A Chicken in Every Pot and A Car in Every Garage
A Chicken in Every Pot and A Car in Every Garage by Dan Amoss The Daily Reckoning Wednesday, May 10, 2006
--------------------- Abandoned by Morgan Stanley's chief economist
who needs savings when you have credit?
China, Russia and Saudi Arabia may not be the most developed nations - but they weren't born yesterday
Nobody-in-particular seems to be winning
all that glitters is not only gold
and more!
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--------------------Gold shot up $21 yesterday. People are starting to notice. The globe is lop-sided. Everywhere we look, things are out of kilter, like a house of mirrors, where nothing quite looks the way it should. We have to check our glasses to make sure it isn't us. And, yesterday, we also felt
deserted
alone
abandoned by our friends. Stephen Roach, chief economist at Morgan Stanley, threw in the towel. He was the last bear standing on macroeconomics matters, according to the Guardian (The Guardian editors do not spend much time in the woods). Like us, for many years, Roach lamented and bemoaned the "unbalanced" world economy, which he saw becoming more and more unbalanced as time went on. But recently, it seems that it is Roach himself who has become unbalanced; yesterday, he imagined balance being restored by the coordinated efforts of bureaucrats at central banks all over the world. Actually, the relationship between East and West is not so much imbalanced as it is parasitic. One side makes; the other side takes. One saves; the other borrows. One grows rich acting poor; the other grows poor believing itself rich. In the West, people live beyond their means and expect to continue doing so at least until the Second Coming. Their top economists tell them that they have nothing to worry about, no day of judgment. Savings? Who needs that? We have something better - credit! But where does the credit come from, without a pool of savings from which to draw? Well, it comes from the East - where people do save. Here, the Wall Street Journal weighs in with some facts. Developing nations already hold reserves - mostly in dollars - of $2.9 trillion. China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia are laying in huge supplies of capital - earned from the export of oil and manufactured goods. Most of this money was once owned by Americans; now, it is owned by foreigners. Every day, more than $2 billion, net, shifts further from one end of the teeter-totter to the other - from the chunky spenders down to the skinny savers. China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia may not be the world's most developed nations, but they weren't born yesterday. And, what they don't know between them - about mismanaged economies, political corruption, incompetence, and worthless paper money - is probably not worth knowing. Sitting there, surrounded by trillions of dollars, they are likely to wonder what each one is actually worth. And then, they are likely to turn their gaze to the country that issues them - and wonder again. "What is behind the dollar?" they will ask themselves. Just faith, comes the answer. But faith in what? Is it in the financial future of the United States? Talk about unbalanced; no nation in the history of the world has ever had such a big gap between what it earned, and what it spent. U.S. public and private finances are out of whack, and on the evidence, becoming more and more out of whack with each passing day. What faith can you have in its paper currencies? Its notes? Its bonds? And then, the foreigners turn to the Middle East and wonder even more. In Mesopotamia, the Americans' war against "nobody-in-particular" is also lopsided. The Untied States is the world's only superpower, and probably the most powerful nation that ever existed. Against the most sophisticated fighting force ever assembled, the "nobodies" on the other side can launch no planes, field no tanks, assemble no armies, and dispatch no ships. An estimate from the Pentagon is that they have no more than 10,000 partisans, most of them neither seriously armed, nor seriously trained, nor seriously led. Still, it is an incredibly expensive war - but only on one side. The United States will spend about $120 billion this year alone; the enemy, whoever he or she may be, spends peanuts. Yet, despite the imbalance, "nobody-in-particular" seems to be winning. That these imbalances will eventually be resolved, we do not doubt. But they are likely to be settled more or less as they were created - by agile individuals and flat-footed official intervention. [Ed. Note: War is money. And a full-blown, target-less Terror War, financed mainly by our foreign investors, introduces uncertainty and risk where these investors had never counted on any before. Once they start realizing the United States is not a safe bet for their money, they'll start shifting away from the greenback
and China has already begun the dollar dumping. Find out what happens next - and how you can protect your wealth: The Hidden Cost of War More news from The Rude Awakening
-------------- Eric Fry, reporting from Manhattan: "Americans love an underdog. We love pulling for the little guy. In fact, we've been pulling for the little guys for seven straight years
So maybe it's time to bet on the new underdogs: the big guys." For the rest of this story, and for more market insights, see today's issue of The Rude Awakening: The Seven-Year Switch
-------------- Back to London for more opinions on various subjects
*** Resource Trader Alert's Kevin Kerr shares his thought on copper becoming a "precious metal." "All that glitters is not only gold; it's copper, steel aluminum, you name it," says the commodities guru. "Surging metals prices of all kinds are making some of the nonferrous metals the first choice for thieves over the more traditional 'precious metals.' Thieves are stealing wire, pipes, even rusty old cars to sell to scrap metal recycling businesses. "All of this is due to the skyrocketing costs of metals, such as copper. Copper, at more than $2 a pound, is about double what it was a year ago, while aluminum prices have gone up about 50% in a year. Zinc and lead have nearly doubled in price over a year
and the list goes on. "So, it turns out we're talking big money after all. At today's prices, it doesn't take much copper to add up to a hefty sum. For example, a chunk of partly compressed copper wire (without insulation) that measures about 6 by 8 by 12 inches is not a lot. But at 75 pounds, it's worth $150. "I was visiting the DR HQ in November of 2005 when I read that Baltimore police officials reported the theft of about 130 aluminum light poles, each about 30 feet tall and 250 pounds. Elsewhere, thieves have stolen manhole covers, luggage carts and parking meters. "Though steel isn't getting nearly the price copper does, in one report I read that some enterprising thieves have been stealing and selling junk cars, calling up a tow truck service posing as the vehicle's owner. The thieves ask the towing company to pick up the vehicle and bring it to a metal recycling company, where the thief, meets the tow truck driver and says it's his car. Also, about a month ago, a man was taking metal power boxes from the CSX rail line, according to police reports. "Now if that doesn't prove physical demand is behind this, what will?" Kevin will be appearing on CNBC's Kudlow and Company today at 5 p.m. (EST) to help everyone out in TV land better understand the commodities market. Be sure to tune in. [Ed. Note: If you are just starting out in the natural resources market, or you're feeling a little overwhelmed by the skyrocketing price of gold, focusing on the other metals could be a great way to get your feet wet. Kevin's tried-and-true trading system is perfect for beginners and seasoned traders alike - and his track record speaks for itself. See it here: Resource Trader Alert *** So far, we are enjoying this 21st century. Except for the World Trade Center, wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the new conservatives - what's not to like? True, so far, the new millennium has not been kind to investors. Stocks are down - especially after inflation is taken into account. So are most other investments. Housing has done well for most people, but you have to live somewhere. The only way most people can release the gains in their houses is by leaving the country, dying, or borrowing against them. Of the three choices, most have chosen the third, which is why the next few years of this century promise to be more disagreeable than the first six. We approve of "rebalancing, " but the world economy is not a wheel. You can't put it on a rotator and rebalance it by adding lead weights. Instead, it is made of millions of individuals, who have made financial decisions based on what they saw before them. When the going was good
they went. Americans took advantage of loose credit conditions to go deep into debt. Rebalancing requires them to end up less in debt, which means they will have to do something that will be unpleasant for most of them - reduce spending. Cutting consumer spending will also turn out to be unpleasant for America's policy makers and officials, for it will mean a slowdown in the U.S. economy
possibly a very severe one. What will people do? Where will they turn? *** Last night, we went to the theatre. Maria's drama school performed the Man of La Mancha. We had never seen the play. We were prepared for the music, but not for the rough handling of the whore, Aldonza, by the mule drivers at the bar. Not when our own daughter was playing the part. We wondered how other fathers must feel when their children perform in front of a crowd. We know how we felt: like stopping the show! Nobody treats our little girl like that! But, we reminded ourselves that it was only theatre; they were only acting. And we let the show go on. It is a touching story. Don Quixote sees Aldonza in a way no one ever had
"Oh, pure virgin," he calls to her
as the bar breaks out in laughter. Of course, Quixote is unbalanced and hallucinating. The world is not what he imagines - or even what he can imagine. But people are infinitely complex
like truth itself. And in Aldonza, a tough, hard-swearing prostitute, is hidden a pure virgin, too. It brought a tear to our paternal eye when the dear girl came out. After the curtain went down, we went backstage to congratulate the cast, but we still haven't quite forgiven the mule drivers. --- Advertisement ---
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