Lost In Space
The Daily Reckoning
Paris, France
Friday, 23 January 2004
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*** When the rig blows up... ?
*** Housing driving (somehow) the economy... a lot of
downside available...
*** Dollar still in decline. Where's the violent
correction? Where's the panic... ? Still ahead, dear reader!
Blind people are dangerous too... and more!
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"When and how will this stupendous rig end?"
The King Report poses the question... the same question that
entertains us nearly each and every day.
"That's the multi-trillion dollar question that regularly
punctuates daily conversations on The Street. While
Bubblevision and Wall Street shills try to entice buying
with projections of 10-15% gains, some operators are
patiently but vigilantly awaiting the opportunity to make
[money]... on the bursting of this historic 'Double Bubble.'
The big money will be made on the downside."
We have climbed to the top of the mountain, dear reader.
Never before have we been at such high elevations of debt,
confidence, self-satisfaction and asset price inflation.
Debt has reached beyond 3 times total GDP - more than twice
its 'normal' level. Under the Bush Administration, federal
spending is increasing faster than under any president in
the last 50 years (see below)... while taxes are being cut.
Housing prices in many parts of the country are rising 5 to
10 times as fast as inflation.
We stop here to reflect on the curious phenomenon of
housing.
"Housing Keeps Driving the Economy," says a headline from
yesterday. Housing starts are at levels not seen since
1978.
But how can housing drive an economy? Housing is merely a
consumer item. It must mean that Americans are 'consuming'
more housing... just as they are consuming more automobiles
and more home theater systems.
When the Chinese figure out how to manufacture houses, the
U.S. is in big trouble. But for the moment, a boom in
housing means a boom in U.S. employment. And, of course, as
houses go up in price, the householder is able to 'take out
equity' - and spend it! Tax and interest rates make it
easier for him to spend more... as long as he focuses only
on cashflow, and not his balance sheet... as long as he
considers only the short-run, not the long term... as long
as he thinks only of having money 'just in time' rather
than 'just in case.'
So he consumes more of everything... making the highest
monthly payments ever... going bankrupt at the fastest pace
ever... while believing he is getting rich.
What to make of it? The air at these altitudes must be so
thin that people have begun to hallucinate... to imagine
things.
As Bill King says, the money will be made on the downside.
Why? Because there is so much downside available!
Richard Russell gives us some numbers to show how much
downside there really is.
At the bottom of a bear market, stocks trade at low P/Es
and high dividend yields. In 1949, for example, the average
stock sold for less than 6 times earnings, with a dividend
yield of 7.6%. The next low was in 1974, when P/Es dropped
to 7.5 and dividend yields hit 5.1%. In 1980, again stocks
reached the bottom of a downside at 6.8 times earnings and
a dividend yield of 5.7%. Two years later, they fell into
yet another crevice with average P/Es below 8 and an
average dividend yield over 6%.
Suffering from apparent oxygen deprivation, today's
investors don't bother to look down. They believe that
another important bottom was hit in October of 2002 - at a
P/E of 33 and a dividend yield of 1.8%! We think, rather,
it was a ledge.
We invite you, dear reader, to ease yourself over to the
edge of it and look over. Hold on tight... because it's a
long way down. See those teeny, tiny little specks down
there? Believe it or not... they're the great stocks and
great houses that everybody thought could never go down.
But there they are... at a fraction of today's size. When
the Dow finally gets down there, it will be at only about
2,500 points above sea level. And investors, those that
survive the long climb down, will have lighter
portfolios... but clearer heads.
And now, here's Addison with more news: