisis; a
system that responds to the needs of working
people and takes into consideration the
looming problems of environmental
degradation, resource scarcity, and climate
change; a system that reinvests in
communities, education and
health-care rather than fattening the
bottom-line of corporate racketeers and
brandy-drooling elites. It’s time to remove
the rotten scaffolding and rebuild the whole
contraption brick by brick.
The system is broken. Maybe Greenspan did
us all a favor by blowing it up with his
“low interest” dynamite. Good riddance.