Monday, November 12, 2007

[economics 101] the reason why it must

Found myself in a position today where I had to explain my perspective to a financier whose English level was reasonable but not fabulous. His question was simple – why I thought the western economy was going to collapse.

Seems to me that there are two ways to come at this question – politically, in terms of what the ECB and Fed are up to and in terms of Economics 101, which is as much as I can lay claim to.

In 1989, a teacher's salary was J11 000 and a two bedroom semi-detached was J55 000 in the north. Seems to me today that in Britain, the salary is about J22K and the house about J120-180K. In Russia, the ratio has gone from 1:15 in 1999 to 1:26 today.

Income, in real terms, has gone down and continues to, to the point that the only way to have a house and one car is to go into deep hock. This is fundamentally wrong and has been fuelled by the availability of credit which is not even cheap.

An inevitable consequence of this is that the middle half of society moves from a position of relative equity to a position of debt and slowly drops into sub-prime status, which was most certainly not the situation in 1969.

It's further fuelled by unrealistic aspirations, the gratification of which has moved into the area of the unaffordable and whose spin-off is that people nurtured on the credit economy inevitably see credit as smart money instead of the debt it is.

The great terminological inexactitude the banks persist with is that most people can make ends meet and therefore will not exceed credit limits or seek further credit. The banks know very well that people's aspirations, fuelled by a “keeping up with the Joneses” mentality will lead them to seek “solutions” from their friendly cooperative or other provider.

Another cynical “given” is that a proportion of people will default, be it an overdraft or true default. Insurance will carry them for a while but not forever. That proportion is most certainly increasing in all western countries – I have U.S. and Australian stats on this.

Now the most unforgivable of all. In a sub-prime position, people go for finance to cover their lack of finance and are given it but at rates which are exorbitant. It should be the other way. Sound borrowers can carry higher rates but sub-primes can both ill afford to nor do they usually have the least clue how to handle money.

So the credit economy becomes the debt economy [$18, 700 per household in the U.S. In 2004, inc all debt] and as the luxuries are pared back to the bone, even basic mortgage and car repayments assume mammoth proportions.

Solution – refinancing and second mortgages.

The pressure on the housing market is enormous, the market stalls, rates go up partly due to the parallel sub-prime loan defaulting, when they should be doing the opposite, the banks themselves find themselves in an overextended position partly due to quite unsound speculative investment, the CB bails them out.

Prime borrowers
are also finding themselves in trouble, as Henry Paulson recently noted:
"Yet, the problem today is not limited to subprime mortgages as the number of homeowners having trouble making payments on prime mortgages is also increasing."
Meanwhile, the banks have been quietly divesting themselves of gold and are increasingly relying on unbacked scribble in a ledger to balance the books [or not bothering, in the case of the EU – admittedly not a bank but still – see the auditor's report for 2004. for example].

While this is happening, the herd mentality has created "gold thinking" and elsewhere, Asian sovereign funds are looming mighty large, which is interesting, given today's warning [below] re the Nikkei.

This has followed on from clear warnings that U.S. financial markets reeled from a growing credit crunch, centered not in the subprime area, but in the leveraged corporate debt market. Private equity funds have become a dodo and hedge funds and derivatives have become two dirty words. Lack of transparency has also led to unease - just what is the overall strategy of the b-g--rs?

Take away property and that leaves commodities.

So, back to the mundane, the average punter is in big hock to the finance provider who, through unwise speculation on the strength of CB noises about soundness, is in hock to the CB, who in turn has been divesting itself of real money and the only ones with money are the Old Money who've been buying up for the inevitable rainy day.

Is this a healthy economy?

Now where the economists and I part company is that they say, just as they explain away the '29 crash, that 2007 is due to cloudy foresight or even incompetence. I maintain that it is due to selective blindness and that there is an agenda to destabilize, certainly from the Round Table and ECB, where my information is sounder.

The purpose? Here we get political again but a glance at the decades pre-1914 and pre-1939 show some parallels. Also, answer one question – can you afford gold anymore? You could have in 2005. So who can afford gold now? OK, it's coming down, so how much is available for the average punter to buy?

Back to the global economy and this little statement earlier today from the BBC, whose link I lost in my haste, I'm sorry:
"I'm afraid factors from overseas, such as sub-prime problems, are coming over to Japan," said Chief Cabinet Secretary Nobutaka Machimura. "We'll closely monitor the situation," he added.

"Its getting to the point where everything seems scary and that its hard to trust what financial institutions are saying."
Why would the U.S. housing crisis affect the Nikkei?

Economists will snort but I don't mean the nuts and bolts - Sackerson's report that Karl Denninger (Market Ticker, yesterday) explained it as a relativistic effect:

Our problems are bad. The problems that will be faced overseas are FAR WORSE. Overseas economies are dependant on us, not the other way around. When this sinks in the other currencies against which the DX is measured will collapse; this will appear to raise the dollar, but in fact it is the sinking of other currencies.

No, I mean, in very non-economist terms, why would the market operate in such a way anyway that this could happen in the first place? What sort of a market fails to be gear itself to prevent this? I'm not talking cause and effect here – I'm asking this question in the way Guthrum asks why we even need government at all. Fundamental structural principle.

I say there are only two explanations for the crisis in the U.S. which the FOMC was meant to prevent:
1. Incompetence – not foreseeing logical consequences – in which case it's very worrying that the world economy is at their beck and call;

2. Design – selective failure to act, allowing sub-prime lending to the point where the sheer volume creates crisis nd tweaking interest rates to exacerbate the situation - in which case it's very worrying that the world economy is at their beck and call.
For example, they were well aware of the likely housing outcome in October, 2006:
Residential construction activity remained weak. Single-family starts ticked up in September, but new permit issuance slid further to its lowest level in nearly five years.
Now, look at one further aspect. Ben Bernanke explained the Fed's recent actions by saying a central bank has to do things that will prevent sales of assets that "will drive the prices of those assets well below their longer-term fundamental values, raising the risk of widespread insolvency and intensifying the crisis."

And what if the fundamental value is far less than supposed? Then the Fed would be fuelling a bubble. And we all know what happened last time. Now is this incompetence or design? We could argue this one till the cows come home.

So where does that leave the average punter? It leaves him paying out, selling off and buying up commodities, which themselves are being selectively released onto the market, with the pittance he's left with.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

[personal pet parade] enter your darling today


Pet velociraptor? Make sure you submit your entry by midnight today, Sunday. This is the final call, dear reader. Send your name as you'd like it diplayed, along with attached photo of your giant squid or tyrannosaurus or whatever to:

nourishingobscurity@gmail.com

The cunning plan is to present the parade tomorrow afternoon or evening. And yes – you may submit pics of your spouse or concubine.

Thanks for all the entries so far.

[breast pocket] essential gentlemen's apparel

Ladies, please go to sleep for the nonce – this is for the gentlemen. Manolo has pointed out a crisis in the dressing department:
The news that sales of shirts with breast pockets have collapsed - from 90 per cent of all shirts sold a decade ago to 25 per cent today - doesn’t surprise me. The clothes snobs have been fighting them for years, and tragically - for a breast pocket fan like me - they’ve won.
Izzy continues:
It is true that, for both men and women, the more functional the piece of clothing, the less formal it is. Think of how you cannot roll back the sleeves on a french-cuff shirt, or how the pockets on a (slimly cut) tuxedo jacket can barely fit anything beyond a money-clip. When it comes to breast pockets on shirts, the issue is to what extent you are willing to trade formality for functionality, a question that each gentleman must determine for himself.
Personally, I like the breast pocket [the box pleat flap is my favourite] - far from distorting the shirt, it helps retain its shape whilst remaining soft to the touch. Otherwise one would need starch. Of course it's not meant to have anything more than a notepaper in it.

I have a designer shirt with a zipped breast pocket which is sewn to the inside and it's wonderful. Also, I wear a thicker, softer shirt than the traditional and ubiquitous nasty business shirt.

My shirts are cotton or linen and my ties silk. And yours?

[nourishing obscurity] just a pretty flower

[technorati] don't fix what ain't broke


Ordovicius is quite rightly seriously annoyed about Technorati's act of ritual suicide:
Earlier this year Technorati adopted a new system, whereby a blog's authority would no longer reflect how many all time links it has, but only those of the last six months. The overwhelming response to this from bloggers has been a "Screw you, technorati", and the removal of links to technorati itself.
Completely agree. Bloggers took a long time to patiently build up those links and links are a blog's lifeline because only through these can a blog be visited. Imagine the chagrin when a blogger suddenly sees his "authority" slump!

Technorati don't give a toss for what blogs are trying to do and I hope they [Technorati] either see the light and amend their ways or else go down in a screamng heap with Facebook.

Not everyone agrees. Ian Kallen says:
Technorati authority is not a monotonically ascending value, it has a time component. Since Summer of 2006 Technorati authority has been based on a rolling 180 day window counting unique blogs linking to a blog. That hasn't changed. Authority drops when links age out and new ones aren't coming in to replace them or when there are data corrections (for instance, spam blogs or data duplication removals). There was a post on the Technorati blog about the various count metrics last year, see Making Sense of Link Counts.
I have other gripes with Technorati. My profile is all wrong, they persist in saying I am hugh jensen or might be so, when I am neither and I've written e-mail after e-mail about it, all ignored. This blogger, vis a vis Technorati, is not a happy chappy.

[monday, november 11th, 1918] pray for humanity

Armistice Day, Veteran's Day, Remembrance Day

Hawks, backed and abetted by the finance, have always prearranged wars long before the opening salvos.

Nowhere was this more glaringly obvious than in The Great War, a term which already had currency in the corridors of power long before the due date. Even Buchan admitted as much in The Thirty Nine Steps [available online].

The Schieffen Plan

For complicated reasons you can read yourselves, the Germans were long harbouring a desire to punish France and for what? Because France had punished them for a wrong which they had perpetrated on France and so on.

This is the eternal cycle of war so beloved of two classes – the aristocracy and the old money of Europe.

Some speculate that if Helmuth von Moltke the Younger has not lost his nerve, Germany might have shortened the war but I think not. Historians almost always fail to take into account the invisible factor in all public life – the Old Finance.

So the long drawn out and extremely lucrative conflict and devastation of the common man was very much anticipated.

Helmuth von Moltke the Younger

French Plan XVII

It is erroneous to suppose that the French were the poor victims in this.

Almost immediately following her defeat by Prussia in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71, together with the humiliating annexation by the newly unified Germany of the coal-rich territories of Alsace and Lorraine, the French government and military alike were united in thirsting for revenge.

To this end the French devised a strategy for a vengeful war upon Germany, Plan XVII, whose chief aim was the defeat of Germany and the restoration of Alsace and Lorraine. The plan was fatally flawed, and relied to an untenable extent upon the "élan" which was believed to form an integral part of the French army - an irresistible force that would sweep over its enemies.

Like Caesar's Soothsayer

It wasn't that no one spoke out:

A few dissident intellectuals in Europe had been trying to warn their nations about how different a war among the great industrial powers of Europe would be from wars of the previous century.

This has always been the way and even now the kudos of this very blog has suffered and jokes are made about the “conspiracy theorist” proprietor - why? Because this blog tries to warn the sphere of the impending war - Merkel's War – but that's another story.

And so to Compiègne

This photograph was taken in the forest of Compiègne after reaching an agreement for the armistice that ended World War I. This railcar was given to Ferdinand Foch for military use by the manufacturer, Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits. Foch is second from the right.

I sometimes imagine that meeting in the forest of Compiegne after all the trench warfare, the slaughter and massive dislocation imposed on a bewildered and yet highly patriotic people.

It was 4.30 in the morning of Monday, November 11th in France and perhaps they'd travelled from Paris via Foch's special train, rugged up for the occasion.

Think for a moment what it would have looked like and felt like that morning.


The German delegation crossed the front line in five cars and was escorted for ten hours across the devastated warzone of Northern France (perhaps, they speculated, to focus their minds on the lack of sympathy they could expect[citation needed]). They were then entrained and taken to the secret destination, Foch's railway siding in the forest of Compiègne.

Telegrams were passed to and from the German team:
Matthias Erzberger, a civilian politician;
Count Alfred von Oberndorff, from the Foreign Ministry;
Major General Detlev von Winterfeldt, the army; and
Captain Ernst Vanselow, the navy.

[General Weygand and General von Gruennel are not mentioned in the French document]
... to both the German Army Chief of Staff Paul von Hindenburg in Spa and the hastily assembled civilian government of Friedrich Ebert in Berlin.

Erzberger apparently attempted to take negotiations to the limit of the 72 hours Foch had offered Hindenburg, but an open telegram from Berlin imploring him to sign immediately somewhat undermined his team's credibility.

Ebert was desperate, facing imminent insurrection in many large German cities. Signatures were made between 5:12 AM and 5:20 AM, Paris time.

How it affected some people

Colonel Percy Dobson wrote:
It was hard to believe the war was over. Everything was just the same, tired troops everywhere and cold drizzly winter weather- just the same as if the war were still on.
Stephen Longstreet, in the Canvas Falcons (1970), wrote:
On that November 11, 1918, morning, another flier, Capitaine Jacques Leps, commander of the French 18th Squadron, sat in his Spad. He was about to take off with his fliers and their planes, all marked with the insignia of a leaping hare chased by a greyhound. The engines were turning over, the props spinning silver.

It was time to get into the air, to escort a major bombing raid on Metz. As Leps raised his arm to signal the take-off, someone came running from the airdrome's communication room, running agitatedly, arms waving.

"La guerre!! C'est finie, la guerre!"

Jaques Leps took in the heart-bursting news. He switched off the Spad's engine. The engines of the rest of his fliers went silent, one by one, as the cry "C'est finie, la guerre!" spread throughout the field. Capitaine Leps unfastened his safety belt and slowly got out of his cockpit.
Penultimate

At 11:00 a.m. this day, we put down whatever we're doing and remember long-suffering humanity who have had to endure these things and especially the brave men and women who gave their lives to defend their homes and families from totally unnecessary and indefensible aggression.

Lovely piece on the issue from the Domestik Goddess who writes of singer-songwriter Terry Kelly, who witnessed an act of philistinism:
On the stroke of 11:00, all the store fell silent.

All, that is, except for one man, who was accompanied by his little daughter. Oblivious of the example he was setting for the child, the man continued to try to talk to the sales clerk all through the respectful silence.

Terry Kelly did what artists have always done, in the grip of the strongest emotions — he channelled his anger into his music.
I have a copy of the Last Post and will play it during that time. What I love about this day is that it brings all of us together - American, Canadian, Britain, Commonwealth and many others.

Finally

Do not forget the modern German either - he is as much against this madness as any of us. He is not to be excluded from this remembrance day. Many of the British recognize this new reality and it seems to me to be a good step towards the ultimate exclusion of war as a means of resolving disputes.

Late update - check Juliet's post - it really brings it home. Also, a series from Jams, of which this is the last.