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Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

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  • Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

    For over four years I've made this column a madatory read every Monday morning. It cuts through all the bullhockey and lays out the stark truth in cold, hard facts; it also reinforces the iTulip thesis as to the inevitable ruin of our once great economy.


    Monday, May 18, 2009

    The Destructive Implications of the Bailout - Understanding Equilibrium

    John P. Hussman, Ph.D.

    One of the features that has enabled the bureaucratic abuse of the public during the past year has been the frantic, if temporary, flight-to-safety by investors. The Treasury has issued an enormous volume of debt into the frightened hands of investors seeking default-free securities. This has allowed the Treasury to finance a massive and largely needless transfer of wealth to bank bondholders so easily over the short-term that the longer-term cost has been almost completely obscured. But by transferring wealth from those who did not finance reckless loans to those who did – providing monetary compensation without economic production – the bureaucrats at the Treasury and Federal Reserve have crowded out more than a trillion dollars of gross investment that would have otherwise have been made by responsible people in the coming years, shifted assets to the control of those who have proven themselves to be irresponsible destroyers of capital, and have planted the seeds of inflation that will cut short any emerging recovery.

    In order to understand the impact of these interventions, you have to think in terms of equilibrium - recognizing that all securities that are issued must also be held by someone - and then follow the money. Initially, suppose you have a banking system with $12 trillion in assets, financed with about $7 trillion in deposits and other liabilities to customers, about $4 trillion in debt to the bondholders of the banks, and about $1 trillion in shareholder equity as a buffer against insolvency.
    Now, suppose that the value of the assets deteriorates by $1 trillion, effectively wiping out the shareholder equity and putting much of the banking system in an insolvent position. Suppose also that government bureaucrats refuse to properly take receivership of insolvent banks, to impose haircuts on the debt to bondholders or to require them to swap debt for equity. Instead, suppose these bureaucrats prefer to defend the private bondholders who funded the bad loans from experiencing any loss whatsoever, and are willing to use public funds to do it.

    In order to do this, the Treasury issues $1 trillion in government debt, with a preference toward shorter “money market” maturities (since it doesn't want to drive up long-term interest rates at the same time the Fed hopes to invigorate the housing market). It may seem like this means that there is $1 trillion of new “liquidity” in the economy, but you have to think carefully. ...

    http://www.hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc090518.htm

  • #2
    Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

    Originally posted by Raz View Post
    For over four years I've made this column a madatory read every Monday morning. It cuts through all the bullhockey and lays out the stark truth in cold, hard facts; it also reinforces the iTulip thesis as to the inevitable ruin of our once great economy.



    http://www.hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc090518.htm
    thanks for the link. I will try to make it my habit also.
    jim

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

      Ditto. It was an informative read.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

        the ugly, brutal truth

        hope someone in power is reading this; hope it makes an impression

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

          Ahem.

          I hate to spoil the love-fest, but how exactly with the rising interest rates and unemployment are people going to bid up producer prices?

          Are you going to be heartned by any of these enough to buy new swizzle sticks? ANYONE of these things happen, I'm going into my bunker and putting up the "do not disturb" sign for the next 5-10 years.
          I will not be transacting business unless heavily armed and on a battlefield which is not going to be good for commerce.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

            Originally posted by occdude View Post
            I hate to spoil the love-fest, but how exactly with the rising interest rates and unemployment are people going to bid up producer prices?
            Hussman is occasionally a good read but his investing advise is spotty at best. As long as one reads him as the monochromatic bear he's been for 20 years, you can take away his high level observations without cost.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

              There is an archive of Dr. Hussman's Weekly Market Commentary at this hyperlink:
              http://www.hussmanfunds.com/weeklyMarketComment.html



              There are several outstanding calls he made - one of which, along with EJ's "get out of stocks" in December 2007 - kept me from being slaughtered along with millions of other investors. Check out Hussman's commentary for July 16, 2007 , December 10, 2007 , and concerning "Banana Ben" Bernanke, his commentary of March 23rd, 2009 where he describes in clear terms the near criminal irresponsibility of the Fed and Treasury.:mad:

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

                "I hate to spoil the love-fest, but how exactly with the rising interest rates and unemployment are people going to bid up producer prices?"

                See: Zimbabwe.

                "Hussman is occasionally a good read but his investing advise is spotty at best. As long as one reads him as the monochromatic bear he's been for 20 years, you can take away his high level observations without cost."

                I've only been reading him for four years so you have quite a heads-up on me. Didn't know he was a perma-bear. But I learned the two most important rules of investing long before I ever heard of Hussman - rules which he is also apparently familiar with:

                (1) Don't lose money, and (2) Never forget rule #1. :cool:

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

                  Hussman is the best teacher I've never had. Incredibly patient, cogent analysis of the basic issues of investing. Particularly about risk. His weekly comments are a free (!) goldmine and I highly recommend him to anyone trying to get their sea legs. And I couldn't disagree more strongly about his being a perma-bear. He is excrutiatingly unemotional and non-committed. Case in point was his favouring this rally (before it began) - and as the latest comment attests, he is one who fully appreciates how terible the fundamentals are. (FWIW he's also gor years been calling BS on on the calls that stocks are cheap leading into and following the peak based on - historically and anomalously high - corporate profitability.)

                  Would put him up there with Jim Grant.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

                    Originally posted by occdude View Post
                    Ahem.

                    I hate to spoil the love-fest, but how exactly with the rising interest rates and unemployment are people going to bid up producer prices?

                    Are you going to be heartned by any of these enough to buy new swizzle sticks? ANYONE of these things happen, I'm going into my bunker and putting up the "do not disturb" sign for the next 5-10 years.
                    I will not be transacting business unless heavily armed and on a battlefield which is not going to be good for commerce.
                    That's what the other Dr. H(udson) said

                    http://216.240.133.177/archives32/Ch...809_100000.mp3


                    No inflation, but he also voted for hope & change.....

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

                      Thanks Raz. Great article and archive of knowledge.

                      It looks like Hussman's worst case is inflation like the 1970's, i..e, a doubling of prices over the course of a decade, which is "only" a ~7% per annum inflation for a decade, but more probably via EJ-like scenario 12-15% pa over 5 years.

                      And if I recall, EJ has said that developed economies can function at inflation <20%.

                      What does this say for the stock market going forward? Lukester's bull in nominal terms?

                      Originally posted by Raz View Post
                      ...
                      or it will result in a stunning and durable increase in the quantity of base money, which will ultimately be accompanied not by a year or two of 5-6% inflation, but most probably by a near-doubling of the U.S. price level over the next decade.
                      ...

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

                        the gvt is spending your money for you! lets see how many bridge to nowhere projects (metaphor) get constructed in the next few years.
                        debasement of the currency will cause your stored money to lose its value (assuming you have an savings), forcing you to either buy something, be it paper assets, real estate or other tangibles , or see your purchasing power erode. I dont think we will have hyper inflation (just a gut reaction because it cant happen here right? ), but lets see what happens when we get 10% y-o-y inflation for a decade with much smaller y-o-y increases in wages. Middle america is just scraping by as it is. Decrease purchasing power by say 30% and how many families are not going to be able to make it? When their simple dreams of retirement, college for their kids, vacations, electronic doo-dads, nice car will no longer be reachable. All the little things that give them hope are squashed how angry are they going to be. This has not sunk in yet. Give it a few more years.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

                          Originally posted by Raz View Post
                          For over four years I've made this column a madatory read every Monday morning. It cuts through all the bullhockey and lays out the stark truth in cold, hard facts; it also reinforces the iTulip thesis as to the inevitable ruin of our once great economy.


                          Monday, May 18, 2009

                          The Destructive Implications of the Bailout - Understanding Equilibrium

                          John P. Hussman, Ph.D.

                          One of the features that has enabled the bureaucratic abuse of the public during the past year has been the frantic, if temporary, flight-to-safety by investors. The Treasury has issued an enormous volume of debt into the frightened hands of investors seeking default-free securities. This has allowed the Treasury to finance a massive and largely needless transfer of wealth to bank bondholders so easily over the short-term that the longer-term cost has been almost completely obscured. But by transferring wealth from those who did not finance reckless loans to those who did – providing monetary compensation without economic production – the bureaucrats at the Treasury and Federal Reserve have crowded out more than a trillion dollars of gross investment that would have otherwise have been made by responsible people in the coming years, shifted assets to the control of those who have proven themselves to be irresponsible destroyers of capital, and have planted the seeds of inflation that will cut short any emerging recovery.

                          In order to understand the impact of these interventions, you have to think in terms of equilibrium - recognizing that all securities that are issued must also be held by someone - and then follow the money. Initially, suppose you have a banking system with $12 trillion in assets, financed with about $7 trillion in deposits and other liabilities to customers, about $4 trillion in debt to the bondholders of the banks, and about $1 trillion in shareholder equity as a buffer against insolvency.
                          Now, suppose that the value of the assets deteriorates by $1 trillion, effectively wiping out the shareholder equity and putting much of the banking system in an insolvent position. Suppose also that government bureaucrats refuse to properly take receivership of insolvent banks, to impose haircuts on the debt to bondholders or to require them to swap debt for equity. Instead, suppose these bureaucrats prefer to defend the private bondholders who funded the bad loans from experiencing any loss whatsoever, and are willing to use public funds to do it.

                          In order to do this, the Treasury issues $1 trillion in government debt, with a preference toward shorter “money market” maturities (since it doesn't want to drive up long-term interest rates at the same time the Fed hopes to invigorate the housing market). It may seem like this means that there is $1 trillion of new “liquidity” in the economy, but you have to think carefully. ...

                          http://www.hussmanfunds.com/wmc/wmc090518.htm
                          Isn't there a mountain of U.S. dollars, cash sitting on the sidelines, in Asia, especially in China? Wouldn't this tsunami of U.S. cash find its way, sooner or later, into commodities, especially oil?

                          If I am right, then the tsunami of cash from Asia comes to Canada, among other countries, and the tsunami of cash is then used to buy U.S. assets such as stocks. So, thinking like this, the stock market is in recovery as Alberta sucks-off of the cash from China. And as the stocks recover, real estate will recover in America and Canada.

                          As far as Bernanke's hokis-pokis of bail-outs and paying the questionable managers of companies fabulous--- truly undreamed of salaries like $150 million dollars per year--- the guy and his associates belongs in criminal court with charges. But I blame Obama for letting any Bush cronies remain on into the new administration. (This was supposed to have been a purge of the Repukes and their whole way of thinking.)

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

                            forgive me if I'm wrong but I think the point Dr. H is trying to make is that in order for the asian savers to liberate their savings they have to find a buyer. Even if their savings is in highly liquid t-bills, someone still has to buy the t-bills, before the proceeds can be used to purchase something else like commodities or stocks.

                            Who has the money to buy 1.x T in treas. paper? If you don't have cash, your going to have to to sell something to get money to buy the t-bills in the first place thus putting downward pressure on that asset. (oh my brain hurts)

                            I have read somewhere that the average maturity of the asian holdings is something like 6 years and trending down so any selling of these assets will really start chewing into the price. The only bulk buyer I see is the fed and their QE engine.

                            Thus it is not the asian changing their savings to stocks, or comodities, it is the fed that will print the money in order to let them.

                            Did I get that right?

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Dr. "H" explains our Inevitable Impoverishment

                              Originally posted by charliebrown View Post
                              forgive me if I'm wrong but I think the point Dr. H is trying to make is that in order for the asian savers to liberate their savings they have to find a buyer. Even if their savings is in highly liquid t-bills, someone still has to buy the t-bills, before the proceeds can be used to purchase something else like commodities or stocks.

                              Who has the money to buy 1.x T in treas. paper? If you don't have cash, your going to have to to sell something to get money to buy the t-bills in the first place thus putting downward pressure on that asset. (oh my brain hurts)

                              I have read somewhere that the average maturity of the asian holdings is something like 6 years and trending down so any selling of these assets will really start chewing into the price. The only bulk buyer I see is the fed and their QE engine.

                              Thus it is not the asian changing their savings to stocks, or comodities, it is the fed that will print the money in order to let them.

                              Did I get that right?
                              I get what you are saying, but I was envisioning a wall of physical cash in U.S. dollars being held by the Peoples' Bank of China. OK, I think you have it right, the T-bills will get sold, because U.S. money is usually held in short-term T-bills. If this were to occur, i.e, a sell-off of T-bills, the bond market would take its first loss, and the bond market bubble would likely burst. Let's not go that route because that bursting of the bond bubble would be terrible for stocks on the DOW and on all world markets... I see now.

                              I was the slow learner in school. Everything had to be re-explained to me, over and over again. But now the point has been underscored: T-bills get sold and the bond market drags the other markets to new depression lows. Ugh!

                              Comment

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