Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
if they want BUSH in ... if they want him OUT ...
i think you're putting too much into this. as you can see in the #s, bush ratings are falling as market continues to climb, and consumer confidence dropping. the vast majority of the voting public rely more on their paycheck than on capital gains or dividends.
"Get your chips into play!"
Marc Faber
02-Sep-03
http://www.gloomboomdoom.com/marketcoms/indexmarketcoms.htm
So spoke Larry Kudlow, of CNBC fame, in a recent "Cramer and Kudlow" show. However, what Kudlow failed to specify is precisely on which number or color we should place our chips.
I have recently taken a negative view about bonds... despite the almost universal consensus that bond markets around the world had reached a bubble peak and would from now on decline. The so-called 'reflation trade', which most strategists are advocating, implies that the selling of bonds and the purchase of equities is the way to play of the day.
Recently, however, I received a study by Ray Dalio and Jason Rotenberg of Bridgewater Associates, an institutional economic service I highly recommend, which pointed out that whereas the twin deficits - the budget deficit and the current account deficit - exploded in the period from 1983 to 1987, and in the process weakened the U.S. dollar, bonds continued to rally from their secondary lows in 1984 (the major low was reached in September 1981) until 1987.
Bridgewater doesn't buy the argument that the present bulging twin deficits, each of which will soon reach around 5% of GDP (a record, I might add), is necessarily be bearish for bonds. The Fed has the means to create sufficient liquidity to support bond prices and simply let the dollar slide in order to make the necessary adjustments.
Since I religiously read the research papers published by Bridgewater Associates, I did some thinking about whether bonds could resume their 22-year bull market and confound the consensus, while the dollar weakened much further. In the process, I discovered some important fundamental differences between the present situation and the economic conditions that prevailed in the 1984-1987 period, which permitted the bond market to rally while the dollar was tumbling.
First, when bonds began to rally in the fall of 1981, they had completed an almost 40-year bear market. In addition, the 1983-1984 renewed weakness in bond prices saw the yield on government bonds spike up once again to over 14%, whereas inflation had by then already declined to less than 4%. Thus, in 1984, bonds had an unusually high real yield, as the investment community still believed that inflation would reaccelerate at any time.
In other words, in those days, inflationary expectations were extremely high, because investors were conditioned by the highly inflationary 1970s during which it appeared that there was no end in sight to rising commodity prices and inflation rates.
However, when commodity prices continued to decline between 1984 and the summer of 1986 and the CPI declined to around 2.5%, while at the same time the Producer Price Index was briefly deflating, bonds staged a huge rally, bringing yields down from above 14% to less than 7.5%. Now, however, it seems to me that the very high inflationary expectations of the early 1980s, which led to record-high real interest rates on long-term bonds, have been replaced by widespread complacency about future inflation rates and, in fact, fear about outright deflation.
Another point that should be mentioned is that, whereas until 1987 the U.S. had a positive net investment balance (it owned more assets abroad than foreigners owned assets in the U.S.), this has today been replaced by a negative investment balance, which amounts now to around 25% of GDP and is currently growing by around 5% of GDP.
Thus, today, the ownership by foreigners of U.S. Treasuries, corporate bonds, and equities is more than twice as large as a percentage of GDP as it was in 1984 - not an insignificant point when appraising the future of bond prices amidst a U.S. dollar bear market, as Bridgewater seems to forecast. It is, to my mind, doubtful that foreigners will continue to increase their already very significant exposure to U.S. bonds, which are now offering very low yields, if the dollar is going to weaken much further.
Another point I believe to be relevant when comparing the 1984-1987 bond bull market and the present situation is that, at the time, Paul Volcker was Fed chairman. By contrast, we now have monetary policy makers such as Alan Greenspan and Mr. Bernanke at the helm, who are much more likely to tolerate higher inflation rates than Paul Volcker would ever have done.
Lastly, it should not be forgotten that crude oil prices tumbled between 1985 and 1986 from more than US$30 to less than US$12.
Now, I am not suggesting that oil prices couldn't decline once again, but a decline of this magnitude seems highly unlikely given both the rising oil demand we have in Asia and how badly the occupation by the coalition forces is going in Iraq, which will be unlikely to lead to significant oil exports from Iraq. At the same time, the cost of the occupation is almost certain to increase the U.S. fiscal deficits for some time to come.
I have been highly skeptical about the invasion of Iraq. I have subsequently received several hate emails for having the audacity to question the war, so I have decided to refrain from making any additional comments. I am, however, indebted to my friend Professor Marvin Zonis, a brilliant international political analyst, for allowing me to reprint some of the views he expressed in a recent report entitled "Terrorism Alert: 'Waste Deep in the Big Muddy' of Iraq". Under the subtitle, "A Guerilla War in Iraq", he writes:
"Before the U.S. war against Saddam Hussein, I predicted that the outcome would, eventually, resemble the fate that befell the Israelis after their invasion of Lebanon in June 1982. The Israelis had liberated Lebanon from its near-total control by the PLO, which had fled to Lebanon after losing its war against King Hussein in Jordan in 1970. After a rapid and total Israeli military victory in the summer of 1982, Yasser Arafat and his PLO fighters were put on freighters in Beirut and exiled to Tunisia. But in 1983, hundreds of U.S. and French Marines were killed in separate terrorist bombings in Beirut and the U.S. pulled out.
"By 1986, the Israelis had fled from Lebanon, unwilling to sustain the low level of casualties that were constantly inflicted on their armed forces. Before the U.S. war against Saddam Hussein, I suggested that the Iraqis would turn against the U.S., as the Lebanese had turned against the Israelis, seeing them as occupiers rather than liberators and that a turn against the U.S. would come to be one way the Iraqis could generate a national identity and create a unified Iraq. The turn against the U.S. has already occurred. (Like all other processes in our age, the transformation of the U.S. from liberators to occupiers occurred more quickly than was conceivable two decades ago for the Israelis in Lebanon.)
"The most dangerous part of this story, however, is not in Baghdad, but in Washington. The Bush administration appears to be in a state of denial about the seriousness of the U.S. position in Iraq. What has become increasingly obvious is that the deaths of American soldiers and the looting in Baghdad and Basra are the product of organized opposition to the U.S. occupation. The U.S. is now in a guerilla war - a low-intensity conflict - in Iraq. The killings of Americans are not the product of disgruntled, lone, Saddam loyalists. They are the product of determined opposition to the U.S.."
According to Zonis, the violent opposition appears to be largely the work of Sunnis, but the Shiite areas of Iraq are apparently also increasingly restive, complaining that U.S. officials promised that Iraq would be turned over to the Iraqis as soon as Saddam was overthrown. And commenting on President Bush's response to the rising casualties, Marvin (not me, although I agree with his views) writes: "President Bush displayed his usual macho style [recently], when he told reporters, 'There are some who feel like conditions are such that they can attack us there. My answer is: Bring them on. We have the force necessary to deal with the situation'. But by all accounts, however, the U.S. does not have the force necessary to deal with the new terrorism."
Zonis then explains that before the start of the war, "Army Chief of Staff, General Eric Shinseki, argued that hundreds of thousands of troops would be necessary to stabilize a post-Saddam Iraq. Secretary Rumsfeld and Deputy Wolfowitz slammed the General (who has now been retired from the armed forces) on the grounds that his estimates had nothing to do with Iraqi realities. The word from Baghdad is that U.S. administrator Paul Bremer has asked for a substantial boost in U.S. troop strength. The request has been denied by the Pentagon."
According to Zonis, "armed resistance to the U.S. occupation of Iraq is likely to grow and not diminish as the U.S. fails to restore vital services - electricity is still being delivered to Baghdad for fewer hours per day than Saddam supplied - and as Sunnis are energized by a new crop of young hot-headed clerics. That the U.S. is involved in a classic guerrilla-type war is, incidentally, also the opinion of the U.S. military's new commander in Iraq, General John P. Abizaid, whose views seem to be in sharp contrast to earlier statements by Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld."
Now, if the U.S. is indeed engaged in a guerrilla war in Iraq (and by all accounts, it certainly looks that way), victory won't be easy. I remember well my meeting with a French member of the Foreign Legion on the Island of Corsica in the 1960s. He had fought in 1954 at Dien Bien Phu in Vietnam, and served during the Algerian uprising prior to Algeria gaining independence in 1962. According to him, his regiment was relieved when they left Vietnam. Every legionnaire was looking forward to being stationed in Algeria, which they thought would be like a paradise when compared to the tough campaign and eventual hellish defeat they had experienced in Vietnam.
However, this proved to be an illusion. According to him, the Algerian war turned out to be far worse than Vietnam, because the French troops in Algeria never knew who was friend or enemy and, therefore, incurred tremendous casualties in continuously recurring ambushes, acts of sabotage, and raids on their camps.
The problem with guerrilla wars is that the enemy isn't visible, and so, unless the local population almost unconditionally supports the occupying forces, guerrillas can easily hide among and seek support from the local population. Claus von Clausewitz describes in his classic work "On War" (first published in 1832) that any "attack which does not lead to peace must necessarily end up as a defense. It is thus the defense itself that weakens the attack. Far from this being idle sophistry, we consider it to be the greatest disadvantage of the attack that one is eventually left in a most awkward defensive position."
This is exactly where the coalition forces find themselves now - in a very awkward position. Not only do the minority Sunnis oppose the occupation, since in a reconstituted Iraqi government they would be outnumbered by the Shiites, but it is likely that some more radical elements of the Shiites with the support of Iran will fight the occupation, which, according to some well-placed sources, will lead to an American attack on Iran sometime early next year. In any event, it is doubtful that the occupation will be over soon.
While it is unlikely that the tactics employed by the Iraqis will lead to a "Teutoburger defeat", which, when in AD 9 the German leader Arminius lured the Roman legions into the Teutoburger forest, resulted in the liquidation of three Roman legions under the command of Publius Quintilius Varus (the emperor Augustus is quoted as having exclaimed, "Varus, Varus, give me back my legions!"), a costly, drawn-out war with heavy casualties, along the same lines as the Algerian war, should not be ruled out. I might add that Arminius is widely regarded in Germany as a hero who, according to the Roman historian Tacitus, was "unquestionably the liberator of Germany", since the Romans were subsequently forced to retreat south of the Rhine and behind the Limes and Danube rivers. This is the reason why Germany, unlike Gallia (France), was never Romanized.
It also goes to show that the so-called Pax Romana, which reached its zenith under Augustus, is more a myth than reality, since Roman legions were continuously engaged in costly wars in the Empire's provinces.
The situation into which the coalition forces have boxed themselves in Iraq is potentially far more serious than the financial markets are giving it credit for. It could, if it deteriorates, not only have implications for the budget deficit and President Bush's chances of being re-elected, but also for geopolitics, since one can safely assume that both the Russians and the Chinese (who are becoming increasingly dependent on Middle Eastern oil) have little interest in seeing the Americans succeed in their endeavor.
As a result, I believe that the risks in U.S. financial assets remain high and that the U.S. dollar, U.S. bonds, and U.S. equities are vulnerable to a large number of potential negative factors, which could disappoint investors, if not in the second half of this year, then in 2004.
So, as Larry Kudlow suggested, where should investors get their chips into play?
I continue to believe that commodities including gold, silver as well as industrial commodities are the place to be. I would, therefore, buy mining companies (Newmont Mining, Placer Dome, Inco, etc), oil and oil servicing stocks (Exxon, Royal Dutch, Diamond Offshore), and even some basic stocks (International Paper, Dow Chemical). Rising commodity prices will also be favorable for countries like Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Russia, Brazil and Argentina. All these purchases could be hedged to some extend by shorting the sectors, which will suffer from rising interest rates and commodity prices. These sectors include the interest rate sensitive financial sectors (banks, sub-prime lenders, consumer finance companies) and US homebuilding stocks, which are up fivefold since 2000!
A word of caution: The September to November period is seasonally a weak period. Expectations in the US are now an extreme and reflect a very optimistic sentiment about an economic recovery and higher stock prices directly ahead. Any disappointment could lead to a sharp sell-off or even a crash, which would temporary strengthen the bond market. A new high in the bond market appears, however, to be most unlikely.
... unless the Fed elects to give out free blindfolds!
you didn't get yours?? pm me. i have a couple extra. (even got a fun one with one of those fake plastic greenspan noses attached. very cool.)
"and cheap oil via increased supply (not slackening demand)...would do it again."
mmm. but you pointed out that its already cheaper. where's this increased supply coming from?
i think maybe you just have the other half of my half-empty glass.
Are you saying that higher priced oil is good for corporate profits???
i believe he is saying that lower oil prices might imply lower demand which, in their roundabout way, could presage lower corporate profits.
Bernard, It's all about the funds now.
interesting thing to keep in mind here. morningstar (e.g.) has recommended that individual sell funds named in spitzer's probe.
Micron Tech [...]
odd. haven't dram prices been falling lately?
Richard Russell uses the 'm' word.
(okay, okay. lots of m's. but i meant "manipulation".)
The market can't take a bad Monday
By Peter Brimelow, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 1:08 AM ET Sept. 15, 2003
NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- McClelland manipulation? The bears have new reasons to be grumpy.
Dow Theory Letter's eternally youthful septuagenarian superbear, Richard Russell, was very suspicious of Friday's rebound. He wrote:
"Today started out on the weak side, but 'miraculously' buying came in and the market ended weakly higher.
"This always smacks of manipulation, but who knows -- I certainly don't. Even if it is manipulation, the market might be manipulated for a day or two, but it can't be manipulated for much longer than that.
"However, I did think it strange with the McClellan Oscillator right on the edge of going negative that buying came in. Am I getting paranoid in my old age?
"I wrote yesterday that the McClellan Oscillator (which is based on the juxtaposition of two exponential moving averages of breadth) had carved out a potential head-and-shoulders top with a very small, weak right shoulder. I said that it would not look good if the stock market was down today, since this would push the Oscillator back below the zero line....
"McClellan Oscillator was up a weak 12 today to a positive 64. Still looks like the right shoulder of a potential head-and-shoulders top.
"The market will have to stay UP next week to keep the Oscillator positive - the market cannot take a bad Monday."
Hmm. What is this McClellan Oscillator anyway?
It's one of these wonderful things that happen in Investment Letterland.
The McClellan Oscillator is a measure of breadth momentum developed by Sherman McClellan and his wife Marian, a mathematician, in 1969. They wrote a book about it, called Patterns For Profit, in 1970.
And in 1995, Sherman and his son, Tom McClellan, a West Point graduate and an army helicopter pilot, began an investment letter, The McClellan Market Report, which they publish from what looks like a very nice part of Washington State.
For their explanation of the McClellan Oscillator, click here.
Mark Hulbert has never heard of the McClellan service -- he thinks. At any rate, it's not yet generated enough reader demand to be added to the list of investment letters monitored by the Hulbert Financial Digest.
But that's not unusual.
The conventional media take on investment letters is that they are all self-promoting showmen - like, let's say, Joe Granville of the Granville Market Letter.
But in fact, you also find little-promoted letters and even outright recluses. When, some 20 years ago, I first interviewed Dan Sullivan of The Chartist because his Hulbert Financial Digest record was (and remains) so striking, he didn't even have his business telephone listed.
People might call him up, he said.
Nevertheless, the McClellan Oscillator and its long-term expression, the McClellan Summation Index, have been spreading through Letterland, apparently purely on its merits.
Just scrounging around at the end of the week, we found it was cited by (besides Russell) letters like the Todd Market Forecast, Professional Timing Service, Stockmarket Cycles.
Couldn't happen in Corporate America, or Academic America either for that matter. There would be too many committees, chairmen of department, reports, reviews etc.
Stock Market Cycles' Peter Eliades currently says that the short-term stock market is "50-50 in terms of the short-term prognosis."
And here, in technician speak, is how Eliades recently used McClellan:
"...it appears the [advance-decline line] made a virtual double top today [September 12] with the recovery high seen on September 8th...there is a big divergence now, actually a double divergence with lower McClellan Oscillator readings on September 8th and today, September 12th, than there were at the McClellan Oscillator high on September 3rd with the advance/decline line higher on both September 8th and September 12th and the McClellan Oscillator lower on each of those successive dates. On a longer term basis there is now a marked divergence on the McClellan Summation Index. An historically high reading on that indicator occurred on June 17th at 6168 on the orthodox McClellan Summation Index ... You will see when we give you today's Summation Index readings [3343] that, despite higher prices on the advance/decline line and most of the indexes, the McClellan summation Index readings are very substantially lower.
Bottom line: Eliades remains a bear -- one of the fiercest of those with a good timing record followed by Mark Hulbert.
Manipulation or not, McClellan appears here to stay.
well even yahoo has that "bad tick" on the compx. (how can that happen? its derived from individual stock prices, right? unless, i guess, something on the compx that's not also on the ndx had a momentary moonlaunch ...)
Day's Range: 1,843.79 - 1,902.07
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?d=t&s=^IXIC
NASD warning while Schwab promoting margin
perhaps schwab was extremely successful in pushing folks onto margin
a message like that was around for a while on the "relogin" screen. today, though, was the first time i noticed it on the "order" page. ... might have been there for a while though.
"Life is but a dream"
whoa, isn't that a song from star trek V: the final frontier?
watching Cirque du Soleil
i haven't seen them since i was a kid, out at the santa monica pier. sigh.
i wish these houses would come clean, though, and just tell everyone that "sell" means "you should have sold", and "buy" means "you should have bought". wasn't there a proposal long ago that they were supposed to supply charts of the stocks they were recommending, labelled with where they issued their past calls? or maybe that was just a dream.
"aggressively buy the pullback as the cyclical ramp continues."
time to recondition the dip buyers to be knife catchers, it seems.
what was that?? am i the only one who's charts momentarily showed the compx shoot up to 1900?
Joe 6 is starting to feel more comfortable about stocks and eyeing the gains the neighbor is makeing.
with polls showing confidence in bush and economy slipping, and consumer confidence numbers confirming this ... isn't this just wishful thinking?
Cash still reallocating out of bonds and will go into stocks as the 9-11 fear is passing.
when stocks crashed, pension funds reallocated out of stocks and into bonds. on the other hand, j6p never really moved his money anywhere. why is this time different?
My horoscope sees Uranus entering the bubble constellation.
nah, watch out for a rogue comet heading for uranus.
anyone here looking at insurers as the hurricane heads for the east coast? or is that play already played out?
TJ, not to curb you short enthusiasm or anything
lol. hey, i've been much longer than short during this whole rally. only difference is, i've been long gold miners and short tech.
clearly, if you did such a thing you could have made out like a bandit (home equity loan to invest in the market). on the other hand, the risk associated with that is well beyond anything i'd tolerate for myself. and i'd guess that nobody recommended it for similar reasons. (although i do remember having a conversation here one saturday about how a guy on one of the saturday or sunday nbc shows had recommended doing just that.)
but that's all hypothetical, i guess, cuz i don't have anything to mortgage :-P
Maybe it is time to buy some shares of Schwab.
Sounds as if they are setting themselves up to make a killing.
well, when i see something that says
"Feeling bullish? Get back into the market with a low-interest home equity loan!"
then i'll know the end is near.
still long msft
hmm. here? i added msft short earlier, and put that with my qqq (9/8), intc(9/9) and csco(9/12).
schwab's new message:
Feeling Bullish?
Potentially maximize your upside with margin borrowing.
Go>
once again, swks showing serious weakness.
well, that was (a bit) tongue-in-cheek.
re jobs going overseas, here's the view of scott mcnealy in a recent and very candid interview. one of my favorite ceo's (and libertarian). his views on jobs going overseas are down near the end.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2003/09/14/BU141353.DTL&type=b...
Sure as hell none of those dollars are headed back here to buy Starbucks coffee or Bed, Bath and Beyond's latest overpriced draperies.
ah, but they buy something better (!) : our dollars and our debt. chief u.s. export!
OT repost
johnny cash's goodbye
http://www.mtv.com/bands/az/cash_johnny/audvid.jhtml
okay okay, it has nothing to do with stocks and i've posted it before. it just seems especially poignant after his recent death.
... they will have no choice but to spend additional profits on assets providing lesser returns (people).
although, of course, there are compelling arguments for hiring those people in mexico or china also ...
It has been preying on my mind how this works in terms ...
well, i think you're conflicted over the macro scale vs the micro scale. sort of like how greenspan and his policies encourage folks to do things that are bad for them individually (take on massive debt, spend spend spend) which are good for the economy as a whole.
wsj article [Re TJ (Roach on China)]
http://online.wsj.com/article/0,,macro_investor,00.html
Washington Needs to Decide
If It Favors Capital or Labor
With strong rhetoric, Democratic presidential candidates have linked President Bush's tax cuts to job losses. But they've failed to provide the intellectual connection, explaining just how the president's changes to the tax code have eliminated a job.
Now there is help for the Democrats from an unlikely source: a supply-side economist who has consulted with the White House on economic issues and was even mentioned as a potential adviser to President Bush. In a recent report, David Malpass, chief global economist at Bear Stearns, said recent changes to the tax laws may actually have reduced hiring. His comments raise an issue that gets at the heart of the debate over the correct economic policies to forge economic growth and create jobs. Specifically, what are the appropriate incentives government should provide business? Should it favor capital or labor?
"… the differential cost between labor and capital has probably widened in recent years due to the improvement in the tax treatment of business investment and the increase in the employer portion of health insurance costs, encouraging business equipment purchases rather than new hiring," he wrote earlier this week.
For the market, the question of capital or labor is especially important. The lack of hiring in the economy looks good for stocks… now. Productivity and profits have been rising along with overall economic growth, and companies have been doing better without adding new workers. But the market wants to know how sustainable the recovery will be, and job growth is critical to keep the engine humming. As mortgage refinancings wane, it will take earning and job growth to keep consumer income and spending high. That's why the August employment report, showing a loss of 93,000 jobs has been so troubling.
(A big fan of the tax cuts, Mr. Malpass believes hiring should revive in 2004 as a result of the president's policies.)
Mr. Bush has been successful at implementing several changes to the tax code that have been beneficial to capital, including a reduction in the capital-gains and dividend tax rates. But among the most important and least discussed is the change in depreciation rules under the Bush administration. Previously, business equipment was depreciated by a schedule that conformed roughly to an estimate of the life of the asset. In the first round of the Bush tax cuts, business was allowed to write off 30% of the asset's value in the first year (plus the first year of the depreciation). That was bumped up to 50% (plus the first year) in the latest round.
By one estimate, this ended up reducing the cost of capital by about 6% compared to before Mr. Bush took office. (There is an argument that the reductions in income-tax rates are beneficial to labor, reducing the after-tax dollars required to hire a worker, but Mr. Malpass's comments make clear that capital has done better under this president.)
The president is fond of noting the tried-and-true economic idea that if you want more of something, tax it less. And he was responding to a consensus in the economic community that what we needed more of was business investment. Beginning with the last quarter of the Clinton administration, investment in equipment and software fell for six straight quarters. The president's economics were sound in that he was banking on another ostensibly tried-and-true relationship: the one between growth in business investment and payroll growth.
I ran some numbers, and over the past 50 years, employment and spending on business equipment and software dance in tandem about 70% of the time. That is, when one goes up the other almost always does too.
But Mr. Bush may have made a classic mistake in believing that correlation proves causation. To wit, while the two series may move together, there is no actual proof, only theory, that one causes the other to rise or fall.
And so Mr. Bush got half of what he wanted. Business investment has risen in five of the past six quarters. But payrolls have grown in only one of those quarters.
This represents what may well be the greatest anomaly in the relationship between these two series of the past half century. If the correlation has been 70% over that time, it has been less than 20% during the Bush presidency. Put it this way: In the post World War II era there has never been so much growth in equipment and software spending by business with such a decline in employment.
Are the tax changes to blame?
I contacted about half a dozen economists across the political spectrum, including professors and business economists, and nearly all agreed that the depreciation change could indeed have led to reduced hiring. (There were arguments over whether it caused a lot or a little, but the dynamic wasn't disputed.)
The process by which this could happen is called substitution, in which employers choose equipment over labor because of a reduction in the tax on capital. Read that as a reduction in the relative price of capital, that is, machines become cheaper than workers because of reduced taxation (among other reasons, including technological ones). As Mr. Malpass pointed out, these taxes have been going down while the cost of labor has been rising, especially health-care costs.
Now, an opposing force that should create jobs is called "the income effect.'' This dictates that as the price of producing something falls, more of it should be produced. As more of it is produced, and produced more profitably, employers should have incentive to hire more workers. Also, if machines do more of the work, then we have raised the economy's growth potential, that is, the ability of the economy to grow without creating inflation. By freeing up workers, we essentially create more resources.
The problem for workers arises, however, when the price of machines drop but growth is sluggish. Labor suffers inevitably. (In economic terms, the substitution effect overwhelms the income effect.) What could have caused this? How about the 9/11 terrorist attack, corporate-governance scandals and the war in Iraq? All combined to make companies more risk averse, choosing to substitute capital for labor but not boost output or hiring.
It is virtually impossible to know what the optimal difference should be between the taxation of labor and capital. Ultimately, the best tax system is the one that produces the least distortions from what the market would create on its own. So there should be no preferential treatment for capital or labor in the tax code --- ideally. Still, societies can make choices, opting to advantage labor over capital or vice versa because of cultural preferences. It can also do so for economic reasons, or social ones at a specific time in history.
This remains a time of technological revolution, when the market should have a greater preference for machines. Labor, especially unskilled labor, suffers from such a bias. This is made worse by the sluggish growth created by the series of shocks that have hit the economy. Moreso, low inflation and low interest rates also tend to reduce the cost of capital. Given all of that, there's a legitimate question as to whether it made sense to accelerate depreciation and favor capital.
But that's in the past. The question now is whether there's a case to be made for helping labor through reduced payroll taxes or additional assistance in retraining. Mr. Bush can wait to see if the income effect takes hold later this year and into 2004, resulting in job growth. That's Mr. Malpass's bet, but the consensus of economists sees the unemployment rate falling only to 5.9% by the end of 2004, from the current level of 6.1%.
Or Mr. Bush can start to consider incentives to help firms hire and retrain unskilled workers. He has already proposed personal re-employment accounts to help retraining, but it appears to be moving slowly through Congress. He could use some additional presidential clout to push it through. And how about a cut in the payroll tax?
After all, if you want more of something, as the president has said, it makes sense to tax it less.
If you'd like to reach Steve Liesman, write to him at steve.liesman@nbc.com, and place "Attn: Macro Investor" in the subject line, or write to newseditors@wsj.com to have a comment published about the Macro Investor.
Updated September 12, 2003 11:14 a.m.
why not ask if we want to continue subsidizing the industrialization of China to the tune of tens of billions of dollars per year?
i agree entirely. but its crocodile tears. as bill gross wrote recently, they own alot of our debt (stick), and we want them to buy our debt (carrot), so the peg is "good for us", in that sense. on top of that, pulling the plug on china's bubble isn't going to be positive for japan or the rest of asia; and, as a consequence, for us.
as i said, is china the problem and is unpegging the solution we want? i sorta kinda don't think so.
but, whether it is or not, its hypocritical of us, on the one hand, to show such fiscal and monetary profligacy to manipulate the business cycle, and on the other hand (wearing our best capitalist hats) point out that the chinese are making out like bandits on our big gambit here.
here's another take on the jobs issue, from the wsj no less. actually, i think this is from the pay site, so i'll repost in another message in its entirety:
With strong rhetoric, Democratic presidential candidates have linked President Bush's tax cuts to job losses. But they've failed to provide the intellectual connection, explaining just how the president's changes to the tax code have eliminated a job.
Now there is help for the Democrats from an unlikely source: a supply-side economist who has consulted with the White House on economic issues and was even mentioned as a potential adviser to President Bush. In a recent report, David Malpass, chief global economist at Bear Stearns, said recent changes to the tax laws may actually have reduced hiring. His comments raise an issue that gets at the heart of the debate over the correct economic policies to forge economic growth and create jobs. Specifically, what are the appropriate incentives government should provide business? Should it favor capital or labor?
I think Roach has got it wrong about China.
well, he's actually addressing the tarriff issue, but still ...
i do think he's making valid points. the peg has been there for years, so what's so special about now? if they abandon the peg, then what? is this a cure and is it the cure we want? does it really help if imports from china decrease and from japan and malaysia increase?
or, to come back to the message that's a constant through all of his recent analyses: this isn't attacking the problem, its attacking a symptom (and its consequences probably aren't what we want, if we learn the lesson from history). the problem is the current account deficit and no savings in the u.s.
McClellan on gold
http://www.321gold.com/editorials/mcclellan/mcclellan091503.html
Gold Entering Corrective Phase
The McClellan Market Report
September 15, 2003
Extracted from the 12th of September 2003 issue #202 of The McClellan Report
The price of gold appears to have made a top on Sep. 9, which was exactly according to our expectation of a top due Sep. 8-9. That appearance could prove to be wrong in the next few days if gold somehow continues higher, but for now it looks like the top is in.
http://www.321gold.com/editorials/mcclellan/mcclellan091503/1.gif
[...]
One good reason is the rampant bullishness among investors in gold and gold mining stocks. The chart above shows the level of assets in the Rydex Precious Metals Fund. It has reached a peak that is almost twice as high as any previous top in the asset level, which indicates to us that the hot money has really chased the gold rall this time. The asset level has even gone way above the upper limit of the rising trend channel. This is an unsustainable level of bullishness, and it is going to take a while to get this asset level back down to a low enough level to indicate that the excessive bullishness has been wrung out of the hearts of these investors.
[...]
Bottom Line: Gold has topped, and should be in corrective mode until late October. Then it can rally again to what should be a higher high.
puplava is good tonight growl
http://www.financialsense.com/stormwatch/update.htm
[excerpt]
I begin my case for distribution with the economy.
Defense Spending Pumped GDP
The financial community is forever preoccupied with the U.S. economy’s improving economic conditions. Everyone—from Wall Street seers to the Chairman of the Federal Reserve to the White House—is bullish over the U.S. economy's growth prospects. The recession has ended and everyone expects economic conditions to get stronger going forward. According to official statistics, the U.S. economy grew at an annual rate of 3.1% during the second quarter and current consensus believes that we’ll hit 5% growth rates by the Q4. (The U.S. is one of the few countries that annualizes its quarterly economic growth, a practice that distorts overall economic conditions.) While the revised economic numbers were widely heralded by the financial press that the long awaited recovery had finally arrived, very little was mentioned about the details of this economic miracle. Defense spending during Q2 rose sharply during the quarter due to the war. It accounted for 55% or $40.6 billion of $73.5 billion in GDP growth. In other words, defense spending due to the war accounted for 1.53% of the 3.1% GDP growth rate.
Statistical Massaging
The other 1.32 percentage points of economic growth were mainly a statistical mirage. The remaining part of GDP growth was attributed to the statistical magic of hedonic indexing. Government statisticians turned a real increase of $6.3 billion in fixed investment in computers into a major increase in capex spending on computers of $38.4 billion with the flash of a statistical wand. Actual spending in current dollars rose from $76.3 billion to $82.6 billion during the quarter. Government statisticians turned a real increase in investment spending of $6.3 billion into a GDP number of $38.4 billion. The $38.4 billion was the number used to compute GDP growth—not the real number of $6.3 billion. The hypothetical increase in business spending of $32 billion did not exist in reality. Actual business spending on computers only increased by $6.3 billion—not by $38.4 billion as widely reported. This means that over 40% of GDP growth during the quarter was purely fictional. In a moment I will get to the implications of this number for the technology sector and the NASDAQ.
Kurt Richebächer has done a great job of tracking these statistical anomalies in his monthly newsletter, The Richebächer Letter. According to his recent newsletter, real economic growth during the second quarter was only $26 billion, a growth rate of 0.27% or 1.04 annualized.[1] That number is a far cry from the widely reported and revised 3.1% growth rates trumpeted by Wall Street and the financial press.
The statistical massaging doesn’t stop with hedonic indexing. The government can inflate the GDP numbers in other ways. For example, GDP is measured in dollars then the government subtracts the inflation numbers to arrive at real economic growth minus inflation. In the first quarter, the annualized inflation rate was 2.4%. Then in the second quarter, the inflation rate miraculously dropped to 0.8%. Does anybody really believe that the inflation rate dropped by two-thirds in one quarter?—a time when oil prices hovered above $30 a barrel for almost the entire quarter, a time when natural gas prices remained stubbornly above $4, when insurance premiums are jumping double digits, and food prices are escalating? By lowering the inflation rate, the government was able to make the GDP numbers look better. Remember, the inflation rate is subtracted from the GDP numbers. A higher inflation rate reduces GDP. Want a higher GDP number? Just lower the inflation rate. This kind of statistical tinkering made the jump in last November and December’s oil and gas prices come in as reduction in energy prices rather than an increase. This is the kind of statistical wizardry that is starting to make U.S. economic numbers as untrustworthy as corporate profits. The smart money doesn’t believe these numbers, nor should you.
I love BBQ short ribs
mmmm. now you make me hungry for a good korean bbq restaurant. the *best* short ribs ...
> I also think if we do have a sell off in gold it will be small
> and quick just enough for the crooks to buy the gold cheaper.
hey, what's with this "crooks", kemo sabe?
if gold sells off, *i'll* buy cheaper. i haven't bought any eagles since summer 02.
this is what's good about a bull market that's off everyone's radar, right? periodicially shake out the speculators, and we buy the dips. fleck made this point quite a while ago, that early bull markets aren't characterized by "the train is leaving the station" mentality ....
> The great thing is that it it seems a natural to short
> with al lthose gloomy unemployment numbers but the shorts keep
> on getting whacked.
i didn't get whacked: my shorts still looking fresh and rosy from 9/8 (qqq) and our last distribution day, 9/9 (intel). (see message about lambic beer on 9/8 ...)
fed flow of funds report: thinking the unthinkable
http://www.boomspeed.com/jimmyb/ABNFoF.pdf
so this is what makes me nervous about the hui up here:
http://www.prudentbear.com/bearschat/bbs_read.asp?mid=139638&tid=139638&fid=1&start=1&am...
No Nasdaq nervousness?
By Peter Brimelow, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 12:53 AM ET Sept. 11, 2003
[...]
Funny thing, though. I asked Mark Hulbert to look for the stocks held in common by the Nasdaq-timing HNNSI letters as of Wednesday night.
Remarkably, in this high-tech index, the stocks held by two or more letters were all gold and precious metals stocks -- for example, Pan American Silver Corp. (PAAS: news, chart, profile)
from which i conclude that gold miner shares are in the same "strong hands" as tech stocks. which to my mind, might not bode well in a downturn.
anyway, enuf gloom.
nice close on the hui. was there news? or just exhaustion of sellers?
I think I opined yesterday that the powers that be would go all out to rally the markets and trash gold on 9/11.
your calls and observations have been spectacular this year.
re a rally today: but what effect from the employment numbers? surely i'm not the only one who recognizes that gov statisticians refuse to correct their procedures and always estimate in the optimistic direction. correcting for that, the trend looks ominous ...
dang. finally a brks short that worked ... too bad it was so tiny.
open source community responds to SCOX (damning)
http://linuxtoday.com/news_story.php3?ltsn=2003-09-10-016-26-OS-CD-CY
I like a gap down tomorrow off bad #'s. touch 911 on the spx's, then bounce to 1000.
hmm. 10% down, 10% up. that would be some doji.