It is not often that we find ourselves in full agreement with mainstream media, but this list published by the NY Times this morning is very moving. As we all consider the many circumstances in our lives, let’s take a moment to remember those we’ve lost – regardless of the cause.
I will be on either a brief Q&A segment with Joe Cristiano’s Liberty Talk Radio or I’ll be releasing a short podcast this evening. I know many of you are not in the US so my apologies for the short notice. Please email your questions when you can and we’ll go from there.
Topics? While I have medical training, I am not qualified to speak on the issue of COVID-19 beyond the most general of terms. I would like to focus on the global financial markets and the very strong likelihood that another 2008-style event was imminent as early as last summer.
Now, with global markets shredded, economies left in doubt, and the population of a growing number of countries behind closed doors, what needs to happen next? We’ve heard some solutions. Are they the right ones?
We’ll be addressing these issues – and your questions – tonight. Don’t miss it!
“The past month has been one of nearly continuous turmoil in the financial markets”. That might well be the understatement of this still fairly new century. Keep in mind that during the past 20 years, we’ve had 2 significant recessions (according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis), a complete meltdown of the .com mania, the inflation of a real-estate bubble and its subsequent bursting, the halving of US financial indexes, and the bankruptcy of names like Lehman Brothers, and AIG to name a few. Throw in a massive bailout, a fusillade of rescue programs like TARP, TSLF and the resulting blowout of the federal reserve’s balance sheet. This is within the first 10 years. Keep that in mind.
The second ten years have featured D-E-B-T – on all levels. Governments
of the world, states and provinces, local municipalities and parishes,
students, consumers, homeowners. In short? Pretty much everyone. That debt has
driven the economy for the past decade. Globally. Many will think this is just
an American problem. It’s not. Misery loves company, right? Not so fast. In
this brave new world of interlocking economies and financial systems, a failure
on the other side of the world can cause problems in our own back yards.
Entire countries have gone bust and have had to go hat in hand to their representative central bank. Remember Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain? Don’t forget the tiny island of Cyprus and its king-sized banking crisis, which led to a bank holiday and eventually a bail-in. Wait, we just talked about a bailout. What’s a bail-in? We penned a serious of articles on this topic back in 2013. Read them here. Keep in mind that this is very non-exhaustive and brief summation of some of the more important events.
Which brings us to the present. Yesterday, 3/11/2020, the ENTIRE yield curve for USGovt bills, notes, and bonds was under 1%. That’s not a typo. There is rampant talk of negative interest rates here in the US. This phenomenon is already happening in Germany – the powerhouse of the European Union and several other easily recognizable nations. Moves in the bond market that generally take many months are now taking days. If you’re planning on retiring and living on the interest of your bonds, you might want to rethink that strategy. Many of the people we communicate with regularly have themselves or know quite a few people who have gotten a 20% haircut or more on their equity investments since the beginning of the year.
Much of the more recent activity has been blamed on the emergence
of a new Coronavirus. The fear alone that has been imparted by the mainstream –
and even alternative media is bound to have some kind of impact on the global
economy. Economists are already clamoring for cash payments to citizens as a
means of ‘stimulating’ the economy. In the US we’ve done this twice previously
in the past two decades. Both were credited with averting nasty recessions.
Both went directly on the federal budget deficit here in the US. Debt has
indeed become the answer to all that ails most economies the world over.
The gyrations and volatility in financial markets have been
enough to give even seasoned investors a serious case of whiplash. In the past
10 trading days the Dow Jones Industrials Average here in the US has had its
two biggest down days – EVER – in terms of the number of points lost. Sandwiched
in there are some of the biggest up days – EVER – again, in terms of index
points. Oil crashed over 20% in a single day. Gold has broken out and is once
again around/over the very important $1650 level. Silver is probably the
bargain of the century to this point. Throw into all this a major year in terms
of the political arena. And no, we are not breaking our tradition of focusing
on policy. The policy provides the answers. The names only serve to
muddle the issues.
As we write this evening of the 10th of March in the year 2020, it is quite possible and likely that the economic and financial foundation that we all rest on has begun yet another metamorphosis into something completely different than we’re all used to. Contemplate the concept of negative interest rates alone. Such a ridiculous move would take several hundred years of investing philosophy and modeling and flush them directly down the toilet. Again, this is likely an understatement. The US went from a national debt around $14T during the 2012 campaign season to a level of $23.5 trillion in the early part of 2020. In 1986, America reached the $1 trillion mark. Any stimulus will go right on the tab.
Many people are electing to stay home for fear of
contracting COVID-19 and with all the uncertainty that exists regarding this
virus, we refuse to pass judgement. Since consumers are responsible for nearly
70% of US Gross Domestic Product, even a month’s cessation of vacations,
cruises, flying, going shopping and all the other activities that fall under
consumption, we could easily see a sizable dent popped into Q1 GDP. Or the
money might be spent online, and it might not affect GDP that much at all. The
situation in China can only be guessed. Sadly, national governments have a
growing aversion to the truth even when lives are at stake.
In summation, we cannot and will not make any ‘predictions’
regarding Q1 GDP, consumer spending and the balance of trade. Given that oil
has dropped precipitously, that drop will translate into lower gas prices at
some point and that will lower that portion of consumer spending, which will
negatively affect GDP. This reality makes a strong case that we should be
measure growth in units rather than dollars wherever and whenever it is
practical to do so. The best advice we can give is gather as much information
as possible and try to avoid making decisions based on emotion. Seeing the Dow
Jones Industrials Average lose over 2,000 points in a single trading will
unnerve even the savviest of investors.
Living off the interest from investments, for all purposes,
is not going to be feasible for the foreseeable future. Our economies are
hooked on low interest rates. That is helpful for the borrower, but lethal for
the investor. It forces investors with shorter time horizons into the riskier equity
markets. This situation represents a clear and present danger to the standard
of living for millions of people in America alone.
This is not all gloom and doom, however. Again, like 2008,
we have a chance to endure the economic pain necessary to down regulate our
debt-laden, consumption-oriented economy into something that doesn’t need
trillions of borrowed dollars each year just to keep plodding along at a snail’s
pace. We have an opportunity. Will we avail ourselves of it? If the talking
points coming out of the television and Internet media outlets is any
indicator, we will most likely not take this opportunity, opting instead to
kick the proverbial can down the road ensuring that the pain will only be worse
for the next generation when they are forced to deal with it. We challenge not
only America, but the rest of the world to put down the credit cards and take a
step back. We did it here in the US during 2010. We can do it again. But will
we?