Beware of nut bars wielding free money

These days world markets are being moved by the crazy people. This happens; we have seen it many times over the years. It’s one of the realities that sane investors have to contend with every day. Lately it has become extreme again. We can try to ignore them, but make no mistake– crazy people make it more dangerous for everyone.
The world is in trouble. We cannot 'spend our way to prosperity' right now and China cannot pull the rest of us out of hock. The Chinese government (and others) have been pouring free money and forced lending and it is puddling into the natural formations of speculative fervour—asset bubbles–again.
If the Chinese have greatly stimulated domestic demand, this would seem to be a good idea on the surface. However, the Chinese economy is 60% domestic and 40% exports. If the demand for Chinese exports isn't there, then domestic stimulation will lead to a short term increase in production/GDP, but could lead to a massive build up in inventories and downward pressure on prices if global demand doesn't return.” See: Busch: Chinese Reality Reckoning.
With free-flowing government money, Chinese people are not investing in homes, cars and business development they are back at the track to double or nothing. Real estate, stock and commodity markets have melted up. Investor participation has been narrow, volume has been weak, but prices have spiked into a new high-pole now teetering over many unsuspecting heads. See: Dollar will rise and punish assets.
Oil supplies in the U.S. are at almost 20 year highs, heating oil supplies are near 25 year highs, consumers are doing everything possible to cut back, and yet oil prices are hovering at $70 again. See: Oil should be priced at $50-$55. As we saw repeatedly over the past few years, when supply drowns demand, the inevitable corrections come fast and hard. Export dependent nations are hurt the most.
Let us be lucid. Today world demand is still driven by western consumption. Western consumers have found the religion of frugality; millions are now like addicts clamouring to rehab, and for a while at least, they are holding on to “the wagon” for dear life. Fear of financial demise will do that to you. Suddenly all the 'things' one thought essential become cumbersome trash in the light of day.
The stock and commodity rally since March started out with some rational connection to valuation fundamentals and then, along about May, things went postal. The familiar chant from simpletons has been all about emerging markets decoupling themselves and pulling the world economy over the corpse of an insolvent west. But so far at least, that is just not working.
Meanwhile US reports today showed that total retail sales fell 0.1 percent in July notwithstanding Obama’s much heralded “cash for clunkers” program which was expected to prompt a 0.7 percent gain in retail spending.
At the same time the Labour Department showed first-time applications for unemployment insurance benefits climbed 4,000 to a seasonally adjusted 558,000 last week. And this says nothing of the thousands of people who are now falling off the unemployment insurance rolls having exhausted their entitlement. No jobs and expiring unemployment benefits equal no spending ability and a fresh new wave of credit defaults and foreclosures. See: Green Shoots?
We need to see a return to growth in the world economy before we can rationally price the future. We need real consumption, not stockpiling and speculation—need based consumption– to fuel a recovery. Until we see that, sane people have no choice but to keep a defensive posture of their net worth while the crazy people run amuck.

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3 Responses to Beware of nut bars wielding free money

  1. Anonymous says:

    Jeff Rubin has a theory out there about high oil prices:
    Actually it would be beneficial in the long run, because the transportation cost of the goods would be so high that it would cancel out the savings on cheap imports, therefore it would revive domestic manufacturing and producing again.
    Thanks Jeff! I like it a lot……

  2. Anonymous says:

    Jeff Rubin changes his forecasts like he (I hope) changes his underwear. His track record has got to be one of the worst out there. He is charismatic which easily sways people into believing what he says (a perfect example of what is wrong with the financial marketing machine). I think he is trying to sell a book right now. Let's be honest, he really doesn't have a clue, like 99.9% of us. I would bet that flipping a coin would do just as well as following Rubin's investment strategies and returns. I'm not a pessimist, just a realist.

  3. Anonymous says:

    I agree with Daryl 100%, however I see Jeff's theory as a possibility in a distant future.

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