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Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

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  • Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

    As manager of the world's largest collection of bond funds, Bill Gross is the first to admit that bond guys are talking their book when they wax apocalyptic. A bad economy means disinflation, declining interest rates, and a corresponding rise in bond prices. Gross is calling a big bond rally.
    Grim Reality
    April 2007 (Bill Gross - PIMCO)

    This study’s important conclusion for PIMCO and our clients is that if home prices in the U.S. have peaked, and are expected to stay below that peak on a real price basis for the next three years, then the Fed will cut rates and cut them significantly over the next few years in order to revigorate an anemic U.S. economy. Strong global growth (not part of this study’s assumptions) may temper historical parallels and provide a higher floor than would otherwise be the case. Nonetheless, prices for houses that I can see and touch every day outside my office are morphing with bond yields inside my computer screen to produce a reality show that speaks to an ongoing bond bull market of still undefined proportions.

    AntiSpin: What if we get the other kind of apocalypse? Not the bond-friendly disinflationary kind that drives interest rates down but the bond wrecking rising inflation and contracting economy–stagflationary–type? That's what former Harvard president Lawrence H. Summers believes.


    An occasion for redo economics
    March 28, 2007 (Lawrence H. Summers - LA Times)

    With prospects for a big slowdown, it's perilous to correct yesterday's mistakes.

    Now the growth syllogism is in real doubt. Subprime-sector foreclosures will bloat the supply of houses. At the same time, reductions in capital in housing finance and more rigorous credit standards will reduce the demand for new homes. As consumers face upward resets on their mortgage rates and are unable to refinance, and as home-equity, automobile and credit-card lending tighten, consumption will decline.

    If that happens, and U.S. interest rates fall or appear likely to fall, there is the real possibility that the foreign lending to the United States will start to dry up, leading to a combination of higher long-term interest rates and a weaker dollar. This would tend to raise inflationary pressures, transmit U.S. weakness to the rest of the world and, by discouraging foreign demand for U.S. assets, could lead to further downward pressure on investment in plants, equipment and commercial real estate.

    Yesterday, before a passel of Congress-critters, Ben Riding Hood came upon inflation data and declared it too hot. The markets didn't like the message.
    Stocks Fall on Bernanke Inflation Remark
    Stocks Slide Following Fed Chief Testimony on Inflation, Subprime Lenders

    Stocks slid further Wednesday after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke appeared to chide investors who may have looked past concerns about inflation following Fed comments last week. The Dow Jones industrials fell more than 100 points.
    What exactly did Ben say that sent the markets down?
    Testimony of Chairman Ben S. Bernanke
    March 28, 2007

    The principal source of the slowdown in economic growth that began last spring has been the substantial correction in the housing market.

    Although the turmoil in the subprime mortgage market has created severe financial problems for many individuals and families, the implications of these developments for the housing market as a whole are less clear.

    Apparently Ben hasn't read the Fed's own September of 2005 report Monetary Policy and House Prices: A Cross-Country Study (pdf). It concludes: "Foreign industrial economies have experienced many large swings in house prices over the past thirty-five years, and the latest rise has been the most dramatic on record. The extent of the rise and its synchronization across countries raises concerns that, if history is any guide, real house prices are quite likely to fall or at least stagnate in a number of industrial countries in the future. Furthermore, the pro-cyclicality of real house prices also suggests that their downward correction will be associated with some slowing of consumption and residential investment, which could contribute to an economic downturn."
    [US] Business spending has also slowed recently. Outside the United States, economic activity in our major trading partners has continued to grow briskly.
    Good thing, too, because if US trade partners aren't growing, then they are not producing the economic surplus that the US needs to consume to maintain the system of Trade Deficit Financing for the US economy.

    Ben's middle ground conclusion:
    Overall, the economy appears likely to continue to expand at a moderate pace over coming quarters.
    And, finally, an ass-covering close to the topic of the economy before moving on to the topic of inflation:
    This forecast is subject to a number of risks. To the downside, the correction in the housing market could turn out to be more severe than we currently expect, perhaps exacerbated by problems in the subprime sector. Moreover, we could yet see greater spillover from the weakness in housing to employment and consumer spending than has occurred thus far.
    Inflation: "These data are too hot," says Ben Riding Hood:
    Although core inflation seems likely to moderate gradually over time, the risks to this forecast are to the upside.
    He goes on to make the case to his bond market audience that the horror of impending wage inflation are worse than the risk that the economy is slowing too much.
    However, a less benign possibility is that tight product markets might allow firms to pass some or all of their higher labor costs through to prices. In this case, increases in nominal compensation would not translate into increased purchasing power for workers but would add to inflation pressures. Thus, the high level of resource utilization remains an important upside risk to continued progress in reducing inflation.
    The Fed would like nothing better than to cut rates and get the next bubble going, but can't without a clear and present finance danger–a crash. So expect to get similar blah, blah, blah until the inevitable financial accident, revelation of fraud, or clear sign of self-reinforcing weakness in the economy–the menu of pins to pop any asset bubble–shows up.

    A lot of smart folks outside the usual circle of skeptics are starting to catch on to the CPI inflation game.
    Not smarter than a 5th grader: How runaway inflation has slipped under our radar
    March 26, 2007 (Jane Stillwater's Web Log)

    We need to stop being sidetracked by statistics and to start learning to trust our own experience at the grocery store and the gas pump instead. We need to start flying by the seat of our pants.

    Remember that old adage, "If a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear it, does it still make a sound?" Well, here's a new adage. "If a price raises at the supermarket and the media doesn't report it, does inflation still exist?" You bet!

    If inflation cost Jimmy Carter the presidency after only one term, how come Bush wasn't thrown out of the White House in 2004? Two reasons. First, the rate of runaway inflation since GWB took over the White House wasn't hyped in the news constantly like it had been during the 1980 presidential election race. And, second, "If election fraud steals an election, does the winner still get to be President?"

    PS: Instead of using the Consumer Price Index to measure inflation rates, we now rely on the Core CPI, which doesn't record dramatic changes in housing and energy costs. According to economist Ann Berg, the Core CPI only reflects that we are now buying more stuff at dollar stores. Dollar store purchases are now keeping inflation down? What? The once-mighty American economy is now being kept safe from inflation because low prices in DOLLAR STORES are forcing the CPI down? That's pathetic.

    According to Berg, "Core CPI reveals no inflation because it tracks manufactured goods that have cheapened over time, the result of the entrance of a billion third world workers since 1990."
    Digging back into the iTulip archives, we find the following faux letter from the Bureau of Labor Statistics on the subject.
    To: All Departments
    From: Patty Jackman, US Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics
    Date: February 3, 2000
    Subject: Revision of CPI

    Due to rising oil prices, the Bureau of Labor Statistics announces a new formulation of the CPI retroactive to January1, 2000.

    All items, U.S. city average, all urban consumers, 1982-84=100, 1-month percent change, seasonally adjusted.

    Old CPI Cost Items -> New CPI Cost Items
    Food and beverages -> Food and beverages at discount grocery stores
    Housing -> Tenement housing
    Apparel -> Consignment store clothing
    Transportation -> Bicycles, skateboards, shoes
    Medical care -> Beer, martinis, television
    Recreation -> Same as above
    Education and communication -> Network television shows and Buck-a-Book store items
    Other goods and services -> Air, sun, snow
    Energy -> Burning tires in the back yard

    Regards,

    Patty Jackman
    Division Weasel
    US Dept. of Labor
    Bureau of Labor Statistics
    We meant it as a joke. Little did we know, this appears to be more or less what the BLS did.

    The era when voters have been willing to put with the ruse of the rigged CPI numbers and the Fed program to keep their wages in check may be coming to an end. As long as it looked like Joe and Jane taxpayer had a seat at the Bubble Economy table where they too could pick up some scrap capital gains from the sales of inflated assets, first in the stock market bubble and then the housing bubble, the nudge-nudge, wink-wink CPI was tolerable. Now that the housing bubble has come to an end, the inflation reality is becoming politicized, and pressure is rising on the Fed to do more than give lip service to inflation. At the same time, if Summers is right, US dependence on foreign absorption of US inflation may be coming to an end, too.

    Remember what happened the last time politics got the Fed serious about inflation: precious metals prices collapsed. The politicization of inflation bears careful scrutiny.

    The Fed needs a crash in order to cut rates. But more than that, it desperately needs a new asset bubble to keep the FIRE Economy chugging along. We don't yet know where it is going to form but as of Tuesday, thanks to J–our mystery writer–we may have come upon one potential tool to help us locate it before the fact.

    Stay tuned.
    Last edited by EJ; March 29, 2007, 05:13 PM.

  • #2
    Re: Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

    i haven't read bill gross' latest [april], but he's been saying for some time that rates would drop and there would be a bond rally ON THE FRONT END [i.e. short duration]. he's recommended loading up on e.g. 2 years, not on the long end. so he's been implicitly talking about fed cuts dropping short rates and poom raising [or at least not dropping] long rates.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

      so you are suggesting a bubble in skateboards, martinis and shoes? I generally go barefoot and I am thinking this trend will continue so I would say that shoes are an unlikely bubble. But otherwise I can't really disagree...

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      • #4
        Re: Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

        Did you say "precious metals prices collapse"?

        I was thinking that precious metals are a good investment now. How can the Fed collapse the price?

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        • #5
          Re: Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

          thanks from germany

          excellent!

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          • #6
            Re: Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

            Originally posted by BlackVoid
            Did you say "precious metals prices collapse"?

            I was thinking that precious metals are a good investment now. How can the Fed collapse the price?
            There is little danger that, long term, the Fed and global central banks will allow a "break in the chain of payments" to snowball into a cascading debt default. But one should be emotionally prepared for a period we call "Ka" of "Ka-Poom" when that appears to be what is happening: credit and money will tighten up. The Fed usually causes this itself, either by raising rates or keeping them too high for too long, just as they launched the previous bubble by keeping rates too low for too long. iTulip's editorial position is that, long term, by, say, 2015, gold will be around $2500/oz, but will not get there in a straight line. Some iTulipers will trade the Ka-Poom cycle, selling gold into the decline, buying near the bottom before the next reflation kicks in. Others will ride it out.
            Ed.

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            • #7
              Re: Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

              Although the turmoil in the subprime mortgage market has created severe financial problems for many individuals and families, the implications of these developments for the housing market as a whole are less clear.
              This is the biggest piece of lying crap. I love how economists who are beholden to political forces trot out this garbage. It is clear to anyone who has studied history, sees what's going on outside their house, and can crunch a few numbers. The "implications of these developments" are very clear Ben, and that is we are going to have a RE-related recession with the associated housing crash that the Fed of Alan Greenspan primarily perpetuated.

              Here, if I can say BS can I be a govenrment or FIRE-hired economist?

              "It appears as if we are having a corrective phase in the housing market. We are unsure at this time what direction the market will be heading in the near future. While inflation is contained, the economy still have low unemployment, it appears as though the broader economy is still healthy."

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

                Originally posted by Fred
                ... be emotionally prepared for a period we call "Ka" of "Ka-Poom" ... credit and money will tighten up. The Fed usually causes this itself, either by raising rates or keeping them too high for too long, just as they launched the previous bubble by keeping rates too low for too long....
                bubbles don't occur within a market - bubbles are manifestations of underlying credit conditions over which the Fed has little control. it's globalized credit creation which is the real culprit - its the trading leverage Doug Noland talks about, the 99.9% of "money" crossing borders which has no relation whatsoever to the real economy we live in - this is what created the stock market & housing bubbles in the US, not whether the Fed sets rates at 1% or 10%. I've heard it refered to as 'financialization'

                the hidden inflation talked about in the article are similar expressions of this out-of-control growth of leverage - tuition levels, medical care, etc. - all are manifestations of 'financialization', which affects everything, no matter if its the price of gold or the cost of trailer park villas in California.

                the infamous R. Prechter warns of a terrible K winter deflation which will sink all boats - but false E.W. wave counts & end-of-the-world warnings aside - it appears as if the global rentier system can no longer continue financializing assets because the 'limits of growth' have been breached, recalling thosesinister Club of Rome warnings of the 1970s. All markets have boomed together while curiously most market participant are actually worse off. Go figure.

                It could almost be argued that growth in the US since Reagan's 'morning in America' psyop/campaign has been soley due to the phenomenon of global financialization, and has, in fact, been negative. In real terms, the education you got at Harvard or at UCLA in the 1970s was superior to the one you now pay 700% more for today, or the medical care you got in the 1970s superior to what you get today. Of course, its the 75+ million new Americans since 1980 and their demographic pressure which transformed the situation, but any 'expanding pie' has its own downsides, costs conservative business school professors like to ignore while 'getting to yes'.

                As a die-hard liberal, the US would have grown more wealthy had we chosen efficiency & population planning back in the Carter years - instead, we closed our eyes, held our breath and opted for financialization & voodoo economics. The road since has easy. Those who chose to work hard & save got eaten alive, and those who took foolish chances & sit on thier butts writing half baked replys were....instead of being producers, most of successful people I know indirectly manage slave labor overseas. How charming! We're all depressed millionaires now. Seems also that our children's future seems far more bleak than ours ever did.

                So under "Ka-Poom" maybe we should put all our money into gold, or maybe we should short stocks, or maybe try and catch that last big run up in tech, but any of these choices will be wrong if & when the expansion of financialization ends. Since Greenspan chose to cut & Bush chose to invade, we've experienced the perfect calm before the perfect storm. But the storm won't be implosion. The storm will be the breakdown of global markets. Even the winners won't win.

                Remember those stories of highly trained Soviet doctors working 60 hour weeks for 100 rubles when a gallon of milk was 70? Recall the decades of the destruction of Africa's economy or the Japanese 'deflation'? All these events occured against the backdrop of a strengthening financializing global trading system. What happens when its the global trading system which is the problem?

                "Ka-Poom" won't just be a decline - markets are too highly controlled now. Ka-Poom will probably result in the in the dislocation and then the localization of markets. It won't just matter whether you own gold or shorts or shares of IBM. What'll matter more is what local market you end up owning them in, how long you've owned them, who you are & who you are, and how indebted your local goverment is. Welcome back to the brutal world of localism.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Is Ben's Stagflation Quagmire Gross's Real Grim Reality?

                  Originally posted by stumann
                  bubbles don't occur within a market - bubbles are manifestations of underlying credit conditions over which the Fed has little control. it's globalized credit creation which is the real culprit - its the trading leverage Doug Noland talks about, the 99.9% of "money" crossing borders which has no relation whatsoever to the real economy we live in - this is what created the stock market & housing bubbles in the US, not whether the Fed sets rates at 1% or 10%....
                  the fed abdicated its role as regulator, forgoing the opportunity to raise margin requirements in the '90's and, along with other bank regulators, turning a blind eye to wild credit market conditions more recently. the issue isn't just the fed funds rate, it's also market oversight.

                  Originally posted by stumann
                  In real terms, the education you got at Harvard or at UCLA in the 1970s was superior to the one you now pay 700% more for today, or the medical care you got in the 1970s superior to what you get today.
                  i suppose one could argue about the quality of education at elite institutions, but i attended one in the 60's, and i've had occasion to see what's going on at 2 such universities in recent years, and there has been NO drop in quality. to the contrary. and as a physician who started practicing in the 70's, i'd add that there is no comparison between the level of medical knowledge and the power of medical interventions in the 70's and that available today. you must be kidding to make the assertion you made.

                  Originally posted by stumann
                  So under "Ka-Poom" maybe we should put all our money into gold, or maybe we should short stocks, or maybe try and catch that last big run up in tech, but any of these choices will be wrong if & when the expansion of financialization ends. Since Greenspan chose to cut & Bush chose to invade, we've experienced the perfect calm before the perfect storm. But the storm won't be implosion. The storm will be the breakdown of global markets. Even the winners won't win.

                  Remember those stories of highly trained Soviet doctors working 60 hour weeks for 100 rubles when a gallon of milk was 70? Recall the decades of the destruction of Africa's economy or the Japanese 'deflation'? All these events occured against the backdrop of a strengthening financializing global trading system. What happens when its the global trading system which is the problem?

                  "Ka-Poom" won't just be a decline - markets are too highly controlled now. Ka-Poom will probably result in the in the dislocation and then the localization of markets. It won't just matter whether you own gold or shorts or shares of IBM. What'll matter more is what local market you end up owning them in, how long you've owned them, who you are & who you are, and how indebted your local goverment is. Welcome back to the brutal world of localism.
                  i must say it's a pleasure to read your post. i mean that 2 ways: you say interesting things, albeit some with which i disagree; and you make me feel like an optimist, something i thought impossible. thank you.;)

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