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		<title>The Long Road to Ruin</title>
		<link>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/the-long-road-to-ruin/18907</link>
		<comments>http://www.contrarianprofits.com/articles/the-long-road-to-ruin/18907#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Jul 2009 15:00:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Bill Bonner</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Politics & Economics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill Bonner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Credit Card Delinquencies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dollar Bonds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Financial Sector]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Household Debt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Market Rally]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stock Dividends]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.contrarianprofits.com/?p=18907</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>The stock market seems to be rolling over. Investors read the news. It’s probably<br />
becoming clear to them that the economy is not going back to normal any time soon.</p>
<p>Yesterday, the <strong>Dow lost another 131 points</strong>. Another big day down and it will be in the<br />
7,000-range. Oil sank too – down to $62. The dollar, bonds, and gold stayed about where<br />
they were.</p>
<p>Economists are still talking about an “exit strategy.” But in view of what is actually going<br />
on in the economy, they’ll probably want to stay on this highway a lot longer. This is the<br />
long road to ruin, of course. It may be fatal, but it is not – yet – unpopular.<br />
Broadly, <strong>what is happening is exactly what should be happening</strong>.</p>
<p>The stock market rally&#8230;</p>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The stock market seems to be rolling over. Investors read the news. It’s probably<br />
becoming clear to them that the economy is not going back to normal any time soon.<span id="more-18907"></span></p>
<p>Yesterday, the <strong>Dow lost another 131 points</strong>. Another big day down and it will be in the<br />
7,000-range. Oil sank too – down to $62. The dollar, bonds, and gold stayed about where<br />
they were.</p>
<p>Economists are still talking about an “exit strategy.” But in view of what is actually going<br />
on in the economy, they’ll probably want to stay on this highway a lot longer. This is the<br />
long road to ruin, of course. It may be fatal, but it is not – yet – unpopular.<br />
Broadly, <strong>what is happening is exactly what should be happening</strong>.</p>
<p>The stock market rally is getting old…and may have already peaked out. The consumer is<br />
running out of time, money and credit. He has no choice but to cut back. Savings rates are<br />
rising fast – from zero to about 5% of disposable income.</p>
<p>Naturally, businesses are finding it hard to make sales. Earnings are collapsing…stock<br />
dividends are down sharply…</p>
<p>…and of course, businesses try to cut expenses by lightening up on their payroll.<br />
When the correction began, it was led by losses in the financial sector. Those losses led to<br />
cutbacks throughout the economy. Now, it’s the cutbacks that are leading to financial<br />
losses. <strong>The economy followed the markets; now the markets follow the economy</strong>.<br />
Investors are realizing that their favorite companies will find it hard to prosper in this<br />
new economic environment.</p>
<p>“US consumers fall behind on loans at record pace,” says a Reuters headline.<br />
Delinquencies are going up on a wide range of household debt. Debtors have never had<br />
such a hard time keeping up with payments. Credit card delinquencies, for example, are<br />
running at 6.6%.</p>
<p>Well…duh.</p>
<p>And no wonder “banks get stingy on credit,” as reported in the USA Today. “Despite<br />
massive government efforts to bolster the credit market, banks are pulling back severely<br />
on card lending,” begins the front-page article.</p>
<p>Once again, we see the feds’ plans failing. <strong>They give trillions to the bankers; the<br />
bankers cut back on consumer credit.</strong> And why shouldn’t they? They can see what the<br />
rest of us see – the consumer can’t keep up with the debt he’s got already.</p>
<p>“Consumers aren’t going to be able to save the U.S. economy this time,” <em>The<br />
Richebacher Letter</em>’s Rob Parenteau reminds us.</p>
<p>“Total U.S. retail sales have rolled back to levels we haven’t seen since 2005. Imagine if<br />
every single retail shop opened in the last three years shut down overnight. It’s already<br />
that bad.</p>
<p>“A lot of people, from Wall Street to Washington, have a great deal invested in you<br />
believing we can reverse that trend. But, in actuality, the freeze in consumer spending<br />
and the consumer economy could actually take many more years to thaw.”</p>
<p>At least, the consumer has wised up. He’s sick of debt. He’s seen where that road leads.<br />
What he wants is to get out of debt…to be free…to be safe.</p>
<p>It’s the government that remains stuck in deep illusion… The feds know that it was too<br />
much credit that got consumers into trouble. Their solution? Give them more credit!<br />
The banks are issuing fewer credit cards than they did last year – 38% fewer. They’re<br />
pushing credit limits down too – the average limit on a new card is down 3% so far this<br />
year.</p>
<p>Instead of passing money on to customers, the banks are using the feds’ free cash to build<br />
up their own reserves…raise their salaries…and pass out bonuses. Makes sense. What else<br />
could they do with it?</p>
<p>“Uighurs are beasts” shout crowds of Han Chinese in the remote northwest of the<br />
country. Uighurs are the Moslem minority. Han Chinese are the majority. And, judging<br />
from the photos, the Han want to kill the Uighurs.</p>
<p><strong>One thing smart people always do is to underestimate the power of foolishness.</strong> It is<br />
wild and reckless to stir up a race war. But that doesn’t stop people from doing it. Any<br />
kind of war is a blow to reason and civilization. But that hasn’t made war unpopular,<br />
even among the most reasonable and civilized people on the planet.</p>
<p>It was within the lifetimes of many people reading this <em><a href="http://www.dailyreckoning.com"  class="alinks_links" onclick="return alinks_click(this);" title=""  style="padding-right: 13px; background: url(http://www.contrarianprofits.com/wp-content/plugins/alinks/images/external.png) center right no-repeat;" rel="external">Daily Reckoning</a></em> that the most<br />
advanced countries on earth began a war of annihilation. At the beginning of the 20th<br />
century, high culture and science were dominated by Germans. German musicians and<br />
composers…German poets and writers…German mathematicians, physicists, painters,<br />
philosophers – even the German economy was a world leader, second in output only to<br />
the United States of America.</p>
<p>Then, the Germans went off their heads – along with the Italians, the Russians, the<br />
Japanese…and many others.</p>
<p>But the Han have it right. The Uighurs are beasts from time to time. So are the Han…the<br />
Teutons…the Anglo-Saxons…and all the tribes on earth. Occasionally, for no apparent<br />
reason, the masks and restraints of civilization give way to mobs…and the old beast starts<br />
howling at the moon.</p>
<p>It happens in markets too. <strong>What is a bubble, if not a wild and reckless thing?</strong> A kind<br />
of madness? A mass illusion…a foolishness, in which people leave reason and civilization<br />
behind?</p>
<p><strong>What if the United States had to pay its debt in gold?</strong></p>
<p>In the old days, before the monetary reforms of the 20th century…notably, Richard<br />
Nixon’s unilateral decision to renege on America’s promise to pay its bills in<br />
gold…countries had to settle up with each other in the yellow metal. The system worked<br />
well; it was reliable; it prevented bubbles. Edward Chancellor explains:</p>
<p>“A country had to pay for its imports or foreign investments with money gained from a<br />
surplus on trade. If more money was sent abroad than had been earned through exports,<br />
then gold would be packed onto ships to discharge foreign creditors. A declining stock of<br />
bullion would induce the central bank to raise interest rates in order to attract gold from<br />
abroad. Rising rates would produce a credit contraction, unemployment and general<br />
economic misery. The typical nineteenth century was severe, but short-lived.”</p>
<p>Then came the improvements. And the Great Depression. And now we are faced with<br />
another one.</p>
<p>Governments are fighting this one…just as they did the last one…but with much more<br />
money. <strong>The cost is in the trillions – most of it in the form of public debt. How will<br />
these debts be paid?</strong> We all expect that they will ultimately be eased by inflation – in<br />
full or in part. But suppose the feds had to pay up in real money?</p>
<p>Colleague Simone Wapler compared government debt to government gold. The United<br />
States has gold worth about $241 billion, she reports. Its official national debt is $11.5<br />
trillion. That gives it a debt/gold ratio of 48 – meaning; the feds have 48 times as much<br />
debt as gold.</p>
<p>Britain is even worse. Prime Minister, then Chancellor, Gordon Brown sold much of<br />
England’s gold at the worse possible moment – about 10 years ago. This leaves the island<br />
with only $9 billion worth of gold compared to $1,274 billion of government debt – a<br />
ratio of 1 to 139. But Japan is the worst of all. It has $23 billion worth of gold and $7.3<br />
trillion of government debt, for a ratio of 1 to 323. (Of course, Japan has vast holdings of<br />
dollars too!)</p>
<p><strong>What nation has the best gold/debt ratio?</strong> Switzerland. It has only twice as much in<br />
government debt as it has in gold.</p>
<p>Source:<a title="Permanent link to The Long Road to Ruin" rel="bookmark" rev="post-17062" href="http://dailyreckoning.com/the-long-road-to-ruin/">The Long Road to Ruin</a></p>
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