10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
You are correct. Our U-3 and U-6 Unemployment figures, 10.2% and 17.5%, respectively, does not jibe with so robust numbers.
On Nov 21 10:56 AM TeresaE wrote:
> Now for the $64,000 question: > > How much of this "exporting" is nothing more than sending pieces > to China for them to do final assembly and ship back to us? (a lot) > > > How much is assembled here with CHINESE parts? (a lot) > > These numbers are so bogus. Unless you live in manufacturing and > see the truth, you have no idea how far corrupted our "export" and > GDP has become.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
Tekatl, you offered great points, too. Thanks. There are only so many items you can include in one article. BTW, G.19 Federal Reserve reports show in Q4 2007, there was $.5 trillion in wealth destruction and in 2008 $11.8 trillion in wealth destruction. So, we are taking Japanese size losses it's that our unraveling only started in July 2007. It's early...
On Nov 20 06:13 PM Tekatl wrote:
> Marvin, great work. A couple things I would like to add > > We are in a depression and headed into more of a japanese economic > rut than most think, some of the below are cut and pastes directly > from my blog and yes to the other posts, there are always 2 sides > of the fence and what side of the fence you decide to be on will > reap great rewards: > > 1. Protectionism through Weak Dollar exacerbating the "Great" Recession: > the weak dollar is of course not a tariff or a restrictive quota, > but the US Fed has been systematically decreasing the dollar, which > is impeding global free trade. > > 2. (Wrote in September) In the 80's, Japan's financial markets and > real estate market created a bubble much like our bursted bubble > today. Although we are not having to issue 100 year bonds and US > citizens are not acquiring foreign skyscrapers and other forms of > real estate around the world, at our real estate apex much like Japan's, > real estate values were over-valued creating their bubble, where > trillions were wiped out. Sound familiar? Although we have not lost > trillions(yet), we have not fully felt the repercussions of the easy > credit which we are feeling in our residential real estate, but not > quite yet in our commercial sectors, which means our bubble is still > half full. Whenever there is easy credit, there is increased risk > taking and an increase in the likelihood for default. Furthermore, > with increasing bank regulations, loan officers and the investment > community are having a hard time finding profitable investments and > consumers are starting to increase their savings at a time when the > economy really needs their old spending habits. As these savings > rates increase and people fear the safety of their banks, who already > give little incentive to save with the bank with low interest rates, > compared to burying a can in the backyard or under the mattress, > the government started to subsidize those failing banks and businesses. > Sound like AIG, Citi, BOA, Merrill or familiar? Yes, well this was > Japan back then. Alarming? It should be because they called this > period of time "the lost decade". The Nikkei bottomed out around > 7600, we hit a bottom of 7000. Furthermore, we are stuck at the moment > when Japan started their unsuccessful quantitative easing policy > creating their "lost decade", where they tried to artificially create > inflation. In addition, this is what the news is talking about when > they are talking about the United States being the next carry trade. > Furthermore, Japan is still stuck in deflation or stagflationary > economy, where the Nikkei 225 is stuck at half its peak value. The > main reasons for this deflated "lost decade" are bubbles in equities > and real estate. > During the "lost decade", the banks continued to lend to companies > and individuals that continued to invest in real estate, when the > values dropped, these loans went unpaid and banks delayed the decision > to collect on the collateral in hopes that asset prices would improve, > escalating deflation. In addition, these banks were unable to lend > more money until their cash reserves were built up to cover potential > bad loans. This is where TARP was helpful for us to some degree. > TARP was designed to reduce the quantity of these bad loans and to > increase the funds available for economic growth, kind of like grease > for the economy. In fear of insolvent banks, Japanese citizens were > afraid of bank failures increasing their holdings in gold and real > estate. Interestingly, sounds all too familiar and Japan's economy > is still in a rut. > Now, Japan has a dilemma with it's demographic shift, much like our > "Greying of America" compounded with a decreasing birth rate and > decreasing wages, exacerbating deflation. Decreasing wages caused > by retiring, top pay scale, baby boomers being replaced with lower > pay, contract hire, and part time employees decreasing salaries close > to 10 percent in the last decade.(This week, the employment numbers > show a huge spike in Temp Workers, sounds like the last sentence) > > > 3. (wrote last month)The 4th Quarter is all about Retail numbers > caused by High unemployment, currently at 10.2%, was supposed to > hit 10.2 percent in the Q2 2010, so has much further to go. Current > survey that most are looking on buying things for themselves. Retailers > numbers will be affected by the dilemma of Margins vs Volume. companies > are having to rely on volume at the cost of margin. I'd rather take > margin anyday over profit, but retailers have to go the volume route > now causing deflationary pressures on consumer goods and remember > in #2, harder for japanese companies to make a profit. As in Japan, > will prices drop as demand drops and form a supply glut causing, > in their case, a deflationary spiral, where business were unable > to make enough profit, no matter how low they set their prices. Let's > hope not, they just "celebrated" their 20th anniversary of economic > stagnation. As Nouriel Roubini stated this week, their is a carry > trade bubble forming, the Japanese Yen was and still is a carry trade > preferred. Now, investors have another option, the US Dollar.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
Yes, an imbalance in wealth distribution is a factor in economic contraction.
On Nov 20 11:09 AM Mike from NYC wrote:
> One additional topic I'd like to add: > > 11. The wealth and income imbalance. Never since the days prior to > the passage of legislation creating the income tax and the estate > tax has there been such an imbalance of the rich vs. the rest of > us. Only a few years ago the top 10% owned more than 70% of the wealth > but in more recent reports it has been stated that the Top 1% own > almost 90% of the wealth. > > The Forbes 400 reported that the 400 richest Americans own a combined > $1.4 TRILLION - that is .0013% of the population. > > It is my belief that wealth and income balances will eventually destabilize > our government as the poor get poorer and the rich get richer. <br/> > > What do you think?
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
I would compare this depression to the US 1836 transcontinental inspired bubble and France's 1720 Mississippi Bond episode.
On Nov 20 06:03 AM supose wrote:
> There have been several depressions and these seem to have clear > and unique markers: > > 1. Depressions are proceeded by an unprecedented (at the time) credit > bubble > > 2. Depressions result in deflation, especially with respect to financial > assets reflecting the future decline in hard assets > > 3. The financial markets collapse as a consequence of deflation and > a resultant flight to safety > > 4. Depressions have secular impacts across many industries > > 5. Depressions are global > > 6. Unemployment rises dramatically in many regions > > Given these markers, I believe we are in a depression and in uncharted > waters due to the level of government debt relative to our future > debt repayment capacity. Inflation seems like a natural consequence. > I'm not sure I appreciate what this means for our society but some > form of secular change is likely to occur.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
Thanks, Mark.
On Nov 19 02:17 PM Mark Bern wrote:
> j-dub - You've got a healthy sense of humor, buddy. We're all going > to need it for as long as it takes to get the politics of this great > nation heading back in the right direction. I don't mean that the > correct direction is to the right. I mean, simply put, that we need > to head more toward the moorings of our Constitution. > > To the Author: Excellent article! All points well articulated. It > is the existence of people like you that give us all hope! Keep up > the good work.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
I hope that you're right and that I'm wrong. But, no one thought in 1930 that entire decade would become a washout.
On Nov 19 02:11 PM bobbybutte wrote:
> As a person who has become financially independent SOLELY through > investing let me add a few things > > Ill give you 158 billion reasons why we will have no depression<br/> > > Mr warren Buffett the only person to ever earn over 150 billion for > he and his investors allocating capital has told you it is not happening > > > Want more proof. none of the big shorts like paulson Rogers Soros > chanos kass are shorting financials here like they were > > Want more proof Chinese economy would fold if america's 12 trillion > dollar econmy just died out or even went back drastically > > Fact is you can continue to get debt as long as someone is willing > to back you > > China will back us but at what price? > > Forget all this depression crap.not happening > > what happened last year wa sa massive deleveraging
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
I wish I could write a happier missive this holiday.
On Nov 19 12:31 PM GreenMom wrote:
> Mr. Clark, thank you so much for the time it took to put together > all of these puzzle pieces, lining up the chickens and buzzards that > are coming home to roost.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
Switch channels to Bloomberg.
On Nov 19 12:49 PM j-dub wrote:
> COUNTERPOINT: > > Since I lost my job earlier this year, I am able to stay home and > watch CNBC all day, everyday. And I've learned three very valuable > pieces of information from watching day in and day out that I am > happy to pass on: > > 1) Everything is fine. > > 2) Our government is making ALL the right moves because Ben Bernake > is a genius. > > 3) The economy is just a bit behind schedule concerning employment. > That'll solve itself. (refer to #1) > > Watch a lot more CNBC Mr. Clark, and you'll come to the same conclusions. > They don't get involved with all those fancy numbers and such and > it's fun to watch Cramer jump around.
Replace Ben Bernanke with Paul Volcker [View article]
Excellent. If you can figure out how to ban the Chicago boys' economic policy from our economy, I will personally nominate you for a Nobel Prize.
On Oct 19 10:37 AM Ransome wrote:
> I'm thinking the deposit banks are not up for paying more interest > on deposits. This may be a poor reason to hold rates down but it > could push them over the edge. The flow of money is chasing short > term returns instead of long term investment. Goldman is going gangbusters > because they can borrow short and invest short. Deposit banks can > not do that. If interest rates climb and the deposit banks don't > respond, money will flow like a river out of the banks. This is > a big experiment in financial capitalism where moving money for short > term gains becomes 40% of GDP, replacing industrial capitalism which > is now less than 10% and agriculture which is 1%. The Fed is captured. > > > Look at the stock market, we no longer value companies, we play the > pricing spread, the asymmetric information spread, not the value > spread. Everyone is a crook because there is so much money to be > made the fast way. It is almost beyond regulation. Besides, this > money generated by financial capitalism is kept from the so called > "productive forces" that make a society and a national economy strong. > People seeking Alpha don't want to hear this, but the productive > forces are so weak, you can't even give money away. Without productive > forces, money becomes valueless, hence the move into gold. You don't > need burning inflation to destroy the value of money. I'm sure we > will muddle through until the next collapse because financial capitalism > is not sustainable by itself. > > We fueled the productive forces in Asia, weakened the productive > forces at home, while fueling the speculators at home. The bailout > further damaged the weakened productive forces at home and bailed > out the speculators. This is why we need Volcker, Bair and Warren. > I think they understand. > > The monetarists and the Chicago School must be banned from the economy > and take Harvard while you are at it as they are a big promoter of > financial capitalism, the economic Nosferatu that drains energy from > the productive forces. Warren must have been considered an Alien > from Outer Space at Harvard as she did not support borrow and spend > nor debt till you drop.
Replace Ben Bernanke with Paul Volcker [View article]
Blinder is a good choice. Not a fan of Summers, either.
On Oct 19 10:32 AM Economic Darwinism wrote:
> I like the general idea here, but in June, I made my own recommendations > for reappointments that I still stand by. > > economicdarwinism.word.../ > > > It has Volcker as the Director of the National Economic Council, > brings in Blinder to head the Fed, and Summers as the Treasury Secretary > (mostly because he's running it anyway).
Replace Ben Bernanke with Paul Volcker [View article]
That's why I'm long GLD. It seems we forgot how to do the right thing in DC, a long time ago.
On Oct 19 09:06 AM phdinsuntanning wrote:
> Marvin, smart message, trust the skinny boy notice and daboyz not > looking. Take care with paper gld & slv. It will be burned if > Paul V goes there, very hard I gues, but keep dreaming, cheers.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 21 10:56 AM TeresaE wrote:
> Now for the $64,000 question:
>
> How much of this "exporting" is nothing more than sending pieces
> to China for them to do final assembly and ship back to us? (a lot)
>
>
> How much is assembled here with CHINESE parts? (a lot)
>
> These numbers are so bogus. Unless you live in manufacturing and
> see the truth, you have no idea how far corrupted our "export" and
> GDP has become.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 20 11:17 PM kbear2 wrote:
> This guy is full into Gold and Silver. He is only pushing this view
> to enhance his own holdings as most of these "analysts" do.
> Wake up people.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 20 06:13 PM Tekatl wrote:
> Marvin, great work. A couple things I would like to add
>
> We are in a depression and headed into more of a japanese economic
> rut than most think, some of the below are cut and pastes directly
> from my blog and yes to the other posts, there are always 2 sides
> of the fence and what side of the fence you decide to be on will
> reap great rewards:
>
> 1. Protectionism through Weak Dollar exacerbating the "Great" Recession:
> the weak dollar is of course not a tariff or a restrictive quota,
> but the US Fed has been systematically decreasing the dollar, which
> is impeding global free trade.
>
> 2. (Wrote in September) In the 80's, Japan's financial markets and
> real estate market created a bubble much like our bursted bubble
> today. Although we are not having to issue 100 year bonds and US
> citizens are not acquiring foreign skyscrapers and other forms of
> real estate around the world, at our real estate apex much like Japan's,
> real estate values were over-valued creating their bubble, where
> trillions were wiped out. Sound familiar? Although we have not lost
> trillions(yet), we have not fully felt the repercussions of the easy
> credit which we are feeling in our residential real estate, but not
> quite yet in our commercial sectors, which means our bubble is still
> half full. Whenever there is easy credit, there is increased risk
> taking and an increase in the likelihood for default. Furthermore,
> with increasing bank regulations, loan officers and the investment
> community are having a hard time finding profitable investments and
> consumers are starting to increase their savings at a time when the
> economy really needs their old spending habits. As these savings
> rates increase and people fear the safety of their banks, who already
> give little incentive to save with the bank with low interest rates,
> compared to burying a can in the backyard or under the mattress,
> the government started to subsidize those failing banks and businesses.
> Sound like AIG, Citi, BOA, Merrill or familiar? Yes, well this was
> Japan back then. Alarming? It should be because they called this
> period of time "the lost decade". The Nikkei bottomed out around
> 7600, we hit a bottom of 7000. Furthermore, we are stuck at the moment
> when Japan started their unsuccessful quantitative easing policy
> creating their "lost decade", where they tried to artificially create
> inflation. In addition, this is what the news is talking about when
> they are talking about the United States being the next carry trade.
> Furthermore, Japan is still stuck in deflation or stagflationary
> economy, where the Nikkei 225 is stuck at half its peak value. The
> main reasons for this deflated "lost decade" are bubbles in equities
> and real estate.
> During the "lost decade", the banks continued to lend to companies
> and individuals that continued to invest in real estate, when the
> values dropped, these loans went unpaid and banks delayed the decision
> to collect on the collateral in hopes that asset prices would improve,
> escalating deflation. In addition, these banks were unable to lend
> more money until their cash reserves were built up to cover potential
> bad loans. This is where TARP was helpful for us to some degree.
> TARP was designed to reduce the quantity of these bad loans and to
> increase the funds available for economic growth, kind of like grease
> for the economy. In fear of insolvent banks, Japanese citizens were
> afraid of bank failures increasing their holdings in gold and real
> estate. Interestingly, sounds all too familiar and Japan's economy
> is still in a rut.
> Now, Japan has a dilemma with it's demographic shift, much like our
> "Greying of America" compounded with a decreasing birth rate and
> decreasing wages, exacerbating deflation. Decreasing wages caused
> by retiring, top pay scale, baby boomers being replaced with lower
> pay, contract hire, and part time employees decreasing salaries close
> to 10 percent in the last decade.(This week, the employment numbers
> show a huge spike in Temp Workers, sounds like the last sentence)
>
>
> 3. (wrote last month)The 4th Quarter is all about Retail numbers
> caused by High unemployment, currently at 10.2%, was supposed to
> hit 10.2 percent in the Q2 2010, so has much further to go. Current
> survey that most are looking on buying things for themselves. Retailers
> numbers will be affected by the dilemma of Margins vs Volume. companies
> are having to rely on volume at the cost of margin. I'd rather take
> margin anyday over profit, but retailers have to go the volume route
> now causing deflationary pressures on consumer goods and remember
> in #2, harder for japanese companies to make a profit. As in Japan,
> will prices drop as demand drops and form a supply glut causing,
> in their case, a deflationary spiral, where business were unable
> to make enough profit, no matter how low they set their prices. Let's
> hope not, they just "celebrated" their 20th anniversary of economic
> stagnation. As Nouriel Roubini stated this week, their is a carry
> trade bubble forming, the Japanese Yen was and still is a carry trade
> preferred. Now, investors have another option, the US Dollar.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 20 05:41 PM TraderMark wrote:
> Good post Marvin. People like their lists so a "top 10" list is appropriate
> as we distract the Roman masses with games :)
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 20 11:09 AM Mike from NYC wrote:
> One additional topic I'd like to add:
>
> 11. The wealth and income imbalance. Never since the days prior to
> the passage of legislation creating the income tax and the estate
> tax has there been such an imbalance of the rich vs. the rest of
> us. Only a few years ago the top 10% owned more than 70% of the wealth
> but in more recent reports it has been stated that the Top 1% own
> almost 90% of the wealth.
>
> The Forbes 400 reported that the 400 richest Americans own a combined
> $1.4 TRILLION - that is .0013% of the population.
>
> It is my belief that wealth and income balances will eventually destabilize
> our government as the poor get poorer and the rich get richer. <br/>
>
> What do you think?
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 20 06:03 AM supose wrote:
> There have been several depressions and these seem to have clear
> and unique markers:
>
> 1. Depressions are proceeded by an unprecedented (at the time) credit
> bubble
>
> 2. Depressions result in deflation, especially with respect to financial
> assets reflecting the future decline in hard assets
>
> 3. The financial markets collapse as a consequence of deflation and
> a resultant flight to safety
>
> 4. Depressions have secular impacts across many industries
>
> 5. Depressions are global
>
> 6. Unemployment rises dramatically in many regions
>
> Given these markers, I believe we are in a depression and in uncharted
> waters due to the level of government debt relative to our future
> debt repayment capacity. Inflation seems like a natural consequence.
> I'm not sure I appreciate what this means for our society but some
> form of secular change is likely to occur.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 19 02:17 PM Mark Bern wrote:
> j-dub - You've got a healthy sense of humor, buddy. We're all going
> to need it for as long as it takes to get the politics of this great
> nation heading back in the right direction. I don't mean that the
> correct direction is to the right. I mean, simply put, that we need
> to head more toward the moorings of our Constitution.
>
> To the Author: Excellent article! All points well articulated. It
> is the existence of people like you that give us all hope! Keep up
> the good work.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 19 02:11 PM bobbybutte wrote:
> As a person who has become financially independent SOLELY through
> investing let me add a few things
>
> Ill give you 158 billion reasons why we will have no depression<br/>
>
> Mr warren Buffett the only person to ever earn over 150 billion for
> he and his investors allocating capital has told you it is not happening
>
>
> Want more proof. none of the big shorts like paulson Rogers Soros
> chanos kass are shorting financials here like they were
>
> Want more proof Chinese economy would fold if america's 12 trillion
> dollar econmy just died out or even went back drastically
>
> Fact is you can continue to get debt as long as someone is willing
> to back you
>
> China will back us but at what price?
>
> Forget all this depression crap.not happening
>
> what happened last year wa sa massive deleveraging
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 19 12:31 PM GreenMom wrote:
> Mr. Clark, thank you so much for the time it took to put together
> all of these puzzle pieces, lining up the chickens and buzzards that
> are coming home to roost.
10 Reasons to Believe That We're in a Depression [View article]
On Nov 19 12:49 PM j-dub wrote:
> COUNTERPOINT:
>
> Since I lost my job earlier this year, I am able to stay home and
> watch CNBC all day, everyday. And I've learned three very valuable
> pieces of information from watching day in and day out that I am
> happy to pass on:
>
> 1) Everything is fine.
>
> 2) Our government is making ALL the right moves because Ben Bernake
> is a genius.
>
> 3) The economy is just a bit behind schedule concerning employment.
> That'll solve itself. (refer to #1)
>
> Watch a lot more CNBC Mr. Clark, and you'll come to the same conclusions.
> They don't get involved with all those fancy numbers and such and
> it's fun to watch Cramer jump around.
Replace Ben Bernanke with Paul Volcker [View article]
On Oct 20 03:30 PM flow5 wrote:
> You are obviously ignorant of Volckers record as Chairman of the
> Federal Reserve Board. He is a bad leader and an incompetent economist.
Replace Ben Bernanke with Paul Volcker [View article]
On Oct 19 10:37 AM Ransome wrote:
> I'm thinking the deposit banks are not up for paying more interest
> on deposits. This may be a poor reason to hold rates down but it
> could push them over the edge. The flow of money is chasing short
> term returns instead of long term investment. Goldman is going gangbusters
> because they can borrow short and invest short. Deposit banks can
> not do that. If interest rates climb and the deposit banks don't
> respond, money will flow like a river out of the banks. This is
> a big experiment in financial capitalism where moving money for short
> term gains becomes 40% of GDP, replacing industrial capitalism which
> is now less than 10% and agriculture which is 1%. The Fed is captured.
>
>
> Look at the stock market, we no longer value companies, we play the
> pricing spread, the asymmetric information spread, not the value
> spread. Everyone is a crook because there is so much money to be
> made the fast way. It is almost beyond regulation. Besides, this
> money generated by financial capitalism is kept from the so called
> "productive forces" that make a society and a national economy strong.
> People seeking Alpha don't want to hear this, but the productive
> forces are so weak, you can't even give money away. Without productive
> forces, money becomes valueless, hence the move into gold. You don't
> need burning inflation to destroy the value of money. I'm sure we
> will muddle through until the next collapse because financial capitalism
> is not sustainable by itself.
>
> We fueled the productive forces in Asia, weakened the productive
> forces at home, while fueling the speculators at home. The bailout
> further damaged the weakened productive forces at home and bailed
> out the speculators. This is why we need Volcker, Bair and Warren.
> I think they understand.
>
> The monetarists and the Chicago School must be banned from the economy
> and take Harvard while you are at it as they are a big promoter of
> financial capitalism, the economic Nosferatu that drains energy from
> the productive forces. Warren must have been considered an Alien
> from Outer Space at Harvard as she did not support borrow and spend
> nor debt till you drop.
Replace Ben Bernanke with Paul Volcker [View article]
On Oct 19 10:32 AM Economic Darwinism wrote:
> I like the general idea here, but in June, I made my own recommendations
> for reappointments that I still stand by.
>
> economicdarwinism.word.../
>
>
> It has Volcker as the Director of the National Economic Council,
> brings in Blinder to head the Fed, and Summers as the Treasury Secretary
> (mostly because he's running it anyway).
Replace Ben Bernanke with Paul Volcker [View article]
On Oct 19 09:06 AM phdinsuntanning wrote:
> Marvin, smart message, trust the skinny boy notice and daboyz not
> looking. Take care with paper gld & slv. It will be burned if
> Paul V goes there, very hard I gues, but keep dreaming, cheers.
Replace Ben Bernanke with Paul Volcker [View article]
On Oct 19 10:11 AM Dave Wrixon wrote:
> The biggest concern is Paul's advancing years, but lets face it even
> a corpse would be better than Bernanke.