* * * * * * * * * * * * 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.
 
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Contrarian Lethargy

The Daily Reckoning

London, England

Wednesday, September 22, 2004

 

*** Curious developments... and the Fed cut rates... 

*** Lobsters, trend reversals and the end of cheap oil... 

*** The price of AK-47s... more on gay rights... more on 
Japan and how to make half the population of the U.K. hate

you!
 
---------------------

The Fed raised its key lending rate another quarter of a 
percent yesterday. Stocks and the dollar have gone nowhere

for a very long time; this tiny little "baby step" is not 
likely to take them much further. 

"Low interest rates were clearly a major stimulus to the 
economic recovery," writes our old friend John Mauldin. 
"The recession of 2001 would have been much deeper without

aggressive Fed action combined with Bush's repeated tax 
cuts. The lowest mortgage rates in 40 years led to a 
booming housing market as more people could afford to buy 
homes for the first time and more people could afford to 
move up to larger and newer homes. In addition, mortgage 
refinancing allowed consumers to lower their mortgage 
payments, as well as take money out of their home equity 
for other purchases. If interest rates (and especially 
mortgage rates) were to rise significantly in a fragile 
recovery that is largely stimulus driven, the recovery 
could be aborted before it has time to develop a firm 
foundation in business spending. Thus, Fed policy was to 
keep rates lower for a longer period than in any previous 
recovery.

"But what would happen next?"

What people expect is rising inflation, rising interest 
rates and, otherwise, more of the same.

"Interest rates are rising in an effort to calm consumption 

and housing in the Anglo-Saxon economies, now that the fear 

of Japanese-style deflation, falling prices and wages has 
passed," Alex Brummer tells us in today's Daily Mail.

The danger of Japanese-style deflation may not have passed, 

but both the Fed and the lumpeninvestoriat seem to have 
conquered their fear of it. Nearly all of them look ahead 
to high prices, confidently.
 
What they are likely to get is something different. Despite 

the most massive stimulus in history, inflation rates are 
still low. Despite the easiest financing terms of all time, 

consumer spending is weak... and possibly falling. Despite

GDP growth rates of 3-5%, people are not earning more 
money... and have no way to increase consumption. Despite 
rising corporate profits, business is not investing in new

plant and equipment. 

These curious developments suggest a curious development: 
not a boom, but a bust - slow to develop and hard to get 
rid of.

More from the news team in Baltimore: 

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

Tom Dyson, from Mount Vernon... 

- Trends change. It happens all the time.

- These days, lobster is an exquisite delicacy, and each 
year, 60 million pounds of the armored sea-monster are 
pulled from the Maine waters and shipped to Red Lobster 
restaurants all over the country. In the last 15 years, the 

lobster catch in Maine has tripled.

- Actually, lobster has been in a 75-year bull market. 
Everyone loves it. Demand is hot. On the Internet, you can

arrange for a live lobster to be delivered right to your 
boiling pot for the princely sum of $70. And if you don't 
reside in the United States, no problem, they pack the 
crustaceans on ice and fly them to expensive restaurants 
and gourmet supermarkets all over the world. 

- It wasn't always so. Only a few decades ago, lobster was

a meal that people in Maine ate reluctantly. The fishermen

certainly wouldn't eat the day's valuable catch - swordfish 

or cod perhaps - and lobster bisque wasn't exactly 
"fisherman's favorite" after a long day on the trawler...
so 
they only ate it if there was nothing else around. Lobster

was junk food. 

- Even further back, lobster was used to fertilize the 
crops... a kind of marine manure.

- So unlike the other fisheries, which, as Eric Fry 
reported yesterday, have been in a deep decade-long 
decline, lobstermen have been doing well recently.

- And so have certain sectors of the markets. We notice 
that, yesterday, the FTSE made a new 2-year high at 4,608.

We also notice that, today, treasuries are making new 5-
month highs. The 30-year T-bond just hit 4.78%, at 1 p.m. 
on Wednesday, pushing to levels last seen in March.

- In equity markets, things continue to bumble along. 
Yesterday, the averages were all up. The Dow gained some 40 

points. The Nasdaq gained 13 and the S&P 7. But today, they 

reversed course and headed lower again. The last time we 
looked, the Nasdaq had declined 1.72%, or 33 points to 
1,888. And the Dow is down 143 points to 10,102.

- "Overfishing," said Eric, "also decimated the once-
plentiful populations of humpback whales, Maryland crabs 
and California abalone, to name a few of the most prominent 

examples. Swordfish in the Atlantic have declined by almost 

70% over the last three decades. The average size of fish 
landed has declined to 90 pounds, compared with 266 pounds

thirty years ago. Bluefin tuna - a favorite of the sushi 
cognoscenti - are also becoming scarce."

- But not everyone noticed. At least, no one in the lobster 

crowd, or their bankers. "But the problem is," explains an

article at salon.com, "if environmental factors change 
again, we now have more lobstermen, more traps, and they've 

all been doing really well. 

- "For the previous generation, they didn't make a lot of 
money, but they had a good life and they made enough to get 

by and they didn't have a lot of expenses. One old hand 
took out one loan his entire life and paid it back in six 
months, but now people are taking out $200,000 and $300,000 

loans just for new boats, so there's a big problem with 
overcapitalization in the industry and banks loaning way 
too much money." 

- Here at The Daily Reckoning, we'd be the first to admit 
that we know very little about markets and even less about

lobsters. But to the untrained eye, the industry would seem 

ripe for a trend reversal. 

- "Reversals of trend - who ever sees them coming?" says 
Addison from time to time. This is the point... 

- Like taste for lobster, "Americans' energy appetite 
doesn't appear to be waning," observes CBS MarketWatch, 
"and Great Britain - self-sufficient with its energy needs

for the past quarter century - now is a net importer of 
oil. 'There isn't enough of it in the ground,' says Andrew

Clark, a senior research analyst at Lipper. 'Demand is 
either going to drive the price up until oil's looking like 

gold or truffles, or some technology has to replace oil-
burning engines.'"

- Unfortunately, the hoped-for, magical technology that 
would render crude oil obsolete has yet to appear. Thus, 
the world must continue to rely on its dwindling birthright 

of crude oil. 

- On Monday, Yukos, the embattled Russian oil company, 
squeezed the world's tight oil supplies a bit tighter by 
announcing plans to curtail some of its sales to China. The 

company says it will end shipments of about 95,000 barrels

a day to the China National Petroleum Corp. on September 
28. The announcement sparked a brisk 3-day rally in the oil 

pits here at the New York Mercantile Exchange, as crude 
prices jumped from $45.59 to $48.05 a barrel by midday 
today - the highest level in over a month. Oil is now just

$1.35 below the all-time high hit on August 20.

- The Yukos maneuver seems more political than tactical. In 

other words, Yukos, which owes about $7 billion in back 
taxes, appears to be trying to pressure the Russian 
government for a little breathing room. If Yukos refuses to 

sell its oil, this turnip will have no blood to give to the 

Russian government. Perhaps Yukos is trying to demonstrate

to the Russian government that a slow payment of back taxes 

would be better than NO payment.

- We suspect that Yukos will not, in fact, turn off the oil 

spigot to China. But we don't pretend to be experts about 
Russian politics. What we think we know, however, is that 
global oil supplies remain quite tight. So whether a Yukos

or an Iraq or a Venezuela or a Nigeria causes a supply 
disruption, the result will be the same - higher prices.

- The commodity bull market is real... you didn't hear it 
here first, but you are hearing it here ad nauseam. On the

narrow chance you'd like to learn more, see our updated 
report on the current state of the oil market.

Peak Oil
http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/OST/day806

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

Bill Bonner, back in London... 

*** The French magazine Le Point reports that inflation 
isn't quiescent everywhere. The price of Kalashnikov rifles 

in Iraq is skyrocketing. The famous AK-47 was priced at 
only about $30 a few months ago. Now the "street price" is

said to be closer to $90. There are said to be 8 million of 

them in the country, and the supply is rising, too.

*** Oh dear, dear reader, what should we make of it? We 
seem to offend people so often. Gypsies, Republicans, 
neocons, Democrats, women, West Virginians, 
Farmingtonians... and now gays - is anyone left unoffended? 


The Daily Reckoning readership seems to be evenly divided.

Half think we should "stick to market commentary." The 
other half thinks we should give that up, too. 

"What did you expect," asked a colleague. "This gay 
marriage issue is a sensitive subject. It's become a 
campaign issue. Gays feel entitled to the same rights as 
everyone else. You were making the point that as debt 
builds up, people begin to think they can do what they 
want... whether or not it has any foundation in the 
traditional order of things. It's like you're always saying 

about the whispers of dead people - reminding us of the 
lessons learned many years ago and now forgotten. Of 
course, I don't know what dead people would say about gay 
marriage...  

"But I think you got sidetracked. It sounded as though you

thought they should be treated differently. Or, as though 
you thought a gay couple was not as valid as a couple of 
straights. Or that you don't like gays.

"I know it's ridiculous. We have our office in the gayest 
quartier of Paris. Half of our fellow employees are gay. 
And I know for a fact that some of your best friends are 
gay."

"Shhh... ."

"Maybe you should explain yourself... "

Well, dear reader, if people are going to be offended, they 

might as well be offended for the right reason. Of course,

we love gays, just as we love all God's creatures - saints

and sinners alike. And as far as we're concerned, people 
can do what they want; you won't find us trying to amend 
the constitution in order to tell people whom they should 
get hooked up with or on what terms. Let them find out the

hard way - like everyone else.

And gay "marriage?" Is it less valid? Or less happy? Or 
less full of trouble and strife? We don't know. Our only 
experience is with marriages of the old-fashioned, un-gay 
sort. A union between two people of the same sex is 
definitely not a "marriage" as we know it; but for all we 
know, it could be an improvement.

*** More reader views... on other subjects:

"I continue to enjoy each issue of your newsletter. In 
particular, the issue 'Libertad' was well written and 
always informative. But, being the son of a pastor, I was 
quite saddened by the attitude of the two clergymen. I 
suppose my status as once removed from a man of the cloth 
does not qualify me to question these men, but my father 
taught me much, and it would be sad if they remain your 
only reference point on matters of God, faith and their 
impact on world events. 
 
"I believe what you were describing in 'Libertad' is the 
pervasiveness of evil done by humans to other humans, and 
not the work or insensitivity of God. God has revealed 
Himself through His son, Jesus, and has provided to the 
individual man or woman a way to redemption, and an 
eternity spent with Him.

"Those who accept this gift become part of His family, 
collectively known as the Church. God is not an American, 
nor is He French, Chinese or Australian. He places no 
nation state above any other, except as it may further His

purposes, nor does He justify a particular way of national

life; only a life led according to His principles as set 
forth in His written word. If a person's way of life or a 
nation's policy happens to champion moral laxness or plain

stupidity, God does not guarantee, as Alan Greenspan does,

that one will not experience the natural consequences of 
these actions, but He will help you get through the tough 
times by one's faith in God's grace.
 
"This idea that Americans possess special virtues and the 
answers to unanswerable questions is bogus. Not so long 
ago, a man, Martin Niemoller, a Lutheran pastor, declared 
the Nazi ideal of 'positive Christianity' a distortion of 
true Christianity simply because it crowned the German 
people with 'special virtue' that needed to be shared with

the rest of the world. I do not think Czechoslovakia, 
Poland or Russia appreciated the German point of view, and

I suspect Iraq, Afghanistan and Iran do not subscribe to 
our American 'special virtues' or the way we go about 
imposing them on others.
 
"We (Americans) find Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran places 
where people suffer every day, at least according to the 
sound bite on BBC World, if we watch it, but they are far 
away, and their experiences are not really applicable to 
us. We listen to government propaganda carried by the 
financial press (Joseph Goebbels would be proud), and we 
continue to enjoy our false wealth and shopping. The plight 

of those unemployed, facing foreclosure or declaring 
bankruptcy is sad, but doesn't really impact us. When the 
'Greenspan Gambit' plays out to all our detriment we will 
wonder why all this happened.

"The average German probably felt the same way. It isn't 
God's fault we got in this fix, nor is it His 
responsibility to get us out without the painful 
consequences. We collectively are responsible and will pay

the price in whatever form it takes. History, after all, is 

supposed to teach us to avoid the mistakes already made by

others but we still don't get it. To paraphrase Bill 
Clinton, 'It's the Truth, Stupid.'" 

*** "I've been reading the DR for a couple of years or so,

and I look forward to it, just love it. Bonner is an 
interesting, wise essayist. 

"But I have to agree with the woman in her 80s who finds 
the men of The Daily Reckoning sexist. (I'm a 61-year-old 
woman.) It's the chivalrous way you view women, the way you 

view them as 'other.' It isn't the worst attitude in the 
world, but it's annoying at times. Women and men are 
different; but they are not separate species." 

*** "I'm learning to speak RP," said Maria yesterday in a 
very posh accent. "You know, it's Received Pronunciation. 
It's supposed to be the best accent you can have in 
Britain. Still, our teacher said that when you open your 
mouth, half the country hates you."

Maria is in an acting school in London, where she is 
learning the ways of the world.

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

The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: The least desirable asset 
today is cash. Therefore a contrarian investor should 
consider holding above-average cash positions. Marc Faber 
outlines his views on the future of the global economy... 

CONTRARIAN LETHARGY
by Marc Faber

A friend of ours recently described the stock market as 
boring and lethargic. 

It is true that the indexes display little volatility and 
that all the volatility indexes are hovering near multiyear 

lows. But not too much importance should be assigned to the 

present low volatility, except that it indicates 
complacency among investors because, during major market 
sell-offs such as we had in 1987, 1998, 2001 and 2002, 
volatility picks up sharply. 

Nevertheless, volatility can stay low for years, as was the 

case in the 1991-1996 period, when the stock market was 
rising. Therefore, if for years volatility stayed low while 

the market was rising, I suppose that volatility could 
remain at very low levels for a long time while the market

is sliding the slope of "the mother of all hopes" among the 

investment community. 

Moreover, while low volatility tends to be associated with

complacency, within the stock market internals there, are 
some powerful trends that are diverging strongly. Moreover, 

in recent weeks, an increasing number of stocks have hit 
air pockets, tumbled and failed to recover. 

These strongly diverging trends may well be exacerbated by

the $1-trillion hedge fund industry, which is under 
tremendous performance pressure (in order to retain their 
assets under management) and is therefore almost forced to

take a long position in the strong sectors of the market 
and to short stocks in the weak sectors. In this respect, I 

should remind our readers that historically low returns on

cash - courtesy of the Fed - are a colossal, and dangerous, 

incentive for not only hedge funds, but also all investors

to speculate in just about anything - from art, propert, 
and direct investments in oversaturated industries in 
China; homes in the United States, the UK and Australia; 
foreign currencies, commodities, emerging market bonds and

stocks; and funds of funds; to a plethora of the most 
imaginative derivative products. 

Like in a casino or lottery, some players who are 
particularly skilful or lucky will leave with huge profits, 

while the majority will end up with losses. I suppose that, 

eventually, even the casino (the investment banking 
industry and other financial service providers, real estate 

and all kinds of other commission agents) will lose money 
when the majority of players, discouraged by their poor 
returns, leave the global investment bazaar or when a 
systematic crisis puts them out of business for good. In 
fact, if we look at the recent performance of brokerage 
shares (note the well-defined "head-and-shoulders top" 
formed between November 2003 and June 2004), one gets the 
impression that the casino is already under some 
considerable stress. 

So, what should the prudent and wealth preservation-
oriented investor do in this environment? 

As I have explained in earlier reports, the least desirable 

asset today is cash. Therefore, a contrarian investor 
should consider holding above average cash positions. Cash

won't provide you with a high return, but in an environment 

where the stock market is unlikely to climb this year above 

the January-March 2004 highs, this may be the proper 
strategy for the average investor. I am purposely writing 
for the average investor, because it should be clear that 
some investors with a particular knowledge of the market, 
individual sectors and stocks will be able to capitalize on 

the diverging trends that I discussed above. 

Now, I am perfectly well aware that every investor is 
convinced that he is an above-average investor, but, as one 

can imagine, this cannot be the case from a mathematical 
point of view. (The evidence from the performance of equity 

mutual funds, which are run by mostly diligent 
professionals but tend to underperform the market, does 
rather support the view that most investors are below-
market-averages investors. This is likely due to the 
casino's fees and the transaction costs involved in playing 

the game.) 

The question then arises of what kind of cash to hold. 
There is at present a widespread consensus that the U.S. 
dollar is in trouble, and while this may be true as far as

the long-term is concerned, counter-trend rallies will 
repeatedly occur, as (with the exception of the Asian 
currencies) paper currencies such as the British pound, the 

Australian, Canadian and New Zealand dollar, and the euro 
don't appear to be particularly undervalued against the 
U.S. dollar. 

Over the longer term, all paper currencies will lose their

purchasing power, as they have done so since the invention

of central banking and the end of currencies that are fully 

backed by gold. Hence, it makes sense to hold some cash in

gold and silver. The return on holding gold and silver may

be low, and at times even negative (in an environment of a

strengthening U.S. dollar), but over longer periods of 
time, precious metals whose supply increases at a far 
slower rate than the supply of paper money will at least 
maintain their purchasing power. Moreover, as we wrote in 
recent reports, we believe that other commodities such as 
sugar, orange juice and coffee will perform better than 
precious metals and industrial commodities over the next 
two years. 

The other widespread consensus that stands out is that U.S. 

bonds will decline as the economy and inflation pick up. I

agree that, eventually, U.S. long-term interest rates will

be higher than they are now, as inflation is bound to 
accelerate in the next 10 years or so. 

However, the question is: What will happen between now and

then? From the monetary and other economic statistics I 
follow, and from the performance of economic sensitive 
stocks such as semiconductors, retailers and now also, 
increasingly, homebuilders, I wouldn't be surprised if the

economy didn't gather strength over the next six months, 
but then weaken once again far more than even the 
pessimists expect as a result of shrinking real personal 
incomes. In this scenario, I believe, as indicated in last

month's report, that long-term bonds could rally another 
5%, or even 10%, from their present level, as investors 
might panic out of equities into the highest quality bonds. 


I should also like to mention that if this scenario of a 
weak economy does come into play, the dollar could surprise 

on the upside simultaneously with the bond market. Why? 
Because weakness in U.S. consumption will lead to an 
improvement of the U.S. current account deficit as imports

falter. I should like to emphasize that this view of dollar 

and bond market strength isn't a long-term call, but 
intermediate in nature, based on the prevailing negative 
consensus about bonds and the U.S. dollar and my 
expectation that the economy might suddenly fall off a 
cliff. 

Lastly, whenever I hear that a market is lethargic, boring

or without any conviction, I think of a market where most 
participants are paralyzed because they are either losing 
or not making any money. Maybe the big hedge fund returns 
of the last 25 years or so are a thing of the past, because 

in the good old days of hedge funds, a small number of 
smart operators made a living from "average" or "below-
average" investors. 

But today, there are, in my opinion, far too many hyper-
smart operators in the hedge fund industry, who are 
constantly trying to outdo each other for this industry's 
own good. Is it time to make a bet against the hedge fund 
industry altogether?

Regards,


Marc Faber
for The Daily Reckoning

Editor's Note: Dr. Marc Faber is the editor of The Gloom, 
Boom and Doom Report. 

Headquartered in Hong Kong for 20 years and now based in 
northern Thailand, 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.

For more information on deep value investing, the Asian
money migration and the mortgage debt bubble, follow this
link:

Lethargic Market Solution
http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/DRI/america811


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