Sucheta Dalal :Capitalism Has Left The Building: The Daily Reckoning
Sucheta Dalal

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Capitalism Has Left The Building: The Daily Reckoning  

October 16, 2008

Here is an excerpt from Bill Bonner's letter in The Daily Reckoning a e-investment letter with a large following.

What’s the capital of Iceland?”

“Oh...about $6.50.”

That’s the joke that is making its way around London this morning.

Iceland has melted down. Now, the government has pledged to save the banking sector – but at a cost of nearly $500,000 per citizen! In Europe, the cost so far is estimated at about $7,000 per citizen. But experts insist that much of that money – loaned to the banks – will come back to the government.

And in America? Who knows...?

The subject is on every pair of lips. It has replaced the weather as the focus of casual conversation.

“How ‘bout what is going on at the banks,” say farmers to one another.

And on the radio, talk shows are alive with recriminations, conspiracies and finger pointing. The man on the street is like a palm tree in a hurricane, wondering what makes the wind blow so hard.

On Monday, the wind shifted. The Dow shot up – along with the rest of the world’s stock markets. People looked up and saw sunshine. But was it a genuine end to the storm...or just the eye of the hurricane that was passing over?

Then, yesterday, the clouds came back. The feds announced that they had to force an evacuation. Capitalism would have to leave town – at least temporarily. They partly nationalized nine U.S. banks.

The Financial Times recorded the scene at the Treasury Department as they told the world:

“America is a strong nation. We are a confident and optimistic people,” declared Hank Paulson, Treasury secretary.

“Our confidence is born out of our long history of meeting every challenge we face.” But then reality reared its ugly head. “There is a lack of confidence in our financial system...it poses an enormous threat to our economy. Investors are unwilling to lend to banks, and healthy banks are unwilling to lend to each other.”

So was America confident or terrified? Apparently, it was confident that it could stop being terrified – but only if the government came to the rescue.

Deputy undertaker Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve chairman, stared grimly into space; Sheila Bair, head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, nodded occasionally. Tim Geithner, president of the New York Fed, stood with both hands in his pockets, looking concerned.

Mr. Bernanke’s turn came next, promising to do whatever it took to save the nation from disaster while letting slip that even yesterday’s giant intervention might not be enough. Then up strode Ms. Bair, her head barely visible above the podium Mr. Paulson had towered over, to detail the “extraordinary steps” the government was taking to save its banks.

Saving the economy would require “a sustained and coordinated effort by government authorities”. People may have lost faith in the private sector but not the power of federal authorities to rescue them. “Above all else, there must be no doubt in our government.”

Ronald Reagan must be turning in his grave, the FT concluded.

But the deed was done with hardly a peep of complaint. Those few who were inclined to peep were pushed aside and ignore.

The Dow fell 76 points yesterday – a bad sign. Usually, following such a bad week, you’d expect the dead cat to bounce for several days. This one had a good bounce on Monday and then lay as still and as silent as a tax collector’s tomb.

This is an ‘emergency;’ everybody says so. All very well to take the high road when the weather is fine. But when storms come, people look for shelter wherever they can find it.

How bad will the storm get? This from Nouriel Roubini, Professor of Economics at the NYU Stern School of Business:

“The crisis was caused by the largest leveraged asset bubble and credit bubble in the history of humanity where excessive leveraging and bubbles were not limited to housing in the U.S. but also to housing in many other countries and excessive borrowing by financial institutions and some segments of the corporate sector and of the public sector in many and different economies: an housing bubble, a mortgage bubble, an equity bubble, a bond bubble, a credit bubble, a commodity bubble, a private equity bubble, a hedge funds bubble are all now bursting at once in the biggest real sector and financial sector deleveraging since the Great Depression.

“At this point the recession train has left the station; the financial and banking crisis train has left the station. The delusion that the U.S. and advanced economies contraction would be short and shallow – a V-shaped six month recession – has been replaced by the certainty that this will be a long and protracted U-shaped recession that may last at least two years in the U.S. and close to two years in most of the rest of the world. And given the rising risk of a global systemic financial meltdown, the probability that the outcome could become a decade long L-shaped recession – like the one experienced by Japan after the bursting of its real estate and equity bubble – cannot be ruled out.

“At this point the risk of an imminent stock market crash – like the one-day collapse of 20% plus in U.S. stock prices in 1987 – cannot be ruled out as the financial system is breaking down, panic and lack of confidence in any counterparty is sharply rising and the investors have totally lost faith in the ability of policy authorities to control this meltdown.

“A vicious circle of deleveraging, asset collapses, margin calls, and cascading falls in asset prices well below falling fundamentals, and panic is now underway.”

And, looking in our old book, Financial Reckoning Day , written with Addison Wiggin, we find this remarkable forecast:

“If the US were to repeat the Japanese experience, stocks would be expected to return to their 1995 trend line, with the Dow below 4,000 in the year 2012, at the very moment when America’s baby boomers will most need their money.”

Get out your galoshes, dear reader...

*** We’re rushing to the airport – on our way to the Frankfurt Book Fair, where we hope to receive a prize for our latest book – Mobs, Messiahs and Markets . Paul Krugman got his Nobel. We’re hoping for something too...perhaps a little smaller.

But we are working hard on our Special Emergency Report, where we hope to present a clearer picture of what this crisis really means and how you can survive it...and even enjoy it. Look for it soon.

*** Yesterday, we mentioned that our friend and colleague Chris Mayer, amidst all the racket in the markets, has found two new buys for his Mayer’s Special Situations portfolio. As we said before, we can’t give specific stock picks in The Daily Reckoning (it is a free newsletter, after all), but we can tell you some things about the second buy Chris has re-discovered. We’ll let him give you the scoop:

“It’s a company we’ve owned before at MSS and more than doubled our money on. But the recent carnage in the market has taken it down, even though the company has created a lot of value since we sold it. It’s a great buy today and it looks like a double, at least, again!

“The stock was $95 in July. We can grab it for $40 today...

“It’s also one of the best owner-operators I’ve ever found. Consider some of these things:

– The company has only 6 employees
– The management team owns 24% of the stock.
– The company has no debt.
– It should generate $300 million in cash flow this year and has a market cap of just under $700 million. Meaning, it’s trading for little more than 2 times cash flow. My goodness, if I could only find one of these every month I’d be a rich man in no time at all!”

To learn more about this pick, and the rest of Chris’ MSS portfolio, see here .

*** In the meantime, we are getting in the spirit of saving money. Last week, we rode a bicycle home from the office.

“You must have looked like the nutty professor,” said our daughter when we described the scene to her. Bicycle riders feel a sense of superiority and invulnerability that you can’t get in a car or on foot. The rider-propelled, two-wheeled vehicle gives a sense of liberation to scofflaws...and a sense of power to poets. Your editor nearly ran down at least two pedestrians who got in front of him. As for the automobiles, he ignored them...and traffic signals too. Bicycles always seem to have the right of way...and never get traffic tickets. So, he zoomed down the Rue de Rivoli, ringing his bell to get the pigeons and old ladies out of his way. And then he glided through roundabout at the Place de la Concorde...right through six lanes of traffic. Drivers honked at him. Even other bicyclists seemed alternately alarmed or annoyed. But he got home. Safely? Probably not, but at least he was saving money.

Until tomorrow,

Bill Bonner

 

 

 


-- Sucheta Dalal