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Financial Prosperity Predicted. By L. M. Holt

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  • Financial Prosperity Predicted. By L. M. Holt

    http://fabsadventures.com/books/tran...csandbooms.txt

    FINANCIAL PROSPERITY PREDICTED.

    A PAPER ON "PANICS AND BOOMS READ BEFORE THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION IN JUNE 1897, BY L. M. HOLT, AT A MEETING HELD AT ALPINE TAVERN OUTLINES CLEARLY THE BUSINESS ACTIVITY OF TO-DAY.

    The United States is passing through one of its periods of business prosperity. In fact this condition of affairs is to be found in most parts of the civilized world at the present time.

    For the past four or five years the business world has been recovering from the terrible effects of the last periodical financial panic which commenced in Australia and the South American republics in 1891, and struck this country with a terrible crash in 1892. The panic in this country was not so severe as it was in Australia, because the conditions were better here than there.

    It generally requires from four to eight years to recover form the effects of a general world-wide financial panic, but the recovery is just as sure to come as daylight is to follow darkness, and then in turn, another panic is as certain to come again in due course of time as darkness is to follow daylight.

    There were five financial panics in this country during the century just closed. These were in 1819, 1837, 1857, 1873, and 1892. The next panic is due about 1910. It may come a little earlier or a little later, but it will be about that time, and as the period of prosperity is being used to its fullest extent in heavy financial operations and gigantic monied and business combinations, when the next panic does put in an appearance, it will be apt to do its work as thoroughly as the accounts to be settled will be large ones contracted on a gigantic scale.

    There may be local financial disturbances prior to the date given, but the world-wide settlement is not due yet for about eight or ten years.

    In 1886-7, Southern California experienced a very wild real estate speculative boom. The gait was so rapid that a halt was a necessity before the financial world at large got ready for a general settlement. Hence the bursting of the boom in 1887-8 was a memorable occasion so far as our little corner of the world was concerned, but it was local in character and did not extend its influence beyond these narrow limits. Such a thing may occur again, for present indications point to a very active real estate and business movement in the section of the United States during the immediate future.

    The real estate market is liable to approach very closely to the margin of the boom conditions. The conditions here are right for a solid advance in real estate values, caused by legitimate business developments. Under these conditions, it will not be strange if speculative property will be advanced in price beyond what can be maintained during a period of financial depression--a period of paying indebtedness. No one should believe for a moment that the present advance in prices can always be maintained. When prices reach the top there will be thousands of people who will be compelled to sell in order to meet maturing obligations. This will cause a depression in prices, and this depression will cause still further necessities for selling.

    In June 1897, L. M. Holt read before a meeting of the Southern California Editorial Association, held at Alpine Tavern, a paper on "Panics and Booms" that so closely outlines and predicted the present condition of affairs, giving the causes therefore, that we republish the same for the benefit of those who may be inclined to think that the present period of prosperity is to permanently continue.

    Panics and Booms.

    Ever since the establishment of the human race on this planet there has been a gradual increase of population and a more rapid consumption of wealth.
    Wealth is the result of labor, and without labor there can be no wealth.

    Men live and pass away, but as they cannot take their wealth with them a large percentage accumulates for the benefit of their successors. Hence the wealth of the world today, per capita, is much greater than ever before, and it is continually on the increase.

    The transfer of wealth, or property, from one person to another creates business. Under favorable conditions, transfers are numerous and business is brisk. Under unfavorable conditions transfers are few and business is dull.

    During periods of business activity there is work for all, and this of itself makes greater business activity. During periods of business depression there is not work for all, and this of itself makes business dull and unprofitable.

    The existence of either one of these conditions leads necessarily to the other. It is an impossibility for either prosperous times or depressed times to continue permanently.

    During prosperous times, there being work for all, all are supplied with the means for accumulating wealth, and thus all are enabled to provide themselves and families with all the necessaries, and many of the luxuries, of life; and hence, during the prosperous times the demand for goods and property increases, and soon the demand exceeds the supply, and then prices advance.

    This rule, which is applied to the laborer, is also applied to the business man. Prosperous times induce business men to branch out in their several lines of trade. The volume of trade. The volume of trade being large, each gets a corresponding proportion of it. Many business men find that they can do more business than is allowed by their limited capital. They then buy on credit.

    Prices are continually advancing, therefore they are not able to make margins of profit not only on the capital furnished by themselves, but on the capital furnished through their credit.

    This rule also applies to people dealing in real estate. The country is growing; money is easy; the times are good; business is prosperous and therefore speculation is favored. A man worth $5000 can buy four times that amount of property by using his credit, and sometimes he buys ten times that amount or more. While prices are advancing he not only gets the benefits of the advance in the price of the property represented by the capital furnished by himself, but also on the capital furnished by his credit.

    When prices of property and goods during a period of business depression are falling, the loss does not come on the entire property, but only on that portion of it represented by the cash capital the man has invested in it. The debt never shrinks until the real investment is all gone. All people in a given section of country use their credit at the same time because they are all governed by the same local conditions. Hence, there is a fictitious stimulation of prices which must come to an end. This end brings a financial depression which must necessarily follow a period of business activity.

    When the people arrive at a point where their credit limit is reached there is necessarily a decrease in the demand for goods and property, and soon the supply becomes greater than the demand and prices begin to decline. This stops speculation. Thousands of people engaged in manufacturing or producing articles of general use are thus thrown out of employment, and this causes a still further decrease in the demand for goods, and hence a further decline in prices. Those who have purchased on credit find themselves subjected to heavy losses because they are compelled to sustain the depreciation on goods the do not own -- that is, goods bought on credit. Because of this decrease in valuations all are compelled to economize in order to adjust their expenses to the new order of things, they being compelled to pay off the accumulated indebtedness with the decreased income. This economy of the masses still further decreases the demand for goods and property and this still further increases the supply over the demand and decreases the prices, throwing more people out of employment and increasing the depressed condition of business.

    The business man feels the change in conditions as well as the laborer. Doing business largely on borrowed capital, he loses all the capital employed in the business, not alone on the money furnished by himself. The value of the business shrinks, but the debt remains the same or increases. Bankruptcy stares the business world in the face. The weaker go under while the stronger pull through, and sometimes make fortunes at a little later date out of the misfortunes of others.

    Here is a condition of hard times. A large percentage of the laboring people of the world are thrown out of employment. Every time a man stops work - stops producing - his purchasing ability is impaired, the demand for goods becomes less and prices are lowered.

    During the period of depression - the debt-paying period - the people at large are forced to economize. The earning capacity of all classes has been decreased. A large percentage of people are thrown out of steady employment and wages are reduced for those who do secure labor. Some earn enough to pay expenses of living economically, while others do not and are compelled to live in part on the limited accumulations of former more prosperous years.

    Many business men continue in business: some are able to meet running expenses, while others prefer to lose a little each month, awaiting the return of better times, rather than to lose more heavily by retiring entirely from business. Many cannot stand the pressure and quit business, forced to lose the accumulations for years.

    During the years of depression values of all kinds of property shrink. In the case of incumbered property this shrinkage falls entirely on the margin and not on the debt. Sometimes it wipes out the margin and a portion of the debt also. Sometimes the margin is so nearly wiped out the alleged owner of the property transfers his interest in the property to the one who holds the claim against it, and another debt is paid. Sometimes the holder of the debt declines to thus take the property and release the owner.

    A person who does business on a partial credit basis, on borrowed capital, makes larger profits during periods of prosperity when the prices are advancing than he who is on a cash basis, but he sustains larger losses during periods of depression when prices are dropping.

    If a man could change quickly from a credit system to a cash basis as soon as the period of prosperity closes he would be all right, but he is in debt, and the debt must be paid, and hence it is not usually practical to make the change. If it were he would not be in debt.

    Gradually the surplus debts of the country are paid and the people breathe easier again. People live within their incomes and temporarily learn economical habits. Men smoke fewer and cheaper cigars and ladies purchase fewer ribbons and occasionally fix over a bonnet and dress instead of getting new ones.

    A time is finally reached when people begin to get out of debt, and then they begin to live a little better, buy more of the necessaries of life and some of the luxuries. As the number of people in such improved condition increases, trade begins to pick up; larger orders are sent to the factories, more wheels are set in motion, more operatives are employed and more people are placed in position to buy more goods, which in turn starts more mills and gives employment to still more men.

    Thus the business of the country is forced into an active condition, and thus business activity increases in geometrical progression until wages reach their maximum point, factories are running to their utmost capacity, prices of all kinds of goods and all kinds of property advance, and people begin to purchase again more than they have the money to pay for -- some because they want profits on increasing valuations and others simply because of extravagant ideas of living.

    Money is plenty, credits are good, and the masses are good pay because all kinds of property are convertible into legal tender. Improvements, public and private, are pushed to their utmost extent, fancy prices are paid for real estate because it can be sold readily again at still more fancy prices. Individuals of limited capital hold thousands and hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of property on which only a small payment has been made. And advance of five per cent on the price of the property is an advance of 50 or 100 per cent or more on the cash investment. Another transfer is made and another soul is made happy. In short, a speculative boom has struck the country again gradually but surely. This speculative boom is not the result of any movement on the part of the people or any portion of them to create a boom, but it is the result of natural laws of business and is just as certain to materialize as a good crop is sure to be the result of favorable climatic conditions.

    It is not, perhaps, in order here to discuss the millionaire question or inquire into the trust combinations which threaten to disturb so seriously the business interests of the country. It is, however, safe to say that those who think during a period of business activity that such activity will always continue are just as much mistaken as are those who believe during a period of business depression that such business depression will never come to an end.

    Good times will follow bad times, and bad times will follow good times just as surely as darkness follows day, and day follows darkness. These periods always have followed each other and they always will.

    The seeds of prosperity are sown during the periods of financial depression, and the seeds of hard times are just as surely sown during the period of business activity and the speculative boom. There is no question as to the soundness of this conclusion. There is no question that these changes will come. The only question is -- when?

    At the close of a speculative boom the change comes like a thief in the night. In fact a thief in the night would be a welcome visitor to many instead of the change which puts in an appearance, but the change from a financial depression to better times comes gradually -- so gradually that for months there is a difference of opinion as to whether a change for the better has actually commenced or not.

    Glance for a moment over the financial history of the century just closing, and see what has been the condition of the country. During 1837 the country was in the midst of a financial panic. Again during the year 1857 -- twenty years later -- there was another panic. In 1837 a financial crisis struck the eastern states and the great banking house of Jay Cook & Co. was found among the financial wrecks scattered throughout that section of the country. In 1873 that same panic reached the Pacific Coast, closing the doors of the Bank of California of San Francisco, together with many other banking institutions, including the then popular banking house of Temple and Workman in our own Los Angeles -- a bank that failed for over a million dollars and never paid a cent on the dollar to the many unfortunate depositors.


    In 1893 the next panic struck the United States after having wrecked so many banking institutions in South America, Australia, and other parts of the world.

    During the year 1886, when the late speculative boom was getting under good headway in Southern California, Hon. D.C. Reed, now mayor of the City of San Diego, gave a banquet at the Horton House in that city, to which he invited business men from all points in Southern California. In response to the sentiment, "The Prosperity of Southern California," the writer, among other things, briefly reviewed many of the principles herein laid down and following the line of thought that waves of prosperity and depression follow each other with more or less regularity, predicted that somewhere between the years of 1892 and 1895 this country would again enter upon a period of business depression that would be very severe on the business activity of the country. The local speculative boom of 188607 broke long before this predicted period, but the universal panic which swept over the civilized world did not appear until the time predicted -- 1893. it appears to require, under present business conditions, from eighteen to twenty years for the country to pass through a complete cycle from one business depression to another.

    After the panic of 1875 it took the people of Southern California five years to get ready for business again in 1880. A similar period after the panic of 1893 ought to place this country again in line for business activity. The panic of 1893 was more widespread in its operations than that of 1875; but locally, it was not so severe, as comparatively little money was lost by depositors by failing banks in Southern California four years ago, whereas in 1875 the loss was very heavy.

    Again so far as Southern California is concerned the past five years has dealt very kindly with our people. Southern California increased in population from 200,000 in 1890 to over 300,000 in 1896. Los Angeles city has increased in population from 50,000 in 1890 to 103,000 in 1897, more than doubled.

    In actual wealth Southern California has kept pace with the increase of population, although on account of the business depression of the country and the decrease in valuation all over the world, this increase in wealth is not so apparent. With the extraordinary increase in population and wealth in Los Angeles city during the past seven years, nothing short of a financial depression all over the country could have prevented that city from experiencing a speculative boom of great magnitude.

    If Southern California in general and Los Angeles city in particular can make such a showing during a period of financial depression, what will be the result when the clouds roll by and prosperous times are enjoyed again throughout the country at large?

    It is a difficult matter to make the people believe that our country is now entering upon another period of prosperity. Each one has a remedy for hard times. And each one sticks firmly to the proposition that better times cannot come again until his remedy has been applied. These remedies are mostly of a political nature. One man believes that a high protective tariff is all that is necessary to restore prosperity to the country, and another thinks the free coinage of silver and gold on a basis of 16 to 1 without making any suggestions to any other nation about the matter would bring good times. There is no question but the legislation on both these questions or either of them would affect the main proposition. Wise legislation will always assist in bringing prosperity, and unwise legislation will always retard the coming of better times, but no legislation, no matter what it be, can prevent the incoming tide any more than the little child on the sandy beach with its little shovel can, by piling up a ridge of sand, stay the incoming surf.

    The country is today (1897) running into a period of great business activity; it has but recently reached that point. In fact there is a difference of opinion among business men today as to whether business is improving or not -- the improvement is so gradual. However, Dun & Co.'s Trade Review of June 5, 1897, says:
    "The statement that, except for the temporary depression in prices the volume of business transacted is now larger than it was in 1892 -- the year of the greatest prosperity -- has been questioned by some. But a comparison of prices this week in the leading branches of manufacture, not only confirms that view, but shows a remarkable similarity to the course of prices in the early months of 1879, when the most wonderful advance in production and prices ever known in this or any other country was close at hand. The key of the situation is the excessive production of some goods in advance of an expected increase in demand. So, in 1879, consumption gradually gained, month by month, until suddenly it was found that the demand was greater than the possible supply. All know how prices then advanced and the most marvelous progress in the history of any country resulted within two years. Reports from all parts of the country now show that retail distribution of products is unusually large and increasing."

    This is a remarkably clear statement of the facts of the case, and is evidence from unquestionable authority that the position taken herein is correct.

    Local conditions in Southern California will affect the issue here, and they appear in our favor. The building of the breakwater at San Pedro by the government will insure another transcontinental railroad from the east to Los Angeles via Utah. Then a 1 cent a pound tariff on citrus fruits, the building of more beet-sugar factories and the improvement of the vast water power of the mountain streams, and the setting of that power to work building up and enriching the country -- all these and more will help along the good work.
    Last edited by Sapiens; April 06, 2009, 02:49 PM.

  • #2
    Re: Financial Prosperity Predicted. By L. M. Holt

    A person who does business on a partial credit basis, on borrowed capital, makes larger profits during periods of prosperity when the prices are advancing than he who is on a cash basis, but he sustains larger losses during periods of depression when prices are dropping.
    Ahh... so the trick is to lever up before everybody else does, and delever before everybody else is forced to.

    Interesting post.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Financial Prosperity Predicted. By L. M. Holt

      Originally posted by WildspitzE View Post
      Ahh... so the trick is to lever up before everybody else does, and delever before everybody else is forced to.

      Interesting post.
      And if your timing is a bit off to catch the luxury express ya can always hop on the federal freight train when it rolls by. Just be sure ya miss or pay the railway bulls as their job is to keep the freight fees exclusively for the right folks.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Financial Prosperity Predicted. By L. M. Holt

        'if I have seen further it is because I have stood on the shoulders of giants' isaac newton

        Looks like fischer's debt deflation theory had some solid grounding before he published his own. Maybe he already knew the dangers of debt deflation and was just playing Greenspan's role as cheerleader for the FIRE in the roaring 20's.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Financial Prosperity Predicted. By L. M. Holt

          But how big are the biggest waves, and where are we on the biggest of them?

          He sees the boom and bust wave form, but treats it like the ordinary cycles of day and night, as if the waves were roughly the same size.

          It's fractal. Within a very wide range, the financial waves have little waves within big waves. It is not infinitely fractal. No theory of the human economy will help us understand the motion of galaxy clusters over billions of years, nor the motion of quarks over billionths of a second.

          But it is fractal over a wide range of financial cycles. Two key questions are how big is the biggest such cycle that will be visible within the time frame we care about, and where are we in that cycle. Are we, for example, at the cusp of some Grand SuperCycle, as an Elliott Wave Theorist might suggest? Early this decade some of us thought we had arrived at that awful turning point, but the Banksters managed to pump it up for one more round.

          Knowing where one is on these biggest waves has great impact on what are the best strategies.

          History as currently understood has large waves of civilization over many thousands of years, in Egypt, Persia, Greece, Rome, Europe, ... Perhaps even that is not correct. See for instance the very unorthodox view of history at http://www.amazon.com/History-mathem.../dp/2913621074, History: Fiction or Science? Dating methods as offered by mathematical statistics. Eclipses and zodiacs. Chronology Vol.I by Anatoly Fomenko.
          Most folks are good; a few aren't.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Financial Prosperity Predicted. By L. M. Holt

            It's fractal
            Or perhaps Nassim Taleb is more right and it's Extremistan - punctuated by extreme events, the Black Swans.
            Most folks are good; a few aren't.

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