| THE END OF MONEY? THE DAILY RECKONING PARIS, FRANCE TUESDAY, 23 NOVEMBER 1999 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * In Today's Daily Reckoning: *** The spike turns into a needle *** Iraq shuts the valve
and oil gushes
*** The jackals circle in California * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *** I can almost see him
the wily bear with a whetstone
sharpening the Nasdaq spike, polishing it, honing it
The Nasdaq hit yet another record yesterday as investors took even greater leave of their senses
*** The Internet average
the IIX
was up, well, sharply
Internets are selling at an average of 20 times sales. Earnings? Forget it. Twice as many Internet stocks are losing money as making it. *** And when you look at any individual company carefully
such as the figures we examined for TheStreet.com yesterday
you see that it is a bad business. Heck
if I could spend $50 a month per sub acquiring readers
I'd have beaucoup of them
and lose $49 on each one. What's the point? *** The Dow rose 83 points, too. But it is a bear market
with 908 advances
2,190 declines. Most stocks are still going down
and yet
if you listen to the financial news, you'd think people were making a lot of money
*** Some people are
those who invest in the leading tech and Nets
"People don't care about cash flows," says Keith Mullins at Salomon Smith Barney. "They don't care about earnings. They care about momentum
You have every signal, every sign, of a blow-off." *** Among the investors aiding the blow-off is cab driver Carlos Rubino. New York City cabs have long been a threat to public safety. This one is a threat to the financial system, too. Rubino day trades from his dashboard while driving
making him doubly dangerous. And he made 35% on his money last year. "I've been trading for three years
and this is a brand new car
and it doesn't have any dents," he says. Yet. *** Iraq turned off the oil valve yesterday
halting 2.2 million barrels/day. This drove oil to a nine-year high
and helped cause a collapse in bond prices, utilities and transport stocks. Oil is nearly at $27. *** Gold, however, was almost unmoved
and nearly immovable. It sits. It waits. *** I hope I don't do anything to make Alan Abelson at "Barron's" mad at me
Lou Rukeyser, whom I see dining at Tony Chang's in Baltimore from time to time
got on Abelson's angry side by firing one of the "elves" in an ungentlemanly fashion. "The prattling panjandrum
smirking at his own feeble jokes," Abelson describes Rukeyser. And the show? "Pretty boring
" The "elf," by the way
Gail Dudack
committed the unpardonable sin of turning bearish. *** "This is the end of politics for Jeffrey Archer," declared Tory leader William Hague. Would that we could end other political careers so decisively. Pat Buchanan. Al Gore. Hillary Clinton. George W. Bush
dream on
Fortunately, Archer has another career -- writing novels. (I got a fact wrong yesterday
Archer won a judgement of only 500,000 pounds, not millions of dollars, from the London paper the "Daily Star.") *** The New York Fed has gotten into the derivatives business
selling $370 billion in "liquidity options" as protection against Y2K problems. *** The Russians say they will have Chechnya under control by Christmas. The whole campaign recalls the "pacification" of the Chechens by Red Army troops in 1925. The "bandits" were disarmed. The men were killed. The women and children were deported to the East. No wonder the Chechens resist so determinedly. *** The Presbyterians have decided that gay couples can get hitched
but they can't call it a marriage. *** But lawyers in California are still permitted to extort money from public corporations and call it a "class action suit." An action suit, maybe. Classy
not a chance. The jackals are going after Microsoft on the grounds that the company overcharged for software sold in the state. This is the inevitable effluent of Judge Jackson's finding of fact -- that MSFT has abused its power in the marketplace. *** I feel an attack of clairvoyance coming on as I look into the future and see what will happen as a result of this suit. MSFT will settle. Consumers will pay more for software. Stockholders will lose money on MSFT shares. The lawyers will pocket their millions and announce that the cause of justice has been served. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * THE END OF MONEY This engaging idea was taken by Richard Rahn for the title of his book. It raises the most profound questions about the nature of money itself
the role of gold
and the future of financial transactions. It would be unkind to say of a one-armed economist that he "could not grasp" the complex issues involved
or to say of a one-eyed economist that he lacked "depth of vision
or perspective." Yet Rahn, who looks very distinguished, if not a little rakish, with his eye patch
seems to merit the comment. His book agitates the questions
but it does not answer them, nor even explore them. Instead, Rahn merely strolls through the well-settled, well-lighted neighborhoods with which we are all so familiar. Naturally, any discussion involving the end of money has to take into account its beginnings. Rahn takes no notice of the issue. Instead, he is interested in financial privacy. Money, as we are often told, arose as a means of exchange and a store of value. Anything could be used for these functions
as long as people believed in them. Gold turned out to be the most enduring money
because it is handily fashioned into different-sized coins
it doesn't rush or tatter
and it is precious, without being rare. Gold has another advantage. It is private. You can bury it in your backyard. You can pass it along to your grandchildren. You can buy things. And you can do all these things without a paper trail. The ironic metal is curiously not even considered money today. So you can put on all the gold jewelry you want and stagger through customs without, presumably, being forced to check the box and provide details on cross-border financial transactions exceeding $10,000. Rahn's idea is that financial privacy is necessary to a free and prosperous society. He notes that "full fledged currency controls
are a 20th century invention, first developed by Hitler's economic minster, Hjalmar Schacht. Hitler effectively extinguished all personal freedom in Germany, including all financial freedom, with his Emergency Decree of February 28, 1933, `For the Protection of the People and the State.'" Gold was a handy thing to have in 1933. You could take it with you..hide it
or put it in a Swiss bank. He also tells us that there are only a few countries left still practicing Schachtian
or Stalinian
control of money. One of them is a country, Belarus, of which I am -- believe it or not -- still, officially, an "economic advisor." Every once in a while, Belarus makes the news. But rarely is it good news. The country is run by Alexander Lukashenko, an unreconstructed communist, who practices "soft-core Stalinism
people have their houses searched. Tax inspectors harass opposition businesses. Police beat demonstrators." Rahn provides the interesting example of what happened in Bulgaria after the communists took over in 1947. There was no longer any need for financial privacy, since the government owned all the property and made all the financial decisions. For the good of the people, of course. But even in America, more and more financial decisions involve the government, which has tremendous, nearly arbitrary power over citizens' lives. There are so many rules and regulations on the books
and such esoteric tax and reporting requirements
that almost anyone could be targeted for abuse. (In fact, everyone is.) This will all change in the new electronic age, Rahn believes. His view in this regard seems a little dated. Jim Davidson and Lord Rees-Mogg argued a few years ago that the Internet would destroy the ability of the government to collect taxes. So far, we've seen no evidence of that. But there is hope. Encryption is now available to anyone
cheap, effective encryption. You can go on the Internet and get Phil Zimmerman's PGP
So you can theoretically conduct your financial affairs in total privacy
if you wish. But the banking sector is greatly, and increasingly, regulated
operating almost as an arm of the government. Ultimately, almost all financial transactions have to go through the bank's clearing system. Thus, in the last few years, despite the spread of the Internet, financial privacy appears to be in retreat. And government revenues have gone up. But the provocative assertion Rahn makes is on the nature of money itself. As he points out, any medium of exchange is, by its nature, inefficient. It is costly to deal with cash
handle it, store it, sort it
print it. Businesses want to get the cash out of their tills as quickly as possible so that it can be put on deposit at the bank and earn interest. Otherwise, it is dead inventory. And in the new electronic age, money will disappear altogether
"because a circulating medium of exchange is needed only when a time interval is required between the liquidation of an earning or useful asset and the acquisition of a new asset or service. In the digital age, such time intervals are no longer needed, hence there is no need for traditional money."
In this respect, he is surely right. Cash is already disappearing. People use credit cards. They do not save money in banks. Every cent is in some interest bearing
or speculative
account. Rahn imagines a world where everyone carries a smart card
linked to mutual fund accounts. There is no cash in the system. Every dollar is in an active investment account
or used to purchase some good or service. Even inflation will be eliminated, he says, since it represents an expansion of the money supply
and there will no longer be a supply of money to expand. The national currencies, too, will become irrelevant
as the smart cards can instantly quote the quantity of "money" in any measure you choose. You will not have a supply of dollars. You will have a supply of investments
or assets
and no need to keep an inventory of money for any purpose. You will own a share of stock
which you will trade, instantly and electronically
for a movie ticket. (Or, if it is an Internet stock
maybe a piece of gum
) Your employment earnings, too, will be immediately realized in an investment account. There will be no need for cash. And what role could there be for gold? Will it also become completely irrelevant? Will Lenin's dream be finally realized
and gold be used to cover the floors of public lavatories? Were the central banks right, after all, in wanting to get rid of it? Is it only a dead inventory item for them, too? I was disappointed with "The End of Money" for not addressing these issues. So, I'll have to address them myself
in upcoming letters. But that's all for today
Bill Bonner ========================================================= INVESTMENT ALERT European Internet stocks are exactly where the U.S. stocks were three years ago. This could be the 2nd Internet bull market! Brian Hicks--a featured expert in the video "2000 and Beyond--Profit Perspectives for the New Millennium"--recommended a little-known European Internet stock. In less than two months it shot up 256%. To find out about spectacular profit opportunities like these--check out "2000 and Beyond--Profit Perspectives for the New Millennium." NOW AVAILABLE ON VIDEO This year's video features more financial experts than ever before. For our global network's year 2000 forecast. Click Here http://www.taipanonline.com/htmlcode/video/pp2000dr.html ========================================================= The Daily Reckoning is a FREE e-mail service of Agora Financial Publishing -- dailyreckoning@agora- inc.com If you would like practical advice on how to act on the ideas in this e-mail, then simply subscribe to my monthly financial communique, "The Fleet Street Letter." You can subscribe or get more information easily. Just call 1-800-433-1528 and ask for code 3472.
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