Inflation Has Distorted The U.S. Markets, by Bill
Bonner, 6/27/19.
PORTLAW, IRELAND – Yesterday, once again, the Dow rose in the morning on news that a deal with China was 90% done – and fell later, as investors realized that they couldn’t believe anything that came out of Washington.
Trump has criticized the Fed for making credit more costly last year and for failing to lower interest rates last week. Policy makers “blew it” on June 19 when they kept the benchmark overnight rate unchanged, Trump tweeted on Monday.
This is inflation of
asset prices, not consumer prices. From Speculators Anonymous: The euro-zone (like the U.S.) faces the real risk of having hundreds of billions in corporate debt downgraded. And at this stage in the market cycle – that puts them in a very fragile position.
Insurance firms, pension funds, and
investment companies are all large holders of these CLOs [collateralized loan
obligations] that could quickly become worthless.
Every major market crash in recent
history has been built on such ‘contraptions’ that
were poorly understood and blew up at the wrong time. Every day seems to bring
some new absurdity, each one more dizzying than the one before. We’re almost
laughed out.
Clown Show - Inflate or Die. When the feds inflate, they have to keep inflating or the show comes to an end.
In the last week, we’ve explored how
inflation – increasing the money supply – causes confusion, mistakes, and
disasters.
When consumer prices rise, at first,
businesses are happy with the extra income… until they see their costs rising,
too. Then, they are lost.
They can make a widget. But they don’t
know if they’ll make money… or lose it… by the time it is sold. Should they
order new equipment? Hire new employees? With the most important signals –
prices – in motion, it’s impossible to know.
What they typically do is shut down –
voluntarily or involuntarily. GDP collapses. That’s why the shelves in Zimbabwe
were barren during the great inflation in 2008… and why the shelves are barren
in the great inflation in Venezuela today.
There, consumer prices are said to be
rising at nearly one million percent per year. The country is in chaos; people
are fleeing for their lives.
Fast Money - A similar process takes place when the inflazione is in the capital markets rather than the consumer markets. But it is much harder to see. Because the price data has been censored and distorted. Rising prices on Wall Street should mean a healthy economy. Instead, they are a measure of how unhealthy the economy has become.
The Fed lends overnight money. But you
can’t build a factory with overnight money. Or even buy a car or a house. The
Main Street economy needs long-term financing.
And when the Fed lends short term at
near or below the cost of inflation, the whole financial world turns its eyes
to fast money, quick fixes, and financial tricks to take advantage of the free
money. The action is fast. Speculators want a piece of it.
Simple Plan - Here’s a simplified version of how it works. A CEO in New York has a contract that gives him a bonus if the stock price hits a specific target.
He knows he can build a new plant, buy
more equipment, train new employees, and launch a new product line. If all goes
well, in five years, profits will rise.
He also realizes that he can borrow
short term for only 3%. Nor is it lost on him that the stock market puts a
multiple of 20 on his company, so that every dollar of profit increases the
stock price by $20.
“Hey… this is simple,” he says to
himself. Forget the long-term business-building. He can acquire a company in
Cleveland with $1 million in profits for $20 million. Borrowed at 3%, that costs his company
$600,000 in interest. But it adds $8 million ($20 million less the capitalized
interest payment of $12 million) to the market value of the company.
He has not added a penny to the world’s
real wealth or hired a single new employee. But the stock goes up. He gets his
bonus. And shareholders are happy. What’s not to like?
What would oil be worth if the oil
companies had to buy half of their output just to keep the price from
collapsing? What would a house be worth if
developers bought every other house they built… trying to goose up prices? And what kind of capitalism is it when
the capitalists spend their precious capital driving up their share prices
rather than producing goods and services that they can sell at a profit?
But over the last 10 years, corporations
spent $15 trillion buying themselves. And now, they owe $15 trillion – an
amount equal to half the total value of their stocks.
If the stock market falls in half –
which we think it will – the value of America’s entire publicly traded capital
will be wiped out.
Comments
Low interest rates
should prompt insurance companies, pension plans and others who invest in loan
obligations to rebalance toward assets that appreciate faster than 3% per year.
If they missed the stock market boom in 2017 they missed out on 40% returns.
Everybody needs to reduce debt before these rates go up again.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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