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For specific detailed analysis of the
Gold, USDollar, Treasury bonds, and inter-market dynamics
with the US Economy and Fed monetary policy, see instructions
for subscription to my newsletter research reports, which
include stock recommendations positioned to rise in the
commodity bull market. Articles in this series are promotional.
Many investors wonder what the consequence
is with a damaged compass for guidance in the economic seas.
Assets must be granted a premium benefit in return for risk
to capital. First, you see improper risk reward for bonds
against erosion of capital via price inflation, which is
much higher than regarded. Interest rates are not high enough,
surely not versus the higher than stated price inflation.
The most important component to a debt soaked USEconomy
is clearly borrowing costs. Second, debt service becomes
an inordinate burden to bear against the USEconomy, whose
strength is less adequate than regarded to handle higher
costs. Wages and savings are not high enough, surely not
versus the worse situation after proper adjustment for price
inflation. Productivity gains come from either more work
with similar total hours worked, or similar total work with
few workers. We have been seeing the fewer workers dynamic
too much lately, much less than reported and certainly less
than what the growing population requires. Third, cutting
off the process of worker wage increase gains when their
living expenses monotonously mount can force a higher number
of bankruptcies than expected. Households are under such
great strain. The US Federal Reserve insists on holding
firm on its heretical notion that wage gains cause price
inflation. Try focusing on money supply growth instead,
guys! The foundation of the USEconomy precariously rests
on the retail sector, where consumption occurs rather than
fixed business investment. This structural misalignment
is disastrous, despite the assurance given by economists.
Fourth, a false sense of security comes from noting that
consumer & retail spending stays steady, when a big
piece of that spending is devoted to increasingly expensive
gasoline. The central source of spendable funds in the USEconomy
has been home equity, a perilous condition. Its weakness
is simply difficult to lie about. Fifth, the appearance
of brisk new home sales (more and more looking doctored)
does not testify to strength in housing prices anymore.
Additions to supply exacerbate the supply & demand already
showing excess inventory. We cannot know truly whether housing
prices have fallen when an unsold house bears no specific
value, and inventory rises.
The US Federal Reserve monetary policy is
charged to set short-term interest rate targets, to authorize
liquidity influx & drain, to set bank reserve ratios
against loan portfolios. The Chairman and Fed Governors
need the best information. THEY DO NOT GET IT. Either they
operate under entirely different accurate competent worthwhile
statistical information from which to make their decisions,
OR ELSE they are at a distinct disadvantage from relying
upon faulty distorted inaccurate worthless statistics. They
USFed is at great risk to making a serious mistake here
and now. On top of the information risk, these bankers and
economists are badly trained, in accepting a debt-backed
currency and endorsing a debt-dependent economy.
By misjudging the dependence of credit, by misjudging even
whether the total size of transactions in goods & services
(Gross Domestic Product) is in retreat or stalling, the
USFed risks sending the USEconomy into a downward spiral.
Downward housing momentum is very difficult to halt. We
might have already passed that point. A mortgage bond crisis
is written in stone, without a doubt certain to occur. Underwater
homeowners go hand in hand with underwater mortgage portfolios.
The housing sector is the viral body which will infect the
bond market. Mortgage finance serves as the umbilical cord.
The upcoming crisis is unavoidable, even with VALID STATISTICS.
The US stock market (see SPX = S&P500)
has lost at least $1 trillion since its May peak. The Japanese
stock market (see Nikkei) has lost roughly $1 trillion since
its May peak. The collection of emerging stock markets (see
EEM) might have lost one quarter $1 trillion or more since
their May peak. Since 2001, the US housing stock has easily
lost $1 trillion since its peak in late 2004, with a second
$1 trillion mapped out. That is something in the neighborhood
of $3 trillion in evaporated capital, and hence lost purchasing
power, no longer available to the USEconomy. With bankruptcies
and home foreclosures on the rise, downward momentum is
here. We see evidence of asset deflation and debt deflation
before us. The USFed must halt rate hikes, must assure a
torrent of monetary liquidity, and must get the heck out
of the way.
THE TRUE USFED ROLE
Does the USFed see the same picture? Do they
even rely upon the same faulty statistics disseminated like
propaganda to the sheeple masses? Does the USFed use “double
booking” on their analytic side, with one set for
a bonafide snapshot of reality and another handed down from
USGovt agencies like promotional material? Methinks possibly
yes. In my always suspicious view,
both their ongoing methods and their prevailing motives
are very much to remain hidden. Tragically, the USFed does
not realize that the biggest problem, the biggest risk,
is the USFed itself. Ever since the US Federal Reserve
has denied the US Congress critical information, owed from
its contractual obligations, we have entered a new era.
What Fed Governors tell the public might differ markedly
from what they discuss in unofficial meetings. National
security has become an issue, since gold is missing from
our national treasure, and our USDollar currency is therefore
rendered vulnerable. It remains debatable whether the collection
of Fed Governors are influenced by external powerful figures.
We certainly know of the USFed failure in
its officially stated charter, to maintain stable prices
and to further maximum employment. These
stated directives are much akin to beauty pageant contestants
working toward world peace and the end to world hunger.
The perverse actual charter (the authentic world of practicality)
is a grand departure, many-fold, more like:
- to manage chronic systemic monetary inflation, our primary
surviving engine of supposed wealth generation, after the
tragic dispatch of the US manufacturing base and erosion
to the service sector
- to oversee the export of inflation in the form of debt
in order to protect the homeland from the direct ravages
of price inflation, instead to treat the USEconomy to imported
price deflation in indirect fashion
- to coordinate foreign central bank policy (e.g. EuroCB,
Bank of England, Bank of Japan, Bank of Canada, Bank of
Australia) so that the USDollar, crippled by dreadful fundamentals,
can benefit from a favorable interest rate differential
built into massive bond speculation
- to hold gigantic inventories of USTreasury Bonds on behalf
of foreign owners, whose accounts make unnecessary their
round-trip electronic voyages across the Pacific and Atlantic
oceans
- to direct periodic rescue efforts in financial markets,
from the Working Group for Financial Markets (a.k.a. Plunge
Protection Team) to the Fanny Mae bond laundering process,
using both new money and slush money
- to orchestrate the USDollar levitation with the collusion
of the gold cartel, which organizes raids and other suppression
tactics such as naked shorting and falsification of gold
bullion certificates
- to aid & abet in the deceitful recording of price
inflation as reflected in the fraudulent Treasury Investment
Protection Securities (TIPS)
- to engineer cycles of expansion and recession, as credit
is supplied then withdrawn, blaming it on the economic cycle,
when it is actually the credit cycle
- to confuse the heck out of US Congressional inquisitors
during sessions, marred by both bootlicking and reprimands,
even as the venerable role of monetary drug dealer is the
hidden agenda prime directive
- to command and control the corruption of the economics
educational process on a nationwide basis, which has led
to an entire generation of badly trained institutional economists
sitting atop a mushroom like toads, who now serve eagerly
as “yes men” sycophants confirming heretical
policy
BACKLASH OF STATISTICS
My ongoing theme has been corruption, distortion,
and rationalization of economic statistics to such an extreme
degree that a quantum shift exists from their fallacious
story to the world of reality. Worse,
the distortion is so great as to lead to heightened risk
for policy errors, as statistics are integral to the decision
making process. In order to sell a phony economic
story of robust strength, healthy productivity, tame inflation,
full employment, and deep pools of funds to perpetuate consumer
spending, radically falsified statistics must be engineered
and disseminated as so much propaganda. Hardly a shred of
truth lies in official statistics, especially those related
to price inflation and adjustments to price inflation. In
such a climate of deceit, it is impossible to have effective
monetary and economic policy when guided by faulty statistics.
Effective policy demands accurate information, reliable
future indicators, and competent forecasts. This is indisputable.
We do not have it. A series of crises is therefore highly
likely from policy errors made in succession. Gold bullion
and crude oil will benefit, as safe havens from a fractured
monetary system and inevitable snafus. Either breakdowns
or unstoppable price inflation will result. We must keep
ourselves protected.
PRICE INFLATION: The latest three months CPI
this spring have delivered a shock which will not go away.
The trend will surely continue. The officially published
index shows month over month increases in the CPI for March
April May June of (+0.6%, +0.9%, +0.5%, +0.2%) which points
to annualized price inflation of between 6% and 10%. Recall,
this index is heavily suppressed. Niceties aside, the statistics
now have begun to backfire from rising rental prices for
housing. As the housing market declines, as their residential
prices slide downward, rents have risen from simple supply
shortages on the rental side. The impact is direct, as rents
comprise between 35% and 40% in weight on the CPI statistical
calculation. This effect will surely intensify to a worse
degree. The effect on the bond market and stock market is
assured to cause problems, to lift long-term rates, and
to aid gold investment as an inflation hedge. As economic
slowdown becomes more clear, long-term rates will fall.
More volatility is assured. USFed reaction with more laxity,
some accommodation, and actual rate cuts will again lift
those long-term rates. Expecting such a reaction will lift
long-term rates. We have never escaped the land governed
by the motto “INFLATE OR DIE.”
The actual bonafide CPI is more like in the
7% to 8% range, perhaps a full 5% different. The Shadow
Statistics group estimates the true CPI is at least 3% higher
than reported. For a second independent measurement confirming
the infamous shadow group, see the graph below. Stephen
Church provided his detailed calculation of price inflation,
in “Real
Inflation” based upon monetary growth, population
increase, productivity improvements, and more. He used no
malarkey shell game hokus pokus nonsense bird-brained concoctions
typical of USGovt statistics. His work is excellent, original,
and convincing.
See my “Backfire
on Corrupted Price Index” from May2006, wherein
a review is given on corruption of the CPI. Three past articles
were featured, to reveal how the construction of the CPI
heavily pushes down the CPI during inflation ridden times,
how export of inflation actually used to keep the CPI figure
down when we correspondingly import deflation, and lastly,
how distortion of economic statistics actually puts at risk
policy making decisions.
ECONOMIC GROWTH: At the risk of being repetitive,
the US Gross Domestic Product is horribly exaggerated. Ok,
ok, give me a break, a broken record in my message. But
it is so important that the message be repeated often, even
from the hilltops. One cannot accept the CPI as distorted
high without concluding the GDP as distorted low. No discussion
of falsified statistics is comprehensive without this story
cited. The nominal total of US goods & services in transactions,
which comprise the GDP, is adjusted down by the GDP Deflator,
consistent with the Personal Consumption Expenditure index.
The reported 1Q2006 growth in GDP was 5.6%, with absurd
3.3% Deflator yr/yr. My contention is that the adjustment
down is wrong by at least 4% and possibly 5%. An additional
1% is entered since information technology hedonic adjustments
contribute to the distortion in an indefensible manner.
JOBS GROWTH: The jobs picture is ripe with
distortion. The April, May, and June job growth reports
incorporated Birth-Death model lifts greater than the total
number. June gains of 121k jobs included 175k mythical B-D
jobs. May gains of 75k jobs included 211k imaginery B-D
jobs. April gains of 138k jobs included 271k fictitious
B-D jobs. Of course, the press & media failed to notice
this point of embarrassment. Without
these convenient B-D modeled new jobs, al three months would
have registered a DECLINE in job growth, a point not even
mentioned by the sleepy press & media. Moreover,
newly created jobs continue to come far under the population
growth requirement of 150k jobs monthly. The Birth-Death
model remains a principal job producer, without any basis
in reality, certainly no scrutiny. Its ARIMA (11-th order
autoregressive integrated moving average) statistical model
has assumptions tied to the previous irrelevant decade,
and a structure which is laughable at worst, and indefensible
at best. Here is the tough Birth-Death model question. Does
the change from one month to the next in the ratio (of new
jobs created to old jobs killed) really tell us anything?
Methinks no. How about that change in the same ratio a year
ago? Methinks even less, especially when jobs are being
outsourced to Asia!!!
The trend toward Asian outsourcing of jobs
seems to have slowed, as high profile job export announcements
have notably waned. The tepid productivity for 4Q2005 (at
+0.5%) and for 1Q2006 (at +3.2%) contain their usual distortion
upward. They confirm the slower job export to Asia, the
backbone of greater claimed efficiency. Job growth has been
and will continue to be harmed, since 20% of the four million
jobs created since 2004 originated from the housing sector.
Challenger, Gray & Christmas posts large
site employer layoff statistics. The trend is lower, but
declines might owe to the fact that large companies have
already shed the bulk of workers planned for cuts. CGC layoffs
cite 67.2k in June2006, 53.7k in May2006, against 103.5k
in Jan2006. Last year, the CGC layoff numbers were larger,
at 103.0k in July2005, 110.0k in June2005, and 82.3k in
May2005.
PRODUCTIVITY: Given the nature of the productivity
statistic, change in output versus change in work, the information
technology hedonic adjustments have an even more pronounced
effect from their distortion. The statistic is exaggerated
by roughly 2%, from such infotech hedonics. There is no
way faster speeds of computer processors, disk storage access,
network connectivity, or internet transmission materially
increases work when human beings sit at consoles and PC’s.
Instead, speeds increase available time for lunch, chatting,
daydreaming, visits to vending machines, flirting with cute
colleagues, going to the bathroom, playing games on the
PC, even surfing the internet. More efficient machines stand
idle more. Greenspan has several gigantic blind spots and
areas of deep ignorance; one is productivity. He did not
even use email. The gains in productivity have come hand
in hand with job layoff in the last few years, lifting the
Asian standard of living. On US shores, productivity gains
serve as testimony to flat industrial output with fewer
workers. That is, if productivity is positive at all, after
a return to reality in its calculation. High productivity
directly addresses exploited cheaper Asian labor costs,
without US wage benefit. This is confirmed in negative inflation
adjusted wages for three years running, a major point of
embarrassment, and a critical piece of information. Inflation
adjusted wage growth remarkably is still negative EVEN AFTER
giant distortion. So imagine how deeply negative wages are
in growth in reality terms. Any inflation adjusted
statistic, such as wages and GDP growth, must subtract 5%
to enter the world of reality in which we live and breathe.
This is Enron accounting.
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE: The unemployment rate is
the funniest of all deceptive statistics. In the 1990 decade,
the Bureau of Labor Statistics had a brilliant idea not
to consider a jobless person as unemployed if efforts to
find work were abandoned. So if a
man is hungry and fallen on his face, having given up scraping
garbage cans, he is no longer hungry. The concept
of “full employment” is utterly laughable. The
June unemployment rate was stated as 4.6%, but after putting
back reality, it is actually 7.0% when divided by the “participation
rate” of people actively involved in working or looking
for work. The irony is that a dire and growing shortage
of highly skilled workers is wrecking havoc, as foreign
applicants win jobs and must jump green card hurdles. Such
is a testament to an inadequate educational system, where
a minimum of math & science is taught in the United
States. A large swath of public schools have degraded into
highly paid revolving doors, detention centers, and nurseries
to ensure literacy and minimal technical skills.
RETAIL SALES: Much like the Energizer bunny,
retail sales hang in there, but they include gasoline purchases.
The official retail sales statistic includes no inflation
adjustment. As gasoline prices relentlessly
rise, now averaging over $3.00 per gallon, to the tune of
30% higher than a year ago, retail sales growth largely
rides on the back of higher gasoline expenses. This
is not progress. Restaurant chains openly report slower
traffic and revenue. In fact, several chain and brand vendors
have responded, noting the threat. Wal-Mart openly mentions
fuel costs to explain tame sales growth at 2.1%, slightly
lower than the last couple years. However, some companies
(Sears dept stores, Kohl furniture, Barnes & Noble books,
Maytag appliances) use sales incentives which involve discount
credits for gasoline purchases. They detect a connection.
The heart of the middle class has finally been affected
by higher gasoline costs, made worse by rising electrical
utility costs, doubled minimum credit card payments, and
for many people, sharp jumps in mortgage monthly payments.
CONCLUSION
Pay little heed to the narrow minded commentary
by USGovt officials, which are all replete and drowned in
vested interest, whether political or toward debt sales.
Sadly, promotion of both the USDollar and USTreasury Bond
has led to an endless stream of deceptive, distorted, fallacious,
misrepresentative information which has become both chronic
and egregious. Bear in mind that the flip side of a USDollar,
given its unbacked fiat nature, is a government bond. Some
regard the USDollar valuation as dependent upon confidence
in USGovt leadership. More accurately, the US$ value depends
directly on the quality of US Treasury debt. If not for
coercion and direct intimidation of debt rating agencies,
the USTBond debt would be downgraded to “B”
levels. We gots Third World financial
fundamentals here, yet triple “A” ratings !!!
Given faulty statistics and heretical economic
beliefs, enormous risks are imposed upon the system of commerce
inside the United States, even beyond its borders. Policy
cannot be made properly or effectively in such an environment,
unless US Federal Reserve decisions scoff at official statistics
and ignore the nonsensical sales promotion pablum. My suspicion
is that a hidden agenda is being worked by our England-owned
Federal Reserve. Some go so far as
to claim that England waited 138 years for its revenge after
the United States declared and won its independence in 1776.
England conned the US Congress into signing away our national
financial independence, integrity, and stable future, by
subcontracting monetary management in 1914. In just fifteen
years, their ineptitude led directly to the Great Depression.
Their charter is nothing like what is advertised. A mission
of creating stable prices has become an utter joke. Commanding
the gigantic sophisticated inflation machinery (think mad
professors on crystal meth), complete with gears and levers,
ethers and mystique, is central to their current function.
Almost nobody really knows much of anything about the field
of economics in this misdirected nation. So we are hapless
and vulnerable to a sequence of nutcase mythology chapters.
No sooner do we dismiss a current chapter, that we are told
yet another even goofier, more heretical, new chapter. Every
promise of a Soft Landing is met with a failure and painful
recession, or financial market crisis, or profound lies
on what constitutes a recession.
Pay little heed to self-serving commentary
such as from Energy Secy Bodman. He claims something true,
that global oil suppliers have lost control of their market.
In other words, the Saudis and other sheikdoms no longer
control price with actual oil output and vaporous FedSpeak
language on increased future supply. How true! But he follows
with claims again bordering on the nonsensical, that the
USEconomy is surprisingly resilient to higher energy costs.
No way is our economy resilient. We relied during the last
four years of colossal raids on home equity. When that supply
is no longer available, as in now, that resilience is absent.
Further, set the record straight. When energy costs rise,
we show higher retail sales (higher gasoline costs) and
higher GDP growth (inflation labeled falsely as growth).
Ironically we claim resilience to
higher energy costs, evident in economic strength, but that
phony resilience is founded in falsified statistics from
inadequately adjusted price inflation from higher energy
costs. Read that statement twice. Try not to laugh.
Count on big accidents in the near future.
Expect a nearly endless sequence of crises. They will become
so regular that investors and citizens alike will grow accustomed
to them. Crisis and scandal will be regarded as normal.
In my humble opinion, we are there already. The only safe
places to hide with money are in yellow gold (gold) and
black gold (oil), along with their cousins (silver, natural
gas, uranium). A greater whipsaw is likely to be inflicted
in stocks capitalizing such commodities. All efforts to
forestall the recession urged by a housing decline will
benefit these stocks. The USFed might prevent a painful
recession, but they will never prevent a serious bout with
price inflation. Why? Because they will react to the recession
in its early stages. However, since we in the United States
import everything under the sun, a continually weak USDollar
will keep prices high. Either businesses pass along higher
costs into higher final prices, or else the USEconomy goes
dark.
The most intriguing element to the housing
debate points to housing prices. If a property goes unsold,
sits on the market, languishes despite price cuts, wallows
in the face of inducements (e.g. paid closing costs, cash
under the table, phony projects funded for supposed repairs,
subsidized interest rates, even a free in-ground pool),
THEN HOW DO WE KNOW ITS VALUE & PRICE ??? The most frightening
housing statistic is the inventory data. The June figure
for existing housing inventory is up 3.8% to 6.8 months
worth of supply. The inventory level for condominiums is
at 8.0 months. This bloat represents the highest supply
of unsold homes since 1997. In six months we will know what
today’s prices are. In twelve months, we will know
what prices then will be six months from now. The residential
real estate market cannot reveal adequately its prices when
a mountain of unsold properties lies in swollen supply.
If a trade war with China is necessary, complete
with an entire regime of protectionist measures, then so
be it. They might easily be imposed, in the interest of
national security. The perverse “benefit” from
trade war is that the US corporate non-financial sector
finally wins some pricing power, finally can grant some
wage increases, and finally can maintain profits. The unfortunate
trend in the next few years will be the reversal of globalization.
We will have much more regional integration, commerce, cooperation,
and legal jurisdictions. The big rub on that trend in progress
will be containing maverick loony tunes like Chavez in Venezuela,
Morales in Bolivia, and Castro in Cuba. The United States
will have trouble keeping order in its own back yard, since
it will continue to be preoccupied by keeping the Saudis
and their neighboring sheiks in power. In doing so we will
protect the core and lose the entire fringe.
THE HAT
TRICK LETTER PROFITS IN THE CURRENT
CRISIS
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