5 Reasons Why Stocks and Commodities Will Soar Over Next 9 Months
Sep 24th, 2008 | By Justice Litle | Category: Featured, Financial NewsRight now we’re in an Alice in Wonderland world where the government not only wants to spend $700 billion on buying up banks’ bad debt but it also wants the Treasury Secretary to have complete immunity from the law in doing so.
But what will the landscape look like when the media’s attention has shifted to how Obama or McCain is coping with his first year in office?
Taipan Daily editor Justice Litle says it’s likely that “we’ll see the price of stocks, commodities and paper assets in general explode into the stratosphere.”
1) The U.S. and China have nothing to lose in pulling out all the stops – and everything to lose if they don’t.
Imagine you run a small family business. The business is your main source of income. It’s provided you a decent livelihood for many years.
Now imagine that for whatever reason – a series of bad breaks, a tough change in market conditions – your business is on the brink of collapse. If things don’t turn around in the next few months, you won’t be able to pay the bills. You’ll be bankrupt.
It’s not a pretty picture. But there’s one more thing: Imagine that just as it appears all hope is lost, you realize you’ve got one last option. You have $25,000 worth of unused credit lines you could tap, between your personal cards and an emergency line of equity you have with the bank. If you tap the credit lines and pull a rabbit out of a hat — come up with a brilliant marketing campaign or something like that — then you just might be able to get sales back up and pay your creditors.
It’s a slim chance… but with the right gamble, the business might be saved. And if you fail, the $25K you borrow will just be swept up in the bankruptcy filing anyway. The reward is saving the family business. The risk isn’t really a risk at all; if you do nothing, you’re already headed for the courts. So why not throw the Hail Mary pass?
This is the same position the United States government is in.
Uncle Sam runs a balance sheet measured in trillions, so the scale of the business is much bigger. But otherwise, the choices are much the same. We are in such a dire situation right now, the whole kit and caboodle is headed for failure unless drastic action is taken.
It’s one of those weird situations where the risks are so extreme, only extreme action will suffice. In the WSJ on Monday, for example, there was a piece titled, “Consumers Cut Back on Health-Care Spending.” In this article, the CEO of Walgreens talks about how the U.S. has “the tightest prescription market” in his 27 years in the pharmacy business.
It’s so bad, people are cutting back on their pills. And it’s going to get worse.
A few years ago, I wrote about the doctrine of financial MADness in regards to the China-U.S. economic connection. China’s government is dependent on economic growth to keep down political unrest. If China can’t grow jobs fast enough, then millions of farmers and displaced laborers will literally riot in the streets, threatening to bring down the government. As far as China’s leaders are concerned, the calculus is “grow or die.” The civil unrest of a slump would destroy them.
Now, U.S. political leaders have to fear the same fate. Things are very bad for the U.S. consumer and about to get worse… and meanwhile the average Joe’s blood is beginning to boil as he reads about these trillion-dollar bailouts for fat cats.
Like China’s leaders, political leaders in the United States have to fend off a consumer collapse at all costs. They will do this by flooding the system with dollars. They really have nothing to lose… If the stimulus plan fails, the U.S. economy will not just slow down a bit; it will potentially collapse. And then China’s economy could collapse… and the world’s, too.
The stakes are far too high to let this happen. That’s why it won’t happen. China has more than a trillion dollars in U.S. reserves to throw at the problem. The United States has a handy little device called a printing press. Politicians in other countries have no desire to be tarred and feathered either… They would much rather join in and support a paper mania than be carried out by rioting voters.
2) The next president of the U.S.A. will have a window to take even MORE drastic action – and blame it all on his predecessor.
When a new CEO takes over a troubled company, it’s customary to get all the bad news right out in the open. Why? Because for a brief window of time, it’s possible to blame all problems and issues on prior management. Before the new broom sweeps clean, it lays blame at the feet of the idiot who just left.
Whoever gets elected president of the U.S.A. is going to be in a hell of a jam. They will be inheriting the most godawful economic mess in generations. Republican or Democrat, the challenges will be huge and the advantages slim.
But the new prez will have the chance to do something big – something drastic – right off the bat. He’ll have the chance to blame it all on Bush… to say, “This had to be done, and I don’t like that it had to be done, but now we can move forward.”
Chances are high, too, that the next president will embrace his inner socialist and bail out the voters of the land. So far, all the bailouts have been oriented toward Wall Street. The next step is to throw huge sums of money at Jane Consumer and John Q. Homeowner.
This action will be dramatically inflationary, of course. The Fed and Treasury will have to print, print, print… and then print and print some more.
3) Remember who Paulson and Bernanke’s friends are.
In politics, it’s very important to remember who your friends are. If you are lucky and talented enough to climb the greasy pole and make it to high office, chances are your friends helped put you there. And once you slide back down the pole and retire back into private life, your old friends will be waiting to receive you with open arms again. So it’s best to keep them happy.
Hank Paulson, the U.S. Treasury secretary, used to be the head of Goldman Sachs. It’s pretty obvious who his friends are. Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Fed, came from the Ivy League academic world. His circle of friends is a bit less obvious. But think for a moment – where does all that Ivy League wealth come from?
Harvard, Yale, Princeton and the like are not just America’s most elite universities. They also practically qualify as the world’s most elite hedge funds.
For example, the “Harvard Management Co.,” a wholly owned subsidiary of Harvard University, has nearly $40 billion in assets. Yale and Princeton are not too far behind.
All these Ivy League money managers have heavy exposure to paper assets. There is really no place to hide when you’re handling that much capital. Do you think Ben Bernanke would leave his old friends hanging out to dry? And Paulson his friends, the elite of the investment banking elite?
America’s biggest pension funds, too, have serious skin in the game. CALpers, the California Public Employee Retirement System, has nearly $250 billion in assets under management. They are loaded to the gills with paper assets (and a fair share of commodity investments, too).
These deeply connected players, with their hundreds of billions in paper asset exposure, would be skinned alive if markets were allowed to head into long-term decline. To Paulson and Bernanke, they are not just constituents… they are friends. They will be a lucrative source of wheeling and dealing down the road.
And Paulson and Bernanke both know full well that, if somehow the system were allowed to implode and paper assets to fall, their friends would be lost. They would have to endure the sad eyes, the harsh words, the forlorn looks — and most of all the question, “Why didn’t you do all you could?”
4) Remember that the U.S. is addicted to bubbles.
Let’s take a whirlwind bubble history tour. How did we get through the crash of 1987? By flooding the system with money. How did we get through the Mexican peso crisis and the Asian currency crisis and the Russian default crisis? By flooding the system with money.
How did we get through the bursting of the dot-com bubble? By starting up a follow-on housing and private equity bubble… which turned into a massive subprime bubble.
So how will we get through the subprime bubble (the popping of which has led to greater financial destruction than generations have seen)? Any guesses?
If the past 25 years are any guide, we’ve figured out that America is addicted to bubbles… and that when one bubble pops, the solution is to inflate another, even bigger one.
Eric Janszen, a former venture capitalist, put forth an intriguing theory in Harper’s Magazine earlier this year. Janszen theorizes that we are addicted to bubbles. He has come up with an acronym, FIRE, to describe the nature of our addiction. “FIRE” stands for Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate.
Janszen argues convincingly that the nature of the system demands that each bubble be bigger than the last. He thinks the next one could be in alternative energy… and that it could be bigger than anything the world has ever seen:
The next bubble must be large enough to recover the losses from the housing bubble collapse. How bad will it be? Some rough calculations: the gross market value of all enterprises needed to develop hydroelectric power, geothermal energy, nuclear energy, wind farms, solar power, and hydrogen-powered fuel-cell technology—and the infrastructure to support it—is somewhere between $2 trillion and $4 trillion; assuming the bubble can get started, the hyperinflated fictitious value could add another $12 trillion.
In a hyperinflation, infrastructure upgrades will accelerate, with plenty of opportunity for big government contractors fleeing the declining market in Iraq. Thus, we can expect to see the creation of another $8 trillion in fictitious value, which gives us an estimate of $20 trillion in speculative wealth, money that inevitably will be employed to increase share prices rather than to deliver “energy security.”
When the bubble finally bursts, we will be left to mop up after yet another devastated industry. FIRE, meanwhile, will already be engineering its next opportunity. Given the current state of our economy, the only thing worse than a new bubble would be its absence.
That “$20 trillion in speculative wealth” would come close to doubling the size of the entire U.S. economy. Put that in your pipe and smoke it…
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5) Remember historical precedent. When inflation runs wild, stocks can, too.
Too bad you didn’t buy Bindura Nickel last year. Don’t worry; I missed out, too. We could have racked up a 257,964% gain.
No, that is not a typo. At one point in late 2007, Bindura Nickel was up more than two-hundred-and-fifty-seven thousand percent. How could this be, you ask? Because Bindura Nickel trades in Zimbabwe.
As of July 2008, Zimbabwe’s inflation rate was calculated at 11.2 million percent. At that level, it takes a backpack full of cash just to buy a loaf of bread.
The point, though, is the historical precedent. As inflation skyrocketed, Zimbabwe’s stock market soared, too. Not enough to keep pace with hyperinflation, of course, but enough to give investors and traders astronomical percentage gain returns.
The same kind of thing happened in Weimar Germany between 1919 and 1933. The Weimar Republic had no hope of getting out from under a backbreaking load of World War I debt obligations. The victors made demands so heavy that Germany simply couldn’t pay. So they solved the problem by rolling out the printing presses.
This led to the famous images we’ve all heard about: German housewives rolling a wheelbarrow of cash to the grocery store, just to buy a little food. Less famously, it also led to huge gains on the German stock exchange. A few astute traders grew incredibly wealthy, even as most German families lost everything.
So there you have it. To quickly recap, we’re working our way through the direst crisis since the 1930s, as many observers have pointed out. The situation is so bad, the U.S. government is in the same place as China’s… It’s worth risking everything, because everything goes down the drain if the system isn’t saved. The true “powers that be” – the respective heads of the U.S. Fed and Treasury – have every reason to bail out their buddies, who are still loaded up on paper assets. We have already seen how America is addicted to bubbles. And we have seen how stock markets can take off like the space shuttle Challenger when paper asset inflation truly gets out of control.
Who wins in all this? The connected players who rack up huge paper gains. Who loses in all this? The poor man in the street who doesn’t have enough in his retirement account to truly feel like he’s been invited to the party. Skyrocketing cost-of-living increases and dollars turned to confetti will be the not-so-lovely consolation prize.
If you see things differently, I’d love to know why. (You know the address: justice@taipandaily.com.) I don’t see how we get out of this any other way. Nine months from now, global equity markets could be up in the stratosphere… and hard asset values higher still.
Source: In the Next Nine Months, Stocks will Explode Into the Stratosphere
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Justice Litle is Editorial Director for 
Hello Justice:
The 700 billion dollars will be the initial downpayments. Before everything is said and done, the bill will be more like 7 trillion dollars. And even at that amount there is no assurance that any of this will work. So, my solution would be to let the big banks fail, take the 700 billion dollars and invest them in infrastructure, which is horribly delapidated, and put many people back to work. At least we will get something for our money, and create the foundation for a sound economic base from which future growth can take off again. I also would reverse all of the bailouts that have occurred to date, which, of course, would spell the end of the US dollar’s status as the reserve currency of the world and it would drastically cut future imports since we would enter into a barter system: we delivery grains in exchange for vital raw materials we cannot produce ourselves.Foreign nations that have bought this tainted paper will have to take the loss. These steps will force us to recreate our manufacturing base, albeit on a much smaller scale; it will reduce our living standard, and, hopefully, force our government to eliminate our massive foreign entanglements. Yes, the pain would be enormous but at least Wall Street would be forced to learn its lessons. By being bailed out again and again, it will never learn from its mistakes. Wall Street will only repeat them on a much grander scale as you so aptly describe in your article.
I’ve wondered about this for a while. At some level of inflation, you want to invest your money in real things: gold, real estate, industry. Anything but money, which is just paper. The trick is not to invest too soon (would you buy real estate today?), and to invest in the right things. Gold has been confiscated in the past. Real estate involves property taxes. The wrong industries go out of business in the bad economy.
Another asset class to consider is weapons…
I am responding to the original article. Yep America is addicted and I figured out awhile ago what was going on.
If the banks fail this country and many others will descend into near anarchy. (I don’t think the average US citizen has the ability to descend into complete anarchy immediately). So, short term, they (the banks)need some propping up.
What’s pathetic is that big business manipulation of govt (I’m referring to them as separate entities thus far)has grown so blatant that the average american citizen knows that something is going on. Beginning with the parading in of the village ‘tard (no offense to down syndrome) and giving him “control” just so they can have a scapegoat (I’m talking about Bush). He gets convinced to create a war in an oil producing country to allow the increased price pressure on the commodity to further make him and his buddies (the Saudi’s) rich. Financing the war is easy; just borrow money from China.
Another example: the subprime crisis. Even the average american realizes that something’s up. The media’s blaming Bush. (Don’t get me wrong, I detest him, but he is an idiot and completely incapable of the subtleties required for this level of subterfuge)
There is no way that the people in charge were not getting a nice palm greasing in order to allow people who cannot pay off their 1000$ credit cards to buy 200,000$ homes.
I think that the people who are making off like bandits right now are the ones who are setting a lot of this up. JP Morgan for one. They just acquired a large competitor and a huge bank for pennies. With gov’t blessing… and help.
Another problem is the social security issue. Who the hell told congress it was OK to “borrow” all of the money, replace it with IOU’s and then claim that the system was broken? Who’s in charge of that?
I have a solution: Honest hard work
1. Stop Iraq war- That’ll save the US a few billion
2. Invert the budget proposal from military focused to education focused.
3. Legalize marijuana and some of the other less deleterious drugs. No…. I don’t use it anymore. Make it legal, make it legal to grow and sell. Tax the hell out of the selling. Use the taxes to combat the illegal drugs.
4. As stated above, create infrastructure. In reference to the Alt E bubble. I suggest going to “nextenergynews.com” and searching in the “free energy” section for magnetic drive engines. We have the ability, and have had for awhile, to create free energy. If that seems to far fetched, we can at least agree that a 12 mile per gallon SUV Hybrid is unlikely to be the best effort we can muster.
5. Fix the social security problems. a)payback the money stolen b) stop paying people who just don’t want to work, especially to have kids
6. I’m a doctor and I’ve seen the health care problems. The biggest one is the fact that every time medicare wants to cut costs it decreases doctor compensation. There are doctors who make as much as teachers. Not much incentive to become a doctor with 400,000 in educational debt and 90 hour work weeks.
The culprits: the insurance companies. I can go on this one for hours. Monetarily, however, we need to stop giving free healthcare to illegal immigrants and those unable to pay at all.
This is how the medical crisis is going. Sick people come to the US illegally to get treated for cancers and such because they know that they can do it for free. People who just refuse to pay for medical care do the same. Hospitals HAVE to treat them. There is no option. There are laws forcing them to. It doesn’t sound like a big issue until people realize that healthcare debt is in the hundreds of billions. It isn’t that I have no empathy. Everyone deserves to be healthy, fed, watered, and loved. But farmers don’t hand out free food, clean water costs 30 bucks a month, and hookers don’t hand it out for free. So why are doctors making less money while the insurance companies are making off like bandits?
If you take all of the fixes above. We will be prosperous again.