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-Caveat Lector-

* * * * * * * * * * * * REMINDER * * * * * * * * * * * * *

On the days that I don't publish, like today, you will
receive Bill Bonner's DAILY RECKONING. This will help you
to keep pace with the changes in the markets.  Bonner and
I agree on most things in the field of economics, so the
two letters will reinforce each other.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Lessons Of History, Part II

The Daily Reckoning

Paris, France

Wednesday, 15 October, 2003

                ---------------------

*** Dow still on echo-bubble trajectory... gold up...

*** 'Spending our way to disaster'... Americans now
borrowing $3 for every $1 of extra income... the what's-my-
monthly-payment nation... from 'job-loss' to 'jobless'
recovery...

*** The British in Iraq... Stop picking on Rush... and more!

                ---------------------

"Spending our way to disaster," begins a CNN story. "The
consumer debt bubble in the United States could make the
stock bubble seem like nothing," it continues, stealing not
just our thunder, but our lightning and hailstones too.

"The American consumer has become deeply addicted to
spending, running up ever-higher levels of debt in order to
live in a fashion that is beyond his means. And the world
has become equally addicted to the consumer continuing to
burn through cash.

"It's a dangerous situation - potentially a bubble that
dwarfs even the U.S. asset bubble that burst in 2000 - and
it will be a challenge for policy-makers to keep it from
ending badly." It will be more than a challenge, we think.
It will be impossible.

Back in the '60s, Americans borrowed about $1 for every $3
of extra income they earned. By the '80s, they were up to
borrowing $1.50. But when the something-for-nothing
mentality really took hold of the country in the late '90s,
when the ratio rose to the point where Americans were
borrowing $4 for every $3 in new income. Then, in the last
couple of years, Americans borrowed even more - about $4.50
for every 3 bucks of extra income. And most recently,
according to Kurt Richeb?her, for every $3 increase in
income, debt was clocked running at nearly $9.

The consumer didn't worry about it, because interest rates
fell so much he was able to refinance his
house... reschedule his debts... and buy a new car at zero-
percent interest. "We're a what's-my-monthly-payment
nation," says Northern Trust's Paul Kasriel.

House prices - rising more or less in line with increases
in the money supply - and low interest rates made it
possible to keep the spending frenzy going. Consumers could
'take out equity' while actually reducing their monthly
payments. CNN notes that Wells Fargo now offers NowLine
Visa, which gives homeowners access to a home equity line
that can be used "for everyday expenses like gas,
groceries, clothes, etc."

Thus does 'the world's mouth' gobble down its own houses,
one brick at time. Would it surprise you, dear reader, if
it developed a case of indigestion?

Just as you can't get something for nothing, neither can
you use nothing to pay back what you borrowed when you
thought you had something.

Instead, creditors will want hard-earned cash.

Over to you, Addison...

                     -------------

Addison Wiggin with news on the markets...

- Here's news: Powerful interests are said to be resisting
change at the New York Stock Exchange. Ya don't say.

- After Dick Grasso ceremoniously departed as head honcho
of the exchange - following scrutiny over his $187 million
deferred-compensation package - many of the nation's wish-
they-were-powerful windbags started calling for "major
reforms." Yesterday, state pension fund managers met with
new acting interim chairman, John Reed, and tried to strong
arm him into exacting changes in the way the NYSE is
governed. Their beef? Securities firms that are members of
the exchange are charged by the SEC with the task of self-
regulating.

- "... A lot of people wanted to see [Reed] come in and
spray a little perfume around the place and leave," Iowa
Treasurer, Michael Fitzgerald, told the Washington Post
after meeting with him. "He's not going to do that."
According to the Post, Reed has proposed reducing the
number of members on the board to seven - all from outside
the securities business. Great... maybe they'll assemble a
strong panel of masons, tugboat captains and pastry chefs
to govern the exchange. Anything would be better than
letting the people who know the business run their own
show, wouldn't it?

- Investors sprayed a little perfume of their own
yesterday... and took the market out for a dinner and a
movie. The Dow Jones closed 48 points higher at 9,812 - its
first time above 9800 since May 2002. The Nasdaq inched its
way nearly 10 points closer to the 2000 mark, but fell
short at 1,943. The S&P posted a 4-point gain to close at
1,049. All 25 earnings reports released yesterday morning
were either at or above expectations. Financial stocks
swooned at the deliciously sweet odor of 'economic
recovery.'

- But what's this? A tussle in the lobby. "Business To
Lenders: Drop Dead!" says an onlooker. "Despite low rates,
companies spurn borrowing," a subhead on CNN.com provides a
little detail, asking, "Could it mean the recovery will be
weak?" Even though business lending rates are at their
lowest level in 20 years, according to a Federal Reserve
report, the dollar value of commercial and industrial loans
dropped to its lowest level in five years. Intel, for
example, beat their own earnings estimates by 20%. But what
may seem like blissfully good news for tech investors was
inhaled a bit more soberly by Intel execs. They reported
yesterday, too, they do not intend to increase their
capital spending budget for the year.

- "A rebound in confidence," explains the CNN piece, "has
certainly encouraged businesses to replace warn-out
equipment... but with pricing still weak, cost-cutting is
still the order of the day. This could mean the next burst
of business investment won't come for some time. It also
means hiring, which is often the companion of business
expansion, will also remain stagnant, at least for a
while."

- "The tap is turned on a little higher than before," says
Anirvan Banerji of the Economic Cycle Research Institute,
"so we may see a little more job growth than before. But
that just means we will shift from a 'job-loss' recovery to
a 'jobless' recovery."

- It's not just jobs that are missing from this reflating
market bubble. Gas and gold stocks got trounced yesterday,
too. The HUI closed down slightly. Oil dipped to $31.82.
Treasuries got roughed up a little; the yield on the 10-
year rose to 4.35%, up 9 basis points from Monday's close.

- Gold, however, bucked the trend and gained 50 cents to
close above $376.

- In the Pao Mo column, word comes that China's auto
industry is overheating... Yahoo! News reports that
production of motor vehicles rose nearly 47% through August
of this year. The surge in production has help boost the
profits of China's top 14 auto companies (all state-run) by
76% year to date. "There is a new Asia to discover," writes
Marc Faber in the introduction to his book, "Tomorrow's
Gold." "If I were 26 again, I would likely move to
Shanghai, Ho Chi Minh, Yangon or Ulan Bator. I would learn
the local language to perfection, live with seven
concubines and start a business." (More on collapsing asset
bubbles and the lessons of history from Faber, below... )

                     -------------

Bill Bonner, back in Paris...

*** "An unusual divergence has developed between stocks and
the dollar," writes Carl Swenlin in his Decision Point
Alert. "Stocks have bottomed and gotten stronger, while the
dollar has weakened significantly. This is probably a
manifestation of the Fed's liquidity pump gone wild,
reinflating the stock bubble and undermining the soundness
of the dollar. My guess is that this is not a good thing."

*** Meanwhile, an article in Britain's "Guardian"
highlights the findings of economists Christina and David
Romer. Analyzing data from previous cycles, the Romers
discovered that the effects of interest rate cuts come
faster than previously thought.

"Applying the Romers' findings to the American economy,"
explains the Guardian, "suggests there could be bad news on
its way. The Fed has already cut interest rates steeply -
and if the Berkeley economists are right, the benefit of
those cuts have already been passed through to industry.
With base rates in the U.S. now at 1%, that means the Fed
has very little gas left in the tank to get the U.S.
economy running again."

*** "Stop picking on Rush," came a response to yesterday's
Daily Reckoning. "The poor man got hooked on painkillers
after an operation. He's admitted it. And he's taken
responsibility for it. Give the guy a break."

Ah, we love Rush like we love all sinners. But while we
love honest sinners, we can't help but ridicule humbugs.
What we fault the man for is not his drugs, nor hiding the
fact from his audience - it was none of their business
anyway. It is the confession that we find pathetic and
fraudulent. Rush says he does not consider himself a
"victim." Yet, describing his drug taking as an "addiction"
and asking for his listeners' prayers makes it sound as if
he had been struck by polio. If he were not in control of
himself, why did he suddenly recognize it only after being
outed by his housekeeper? Why does he not admit that he
took drugs because he liked the sensation they gave
him... and he'd still be taking them if he had not been
exposed?

*** "There is an interesting point (among many!) in the
following article," writes Daily Reckoning reader Byron
King, "that the British occupation of Mesopotamia-Iraq in
the early 1920's was very expensive. (Well, duh. Taking
over distant lands tends to be expensive, particularly if
you cannot afford it, as Casey Stengel would say.) My take
on it is...

"It was not just Britain's World War I war debts, almost
all of which were owed to the U.S., but the tipping-force
of its Iraq war bills of the 1920's, that caused a run on
the Pound Sterling in the early-mid 1920's.

"And then it was Britain's ill-fated effort to support a
falling Pound that caused U.S. Treasury Secretary Mellon to
OK the 'loan' of U.S. gold reserves to London, followed by
an increased use of the U.S. Dollar (then worth $20/oz of
gold) as a world trade-settlement currency. More and more
U.S. gold left the country (as in the expression
'boatloads'), which prompted the Fed, which had only been
around since 1913 and did not know what the hell it was
doing, to increase the money supply (actually, it was the
paper currency supply because the Fed has never operated a
gold mine.) This additional Fed-created credit funded the
'Bubble That Broke The World,' as the great economic writer
Garet Garrett called it, or 'the Roaring '20's' as it is
affectionately known.

"This FED-induced credit bubble, coupled with massive
corporate and Wall Street shenanigans that make Enron &
Worldcom look tame by comparison, led to the 1929 Panic in
FDR's New York state. FDR's Wall Street Panic spread across
the land of President Hoover, who in turn raised taxes
during a recession 'to balance the budget,' and funded
'relief' and public works projects to get people back to
working. This led to the successful candidacy in 1932 of
one FDR, who campaigned against Hoover deficits and tax
increases and wasteful 'make-work' programs (hey, it
doesn't have to make sense... ). And FDR's November 1932
election precipitated a run on gold at America's banks,
such that over 4,000 banks failed between election day in
1932 and inauguration day in March of 1933. So that the
first thing FDR did upon becoming President was to close
the banks and, upon reopening them a week later, order all
Americans to turn in their gold to the U.S. Govt. And some
might argue that it has been downhill ever since.

"And now, we can connect the dots back to the British
invading Iraq. The next time a member of the Iraqi
Governing Council asks the U.S. to 'leave,' ought we to
take him up on the offer? Hey, I'm not making policy. I'm
just thinking out loud."

See: Lessons Unlearned In The Middle East
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/body_headline.cfm?id=3487

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                ---------------------

The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: "When the world is engulfed
in a wave of speculation," says Marc Faber, "the wave
doesn't end abruptly, but tends to carry on for a while and
spreads to assets other than equities, such as real estate,
commodities, art etc... "


LESSONS OF HISTORY, Part II
By Marc Faber

Investors should never forget the lessons of the South Sea
Bubble and John Law's experiment with paper money,
discussed in yesterday's Reckoning. The Mississippi Scheme
in particular is relevant to the current situation in the
U.S.; in fact, there are several lessons contemporary
investors can learn from John Law's rise and ultimate
demise.

It is true that Law's policies were initially a great
success, boosting the French economy considerably. In fact,
at his peak in 1719, Law was one of the most admired
personalities in Continental Europe. But the Mississippi
Scheme failed, and Law fell from grace because the Banque
Royale held for too long the firm belief that it could
solve every problem simply by increasing the supply of
paper money. When Law finally realised that the enemy was a
loss in confidence in paper money and accelerating
inflation, the damage had already been done.

There will surely be a time when the present 'chain letter'
type of fiat money operation practised by the U.S. Federal
Reserve Board will similarly no longer work and lead to a
sharp depreciation of the U.S. dollar. The other
possibility, of course, is that the dollar begins to
depreciate, not compared to foreign currencies, but - as
was also the case at the time of John Law - against
commodities and real assets.

In my article, "The South Sea Bubble and Law's Mississippi
Scheme" [Ed note: to read the article, follow this link:
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/body_headline.cfm?id=3480 ],
we looked at how the excessive money supply creation by the
Banque Royale led to soaring prices for commodities and
real estate, as the French public realised that the
banknotes were depreciating in value.

Concerning real estate, it is very common for prices to
continue to rise for some time after a stock market bubble
has burst, for two reasons. Once speculators realize that
stocks have hit a peak, they shift their funds to another
object of speculation. In other words, when the world is
engulfed in a wave of speculation, the wave doesn't end
abruptly, but tends to carry on for a while and spreads to
assets other than equities, such as real estate,
commodities, art, etc.

Furthermore, towards the end of a speculative stock market
bubble, the smart investors and (especially in the case of
the recent high-tech bubble) corporate insiders realise
that prices have shot up too much and bear little
resemblance to the underlying fundamentals. Therefore, they
shift and diversify part or all of their funds into assets
that didn't participate in the whirlwind of speculation and
are consequently absolutely, or at least relatively,
'cheap.'

Thus, real estate prices continued to rise in Japan
throughout 1990, for example, although the stock market had
already topped out on December 29, 1989. And in the case of
Australia, real estate prices continued to rise for another
two years after its stock market peaked out in the summer
of 1987.

But although real estate prices can stay strong for some
time after a bubble bursts, as money shifts from liquid
assets into real assets, in due course some kind of a
bubble also occurs in real estate because the property
market becomes - in the absence of a strong stock market -
kind of the only game in town. As a result, real estate
prices eventually also succumb to the forces of demand and
supply, and then follow the declining trend of equity
prices.

The Mississippi Scheme and the South Sea Bubble are also
interesting from another point of view. The wave of
speculation in the period 1717 to 1720 spread across the
entire European continent and the subsequent crisis was
international in scope. The initial success of the
Mississippi Company attracted investors from all over
Europe and Britain to Paris, where they speculated in the
company's shares. At the same time, many investors from the
Continent also bought shares in the South Sea Company and
other hot new issues in London. (The conservative Swiss
canton of Bern speculated in London with ,000 of public
funds and sold out at a profit of illion.)

In fact, in early 1720, a 'bizarre' reallocation of assets
seems to have taken place among international investors. As
we have seen, the shares of the Mississippi Company began
to collapse in January 1720, but in London the shares of
the South Sea Company only really took off at that time. In
other words, British and international investors were in no
way perturbed by the collapse of Law's scheme. In fact, in
London the view was that the scheme had collapsed because
of a political conspiracy against Law, since he was of
Scottish origin.

However, in the summer of 1720, just about as the South Sea
stock peaked out, speculators moved funds from England to
Holland and Hamburg in order to speculate on Continental
European insurance companies. I mention this because once
excess liquidity has been created, money will flow from one
sector or country to another very quickly and can therefore
lead to a series of new bubbles somewhere else.

For today's investor, however, the most interesting effect
of excess liquidity creation is perhaps found in commodity
prices. In the future, just as during the Mississippi
Scheme, a bull market in commodities is a distinct
possibility and could exceed investors' expectations. I
have no doubt that the Federal Reserve Board will continue
to flush the economy with liquidity, which at some point
could spill over considerably into the commodities markets,
in the same way that the excessive liquidity created at the
time of John Law's Mississippi Scheme, and also in the late
1960s, led to a sharp rise in the price of commodities and
real assets.

In particular, I want to emphasise that commodity prices
can increase sharply under any economic scenario, provided
that there is excessive money and credit creation and that
investors' confidence in financial assets is shaken. Take
the early 1970s, for example, when commodity prices soared,
even as the global economy headed for the worst recession
since the 1930s. Even more impressive than the rise in the
CRB Index was the performance of agricultural commodity
prices. From their lows in 1968/69 to their highs in
1973/74, wheat rose by 465%, soybean oil by 638%, cotton by
317%, corn by 295%, and sugar by 1290%.

Or take the deflationary depression years of the 1930s. At
the time, the price of silver had been in a bear market
since 1919, but made a first bottom at US$0.2575 on
February 16, 1931 and a marginal new low on December 29,
1932 at US$0.2425. From there, however, silver prices
advanced to US$0.81 in 1935 for a gain of more than three
times their lows. In addition, if an investor bought silver
in 1929 instead of the Dow Jones, which was then above 300,
by 1980, when silver hit US$50, he would have realised a
profit of close to 200 times, whereas by 1980 the Dow was
up by less than three times above its 1929 peak.
(Admittedly, the performance of the Dow was far better if
dividends were included; also we have to take into account
that the 1980 peak in silver prices was similar in nature
to the March 2000 Nasdaq peak at over 5,000 - in other
words, a once-in-a-generation bubble peak.)

I might add that gold shares performed superbly in the
Depression years. From a low of US$65 in 1929, Homestake
Mining rose to a high of US$544 in 1936. Also, from 1929 to
1936, Homestake paid a total of US$171 in dividends, which
was more than twice the price of its stock in 1929. (Dome
Mines rose from US$6 in 1929 to US$61 in 1936.)

The most dramatic commodity bull markets all originated
after extended bear markets, such as we have had since 1980
and which accelerated on the downside following the Asian
crisis and again in 2001, when it became clear that the
global economy was in trouble. At issue is the fact that
off their lows - whenever these lows occurred - commodity
prices experienced dramatic upward moves within a brief
period of time.

If the global economy doesn't improve dramatically, it is
likely that commodity prices will be boosted because of
further liquidity injections by the monetary authorities as
well as expansionary fiscal policies. Moreover, if the U.S.
economy and the investment climate for financial assets in
the U.S. don't improve, it is likely that the U.S. dollar
will weaken much more.

Now consider this: investors have little faith in either
the Euro or the Yen. Therefore, if, in the future,
international investors lose confidence in U.S. dollar
assets, where will they go with their liquidity?

Take as an example the Asian central banks whose assets are
concentrated in U.S. dollars and who only hold about 3% of
their reserves in gold (down from 30% in 1980). If the day
should come when their faith in the U.S. dollar is shaken,
will they pile into Euros or the Yen? Possibly, but it is
also conceivable that, given the less than stellar
fundamentals for these currencies - a diversification into
gold will be considered.

Regards,

Marc Faber
For The Daily Reckoning

P. S. As a holder of gold shares and physical gold myself,
I sincerely hope that there will be genuine deflation in
the domestic price level in the U.S. In this case, the
economic mess will be complete, as the default rate among
corporate borrowers will soar. At the same time, the
confidence and blind faith of investors in the omnipotence
of Mr. Greenspan will finally collapse and lead to a panic.
That in such an environment gold prices could go through
the roof isn't difficult to envision.

With or without inflation, investors should therefore
continue to accumulate gold and silver shares and a basket
of commodity futures.


Editor's note: Dr. Marc Faber is the editor of The Gloom,
Boom and Doom Report. Headquartered in Hong Kong for the
past 20 years, Dr. Faber has specialized in Asian markets
and advised major clients seeking down-and-out bargains
with deep hidden value, unknown to the average investing
public.

Looking ahead to where the real growth opportunities of the
next 30 years lie, Dr. Faber has distilled his analyses
into the ground-breaking book, 'Tomorrow's Gold' - a wake-
up call to Western investors. If you'd like to find out how
to benefit from the dollar's decline in a way consistent
with the ideas in this essay, see:

Tomorrow's Gold
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/9628606727/dailyreckonin-20


See also, Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin's analysis of
exploding credit and consumer bubbles in their book:

Financial Reckoning Day
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0471449733/dailyreckonin-20

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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance??ot soap-boxing??lease!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'??ith its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds??s used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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