I will wear my pant-legs rolled And walk along the beach... Then, I will   drown myself in the pool
The terrible pile-up on the world's financial   highway has left us all in shock. We check to see if our fingers move. We look   in the rear-view mirror to see if there is blood on our face. And then we crawl   out of the car. Thank God, we can still walk! No broken bones. 
What's   our name? Count back from 10.... Okay, no brain damage.
But oh...look at   our ride! The car is totaled. There's only about $100 trillion worth of wealth   in the world. At least, that's the figure we read recently. We've also read that   the total loss of wealth from the global financial crisis could be as much as   $50 trillion. That was Rupert Murdoch's estimate. And he's probably not far off.   Half the world's stock market value. Twenty percent of property values.   Trillions in derivatives, SIVs, CDOs and IOUs. It adds up fast. 
But   wait...what luck!...we're still in one piece. And there, on the side of the   road, there's still a gas station...a pizza shop...a mall. Life goes on. Most of   the wealth that was lost was only imaginary wealth - confections spun out of   sugary dreams. Put a little water on them and the melt away... But the real   wealth is still there...more or less. 
So cheer up. It's not so   bad!
Those who feared the 'end of the world' can relax. A financial   crack-up doesn't mean that real assets disappear. Houses are still right where   they were before the crack-up began. Factories are there too - with their   assembly lines and heavy machinery. Every backhoe and tractor- trailer is still   just as ready-for-service as it was before the crisis began.
So what's   the problem?
Who said there was a problem? We don't have a problem...do   you have a problem?
It's just that the world economy is going through a   major re- examination of its life. It was shaken up by the accident. Not just   physically... emotionally too. It stared death in the face - or so it explained   to friends, a bit too often and too dramatically, after the crash. So, it's   decided to take a long vacation... After many years of working day in and day   out...buying, selling, investing, speculating, leveraging,   borrowing...whew!...it is ready for a rest. So, it's taking some time off.   Thinking about things...re-evaluating things. 
'What am I really doing   with my life?' it wants to know.
'Is this the right way to go?' 'Does   this take me where I want to be? Maybe I should have gone to law school like my   mom wanted.'
'And my marriage...what the heck is going on there? Evelyn   was so nice and sweet when I married her. Now, all she thinks about is   redecorating the house...and hanging out with her friends. And look what she did   to her face! She's got those cardboard lips that never crack a smile... And now,   she's mad at me because I lost money in the worldwide financial meltdown. But   who didn't?'
While all this deep reflection is going on, the world's   income is falling rapidly. Businesses are closing their doors. Working stiffs   are working a lot less. Machines are slowing down. The capitalists are just   trying to hold on to what they've got - forget about making more.
On   Friday, the Dow fell another 100 points. It's headed down to the 3,000-5,000   level. Could there be a big rally first? Could it fall like a stone...even lower   than 3,000? You bet.
And look at what's going on with gold - up $25 on   Friday to close over $1,000! The Dow is on it way to 3,000...and so is gold.   Remember our 'Trade of the Decade?' Never mind...of course you do. Buy gold on   dips...sell stocks on rallies. So far, so good...and only 10 1/2 months left to   go.
(More on gold, below...)
Gradually, a stark and uncomfortable   realization is setting in. It's like a middle-aged man who suddenly realizes   he's wasted the best years of his life...
The world's enterprises are set   up for an economy that no longer exists! Factories were built...along with a   whole chain of production, delivery, and sales...to provide too many things to   too many people who can't pay for them.
And now, in these moments of soul   searching...of walking along the beach and hearing the seagulls speaking each to   each...comes another realization: almost nothing is worth as much as it used to   be. Take IOUs from people who can't pay their debts, for example. Houses lived   in by people who don't have jobs. Shares in companies that sell stuff to people   who can't afford to buy it. The 'wealth' that these things represented was   mostly imaginary. And now that imaginary wealth is disappearing -   poof!
Dear reader, we are in a period of discovery - 'price discovery,'   as economists call it. It's a time of growing self-awareness...of dawning   reality. At moments...it is terrifying. For all of a sudden, it occurs to us   that we have been dunderheads. We have paid too much...saved too   little...
We have misspent our time...mislaid our fortune...and   misunderstood everything...
..and now, terrible truth strikes us like a   Mac truck. We have been rear-ended, so to speak. Our life is a wreck...a wasted   opportunity...a dead end.
Is it too late to start a new one? A new   career...maybe as a bankruptcy lawyer. And a new love in our life - maybe with   one of these young surfer bunnies from California. Or perhaps a local   girl...?
*** Our intrepid correspondent, Byron King, with his thoughts on   the recent gold rally:
"I'm bullish on gold. Actually, I think that gold   could go to $3,000 per ounce in the next 30 months. Really   bullish.
"There's no fever like gold fever. Right now, we are on the cusp   of a great run-up in gold. I believe that there's still time to get into some   excellent stocks. The gold miners have room to grow. They should benefit from   rising gold prices. And we might see higher dividends down the road.
"Is   there a caution? Always. Could gold prices tumble? Well, yes. That would hurt   us. But for gold prices to tumble would take a lot of investor dishoarding. That   is, people would have to hit the 'sell' button en masse. And that would require   some tectonic shifts in worldwide tax, fiscal and monetary policies by a host of   socialist- leaning governments. For the moment, I think we're safe from any   counterrevolutionary antics like that. As Charles de Gaulle once noted, 'People   get the history that they deserve.'"
Even though the stock markets are   vicious, Byron sees the precious metals environment as healthy...especially for   some of the elements in his Outstanding Investments portfolio. 
In fact,   he knows of one way for his subscribers to buy gold - without taking   delivery...or worrying about storage...bookkeeping...or security. You just   benefit when the price of gold rises. And the way it's looking now; that's a   pretty safe bet. Learn more about this 'golden opportunity' here.
***   Colleague Manraag Singh brings us up to date on what's going in the monetary   experiment known as Zimbabwe:
"The Cato Institute estimates Zimbabwe's   inflation rate at 89.7 sextillion percent. That is 89.7 million million million,   or twenty-one zeroes behind the number.
"Putting that into perspective,   the official count of stars in the universe is about 70 sextillion,   apparently...
"On the plus side, Zimbabwe's share index is expected to   double this year now that are re-opening it with trading in US dollars...   
"Gideon Gono had shut it down about three months ago after accusing some   traders of using fraudulent cheques worth '60 hexillion' Zimbabwe dollars to buy   shares. I haven't been able to find out how much a hexillion is..."
***   Last night, at the bar...a friend told this story. Every word is true, as far as   we know, except those that aren't:
"You know, Nicaragua is a poor   country. And you gringos are rich. I know, you're not all really rich. But the   local people don't know who's rich and who's not. They figure you are all   rich.
"And when you gringos come down here, I guess it is just inevitable   that there are some problems between the local people and you. That's why, here   anyway, we don't let the local girls fools around with the visitors from North   America. I mean, we can't stop them...but if they do, they are fired. We have to   do it. Otherwise, it leads to trouble. The local guys don't like the gringos   taking their women. And then, they get into fights. And down here, bar fights   usually end up with someone dead. 
"And think of the poor girl. He goes   back to the States and the poor girl has problems with her family and the   community...you can imagine.
"Well, not here, but up the coast I was   working with a guy from Cincinnati. He was in his 50s, I think. He and his wife   decided to build a house on the beach, so I was helping them with it. But then   they got divorced; and he came down here to live to put his life back together.   
"He was there by himself. I don't know what he did. Maybe real estate.   And he had a nice woman, named Rosalita, come in to cook and clean. She was just   a girl, only in her early 20s, I think. A beautiful girl, and very nice. I liked   her. I knew the family. Very sweet smile...always smiling...so I felt like   looking out for her.
"After a few months, though, I was visiting and I   noticed that he was treating her like hired help. They smiled at each other all   the time. She patted him on the shoulder. He put his arm around her. And then I   realized that she was living there with him.
"'Russell,' I said, 'what is   this, my friend? If I understand what is going on, I am happy for you...but this   can be trouble too. She is a young girl. She needs to find a husband. Of course,   she is happy to go with you because she thinks you have money. No, I didn't mean   it exactly that way. But these people are poor. And they think you are all rich.   And you offer her a better life, which is maybe a good thing. But it isn't that   simple. Because she wants to get married and have kids. And in this country   people get married when they are young. And if they don't get married then, they   have a hard time getting married later. That's just the way it is.'   
"'And when you leave, what is going to happen to her? I'm not trying to   make trouble for you, my friend; I just want you to understand what is involved   here. You don't want to take advantage of her because she is young and   naïve...and very poor. 
"'And you have to watch out too. Because when you   go to a local bar on Saturday night you might run into a boy who liked her...or   maybe her brother. And somebody makes a comment. And her brother gets into a   fight. You don't understand. Family honor means a lot down here. And a lot of   the local men don't like it when you take their girls as girlfriends. Sometimes   they want to start fights with in bars. And those kind of fights usually end up   with someone getting killed. And I can tell you something, it's usually not the   gringo; he just stands on the sidelines and doesn't know what is going on.'   
"Well, I talked to him. My friend, Russell, I mean. But he didn't listen   to me. He was probably lonely down here. And why shouldn't people get together   if they want to? But I didn't like it. I felt sorry for her. She must have   thought he would marry her. And that he had a lot money. And I knew she was   wrong about both of those things, because I had gotten to know him. And I knew   he didn't want to get remarried. And I knew he didn't have any money, because   after the divorce, he had a hard time paying me.
"But a couple of years   went by...and I saw them once or twice. And the last time I saw them, she wasn't   smiling so much. And he wasn't smiling so much either. I thought something was   wrong. 
"You know, money is funny. I don't think she liked him because   she thought he was rich. She wasn't, what do you call it, a fortune hunter. It   wasn't that simple. But because he was a gringo, she must have assumed he had   some money. It probably wasn't because he had money that she liked him; on the   other hand, having money is just something that is part of being a gringo. Or,   at least that is the way they look at it down here. So, if she realized that he   really didn't have any money, maybe she was disappointed about the money. And   maybe she was just disappointed because he wasn't the man she thought he   was.
"All I know is that I had a beer with them...and nobody   smiled.
"Then, a couple months later, a friend of mine called me. He   said, 'Did you hear about Russell?'
"I said, 'No, what?'
"He told   me that Rosalita had left Russell a week ago.
"'What, did she go back to   her family?' I asked him.
"No, she took up with one of those surfers over   at the beach club. But that's not the important part. They found Russell in his   swimming pool...he was dead. They think it was a suicide. He drank a whole   bottle of whiskey and passed out in the pool..."
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
A Pile-Up on the World's Financial Highway
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