
The Twilight Zone
The averages have been drifting higher for months -- about 3% off their rally highs at this writing but still holding their uptrend, rates are drifting lower after the big jump up, and the dollar is selling off again. Stocks held up impressively in the face of the vicious bond market sell-off but the subsequent rally has been pretty lackluster. Daily ranges and volume are contracting and it appears that the movement up has been driven primarily by lack of selling, not enthusiastic buying. Wall Street and White House economists are touting the prospects for economic growth even as the long term liabilities are stacking up at an alarming rate. The S&P is now at valuation levels last seen at the market top in 2000. As I observe market behavior and evaluate the underlying social, political and economic trends I find myself feeling as if I have entered into the twilight zone.
From the risk perspective, as I look at the underlying trends I find three particular areas of concern: job formation, fiscal policy and geopolitics.
Jobs
The job situation is dismal and it is not getting better; it is only getting worse more slowly, if that. Officially we have lost over 2.7 million jobs in the last three years. The official jobless rate is 6.1% but that doesn't begin to tell the real story. To begin with the official number doesn't count the growing legions who have given up looking for work. Additionally, I suspect that the number is further understated by virtue of the millions of workers in recent years who have become self-employed contractors even though they are (or were) still doing the same functions they were doing as employees. However, what is really troubling about the current jobless situation is not so much the numbers or the duration but the dynamics that are driving the long term trends in job creation.
First, we have overcapacity in every sector. Yes, spending is increasing on technology but as we will see below, this is the exception that makes the point. In large part the pervasive overcapacity is a legacy of the roaring '90's which, under normal conditions would take considerably longer than three years to work off. But we are not faced with normal conditions. In our global economy we are not able to control or work through our overcapacity in a normal way. We are faced with an ascendant developing world which is increasing capacity as fast as it possibly can. This is limiting our ability to work through our own overcapacity, limiting our ability to create jobs and it is creating deflationary pressure.
Second, just as with capacity, the competition for jobs is no longer a local or national affair. Service sector jobs have now joined manufacturing jobs in moving offshore - in large numbers. This adds to the challenges of job creation, exacerbating chronic joblessness and promoting wage deflation. Even those jobs that remain in the
Third, and most troubling, is the changing impact of productivity. Worker productivity has been the magic sauce of the
We will eventually find equilibrium and the beginning of real growth but there are still many distortions and excesses to be worked out of the system before that can happen. A perfect example of how far we still have to go to work off the excesses of the '90's is the Richard Grasso pay scandal -- Corporate America paying a regulator $188 million for his oversight of their activities! Gee, do you think they got any favorable treatment? If anyone has been looking for an indication of whether anything has really changed in the criminal culture of big corporate
Meanwhile, the disparity in income and wealth between the upper tier and everyone else continues to grow. Even as the number of millionaire households (as measured by investable assets) recently hit a 20 year high, personal bankruptcies were also an all time high, and 90% of those bankruptcies involve middle class families. Contrary to urban legend, the vast majority of these bankruptcies are not due to profligate spending, but to the pincer effect of declining income and rising cost of living, particularly of housing. And on the bottom of the socioeconomic ladder millions of honest, hard working families are only a paycheck away from the street. In fact homeless families are becoming commonplace, now accounting for approximately 40% of residents of homeless shelters.
The bottom line here is that while we are likely to see some modest improvement in the job situation over the next year, the underlying trends are indicating that job creation will continue be weak, wages will remain under pressure and the disparity in wealth and income will continue to grow. Any isolated economic data or up ticks in growth notwithstanding, this is not the picture of a healthy economy, and it is not sustainable. When the next recession arrives (there is always a next recession) the job situation and the growing gulf in income and wealth distribution are going to start causing a severe crunch. Coming on the heels of 30 years of slow erosion in purchasing power and the recent period of real difficulty for workers, this crunch will begin to generate big social, political and economic disruptions.
Fiscal Policy
The fiscal outlook is grim indeed. Fiscal discipline in
The spin out of the White House is that we can beat deflation and grow the economy by flooding the economy with money, keeping interest rates below their natural level (thus cannibalizing future sales), running record deficits for the foreseeable future (deficits don't matter) and devaluing the dollar (while posturing for a strong dollar). Well, maybe; maybe not. When you put a strategy in play that is going to hurt a lot of people, the laws of action and reaction and unintended consequences become activated. For example, foreign governments now purchase approximately half of U.S. Treasury bonds. Will they continue to buy these depreciating assets, or will they at some point decide that financing our debt so they can continue to sell things to us is no longer worth the cost?
Another consideration is: are people actually doing something constructive with all the money that's floating around, or is it just causing a series of bubbles and unsustainable debt? I say the latter, but either way our leaders are destabilizing the system with their machinations and we will end up in the same place. If reckless efforts to reflate don't work, we will sink under the weight of the massive debt when the next recession arrives. If it does work, can it be controlled? With the partisan competition to buy votes and implement policy fantasies regardless of cost we could end up with a $50 loaf of bread - we can call it a Weimar loaf. We can say that we whipped deflation, but we'll wish we hadn't. Like a drug addict, we are violating every principle we know to be right and true, delaying the inevitable, squandering our inheritance, and impoverishing ourselves and our heirs in the process.
Geopolitics
On the world scene we have gotten ourselves into big trouble. Our peerless military is stretched thin around the world and the troops are not happy. Don Rumsfeld continues to insist that everything is under control in
The
Last week, after our prior insults to "old
Meanwhile Treasury Secretary Snow, in an effort to deal with our out-of-control trade deficit, has been conducting a campaign to pressure the Chinese and Japanese to revalue their currencies. Never mind that it is the Chinese and Japanese who are purchasing the bulk of our Treasury obligations, enabling us to continue to run our huge budget deficits. If they revalue and stop purchasing our debt, interest rates will soar.
Also on the global front, the trade liberalization juggernaut is losing steam and protectionist sentiments are rising. At the WTO the Group of 21, composed of developing nations, walked out of the recent round of talks over the issue of agricultural subsidies in the developed nations. In
Summary
Economic growth and thus continued corporate earnings growth are facing strong headwinds. Job formation will remain anemic and a real economic recovery cannot be sustained without robust job creation. Fiscal insanity in
Investment strategy should remain conservative and primarily defensive. Market neutral strategies provide the best risk adjusted opportunities at this time. Also, cash is good, gold is good on pullbacks, and foreign currencies are good, especially Far Eastern currencies.