* * * * * * * * * * * * 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
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The Era of Fictitious Capitalism

The Daily Reckoning

London, England

Thursday, November 4, 2004

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

*** The god's are not on our side... 1950s-style spending... 

*** If it seems to good to be true-it probably is... phony
America... 

*** Getting foreigners to sweat for us... time marches on...
America's bleeding... and more!


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America's consumers outdid themselves last quarter. With the
saucy confidence of a fat girl in love, they spent a record $342
billion (annualized) more than they received in disposable
income. 

Our oldest baby boomers have lived through this before, Paul
Kasriel points out, but under entirely different circumstances. 

World War II was a real war. America did not launch a peremptory
strike against Japan; they waited for Japan to do something
wrong. Then, with the gods of war on its side, America kicked
Japan's butt.

The war years were lean for consumers. Output was redirected
towards supplying tanks and planes, not automobiles and
refrigerators. Consumers had no choice; they saved their money.

Then, when the war was won, our parents married... and began
families. We were just tots in 1950 - the last year in which
consumers overspent as much as they do now. In the 3rd quarter of 
1950, consumers spent $1.05 for every dollar of after-tax income. 
Then, incomes rose... and for the next 50 years... never again
did consumers spend significantly more than they earned. 

But Alan Greenspan's EZ credit-terms turned a good thing into
something that was too wonderful. The Fed's key lending rate was
set well below the inflation rate. Even after two rate hikes, the 
Fed still lends money at 1.75% - about a full percentage point
below the rate of consumer price inflation. The Fed has been
giving money away; can you blame consumers for taking it?

In the 3rd quarter of 2004, the baby boomers - half a century
older, but none the wiser - almost matched the record set 54
years ago. For every dollar in after tax income, they spent
$1.04.

But instead of satisfying the demands pent up in the war years... 
and instead of spending savings built up when the going wasn't so 
good... today's consumers spend money they haven't got on things
they don't really need. Who needs a new SUV? Who needs a new
mortgage? Who needs a new TV for the new family room in the new
house in the new development?

Who needs a TV at all? "Television is very educational," said
Groucho Marx. "Whenever it is on, I go in another room and read a 
book."

Spending savings is one thing. Spending debt is something
altogether different. Savings represent real demand. Real demand
can bring about a real and sustainable boom. In the early '50s... 
America began a boom that lasted for most of the baby boomers'
lives. 

Now, the oldest of the boomers are in their mid- to late-50s. The 
real boom has turned into a phony one. The great fortune the
boomers have enjoyed seems to be turning over in a great, rolling 
top...  

The cheap oil of the '50s is all used up. The factories and
machinery that gave us such an edge after the war is not worn
out; but manufacturing buildings are converted into loft
apartments and shopping malls. Our parents used to sweat. Now,
the sweating is done on the other side of the planet - where the
new factories are built. A man from China or India will work all
day for $10. We want 10 times as much for our labor. After World
War II, we could get it. Because we had the most savings, most
modern machinery, the most efficient roads, the best trains, the
most energy... and most highly skilled workforce in the world.
Now, those things have spread all over the world, and there is no 
stopping them.

The cheap credit must soon be coming to an end, too. After the
war, we had the world's only solid economy... and the only solid
money, backed by real gold. Now, the whole world stands knee-deep 
in dollars and dollar credits. And we boomers stand up to our
necks in dollar debts. Our parents had few debts and much
savings. We are so much smarter; we have few savings and much
debt.

Time marches on. The world turns. We boomers were just learning
to walk 54 years ago. Now, we are getting soft and weak. Our boom 
is phony. Our dollar is a phony. Our war is phony. Our consumer
demand is phony. Our president is a phony. Our wealth (in housing 
prices) is largely phony.

Not that we are complaining. We've enjoyed 50 very good years.
Would it be so bad if the Baby Boomers finally had to face some
real trouble near the end of their careers? Would it be so
startling, or so unkind, or so unjust, if the going were not so
good... and the world not quite so wonderful?

More news, from our team at The Rude Awakening:

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

Eric Fry, reporting from Wall Street... 

"'A gold mine,' Mark Twain once observed, 'is a hole in the
ground with a liar on top.' The trouble is, even when an honest
geologist stands atop a hole in the ground, the precious metal is 
very difficult to find."

Get the whole scoop in today's issue of 

The Rude Awakening
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/body_headline.cfm?id=4237

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

Bill Bonner, back in London:

*** " [America] bled Russia for 10 years, until it went bankrupt
and was forced to withdraw in defeat," says Osama bin Laden.

"So we are continuing this policy in bleeding America to the
point of bankruptcy."

Nice of him to tell us. Nice of the Fed, the Bush administration
and consumers to cooperate so fully. [Ed. Note: bin Laden thinks
he's bleeding America to bankruptcy, but truth is, he couldn't
stop it if he tried. We're calling Bush's second term Act II: The 
Depression. We should have called it:

Bush Presidency, Act II: The Bankruptcy
http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/DRI/WDRIEB14


*** Pssst... wanna make some real money? Invest in emerging
markets! While Wall Street may be yesterday's news, and America
itself is on its way to Banana Republic status, tomorrow's news
is coming in from the Banana Republics themselves. 

The Colombian stock market rose 75% so far this year - in
dollars. Mexican stocks went up 27%. In Eastern Europe and the
Middle East the story is similar, with the Czech Republic up
49%... and Egyptian stocks soaring an incredible 81%.

The emerging economies are doing well. They had two big
advantages... three really. First, they have lower cost labor.
Second, no one would lend them any money, so budget deficits are
much smaller than in the developed world. And third, Alan
Greenspan's low rates have helped accelerate the process of
globalization. Developing countries' ratio of debt service to
exports has been almost cut in half since 1998. And stocks are
still cheap - with the average PE at just about 8. 

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

The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: When "real value" is no longer what 
seems to matter... you can be sure it matters more than ever...
This classique, that ran on Dec. 2, 2003, is a must-read... 

THE ERA OF FICTITIOUS CAPITALISM 
by Addison Wiggin

Perspective.

While doing radio interviews this fall regarding themes in our
book, Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving The Soft Depression of
the 21st Century, the question invariably arises: "France? Nice
place to visit, but why the heck do you live there?"

The short answer is, of course, the wine is cheap and the woman
are... um, elegant. The long answer is, we gain perspective. It's 
the long answer, because it requires an explanation. One could
gain perspective from just about anywhere, of course... but why
not do it in a place where the wine is cheap and the women
pleasing to look at?

An English reader, who also lives in France, recently passed on
an interesting article written by a Chinese bureaucrat, published 
on a non-profit website hosted in Italy, sponsored by the
government of Singapore. The aim of the site is to increase
amicable relations between Asia and Europe in a U.S.-centric
world. The purpose of the article: A strategic recommendation on
how China ought to position itself while the United States and
Europe - as the major players in the two-bloc international
system the author predicts will eventually emerge - gear up for
eventual war.

If we were writing our daily missives from our offices in
Baltimore, would such a site, and such an article, be
interesting? Probably. But we'd likely judge the origin of the
site through Murdoch's lens at Fox News, like so many TV-addled
minds do, and dismiss it out of hand. Away from influence, living 
as foreigners, in a country where they don't pronounce words as
they are spelled, we take to the extraordinary like gnats to a
sugar bowl. We are addicted to the taste and go there often to
get a buzz going. But we are under no illusions that it has
nutritional value.

What could possibly interest us about a Chinese bureaucrat's
white paper on impending global war? First of all, his
conclusion: "In the last century," writes Wang Jian, "American
people were pioneers of system and technology innovation.
However, the interests of a few American financial monopolies now 
lead this country to war. This is such a tragedy for the American 
people.

"Clouds of war are gathering. Right now, the most important
things to do for China are:

1.) Remain neutral between two military groups while insisting on 
an anti-war attitude. 2.) Stock up in strategic reserves 3.) Get
ready for a short supply of oil 4.) Strengthen armament power 5.) 
Speed up economic integration with Japan, Hong Kong, Korea and
Taiwan... "

It's a rather unsettling idea. China as the neutral power in a
war between the United States and a united Europe. How did Wang
get there? That's the subject of the second part of the article,
which we find intriguing... and even more unnerving. Wang's view
is disturbingly similar to our own understanding of the way the
global economy works.

"War is the extension of politics and politics is the extension
of economic interests," Wang asserts. "America's wars abroad have 
always had a clear goal, however, such goals were never made
obvious to the public. We need to see through the surface and
reach the essence of the matters. In other words, we need to
figure out what the fundamental economic interests of America
are. Missing this point, we would be misled by American
government's shows and feints."

Wang's argument in a nutshell: By the mid 1970s, the United
States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and
other major capitalist countries had completed the
industrialization process now underway in China. In 1971, when
Nixon closed the gold window, the Bretton Woods system collapsed, 
and the dollar - the last major currency to be tethered to gold - 
came unstuck. Economic growth as measured by GDP was no longer
restricted by the growth of material goods production. Toss in a
few financial innovations, like derivatives, and the "fictitious" 
economy assumed the central role in the global monetary system.

"Money transactions related to material goods production," writes 
Wang, "counted 80% of the total [global] transactions until 1970. 
However, only five years after the collapse of the Bretton Woods, 
the ratio turned upside down - only 20% of money transactions
were related material goods production and circulation. The ratio 
dropped to .7% in 1997."

As we note in our book, since Greenspan assumed the central role
at the most powerful central bank in the world, he has expanded
the money supply more than all other Fed chairmen combined. From
1985-2000, production of material goods in the United States has
increased only 50%, while the money supply has grown by a factor
3. Money has been growing more than six times as fast as the rate 
of goods production. The results? Wang's research reveals that in 
1997, before the blow-off in the U.S. stock market, mind you,
global "money" transactions totaled $600 trillion. Goods
production was a mere 1% of that.

"People seem to take it for granted that financial values can be
created endlessly out of nowhere and pile up to the moon," our
friend Robert Prechter writes in his book, Conquer the Crash.
"Turn the direction around and mention that financial values can
disappear in into nowhere and they insist that it isn't possible. 
'The money has to go somewhere... It just moves from stocks to
bonds to money funds... it never goes away... For every buyer,
there is a seller, so the money just changes hands.' That is true 
of money, just as it was all the way up, but it's not true of
values, which changed all the way up."

In the fictitious economy, the values for paper assets are only
derived from the perceptions of the buyer and seller. A man may
believe he is worth a million dollars, because he holds stocks or 
bonds generally agreed in the market to hold that value. When he
presents his net worth to a lender, a mortgage banker for
example, and wishes to use the financial assets as collateral for 
a loan, his million dollars is now miraculously worth two. If the 
market drops, the lender, now nervous about his own assets, calls 
in the note... the borrower once thought to be worth two million
discovers he is broke.

"The dynamics of value expansion and contraction explain why a
bear market can bankrupt millions of people," Prechter explains.
"When the market turns down, [value expansion] goes into reverse. 
Only a very few owners of a collapsing financial asset trade it
for money at 90 percent of peak value. Some others may get out at 
80 percent, 50 percent or 30 percent of peak value. In each case, 
sellers are simply transforming the remaining future value losses 
to someone else."

As we saw in the 2000-2002 bear market, in such situations, most
investors act as if they were deer being approached by a speeding 
truck at night. They do nothing. And get stuck holding financial
assets at lower - or worse, non-existent - values. Anyone
suffering glances at their pension statements over the past few
years knows their prior "value" was a figment of their
imagination.

Back to Wang: "In the era of fictitious capitalism, a fictitious
capital transaction itself can increase the 'book value' of
monetary capital; therefore monetary capital no longer has to go
through material goods production before it returns to more
monetary capital. Capitalists no longer need to do the 'painful'
thing - material goods production."

Real-life owners of stocks, bonds, foreign currency and real
estate have increasingly taken advantage of historically low
interest rates and applied for mortgages backed by the value of
these financial assets. Especially since the rally began 8 months 
ago, they then turn around and trade the new capital on the
markets. "During this process," writes Wang, "the demand of money 
no longer comes from the expansion of material goods production,
and instead it comes from the inflation of capital price. The
process repeats itself."

Derivative instruments, themselves a form of fictitious capital,
help investors bet on the direction of capital prices. And
central banks, unfettered by the tedious foundation set by the
gold standard, can print as much money as is required by the
demands of the fictitious economy. You can, of course, trade the
marginal values of these fictitious instruments and do quite well 
for yourself. 

But Wang sees a darker side to the equation. "Fictitious capital
is no more than a piece of paper, or an electric signal in a
computer disk. Theoretically, such capital cannot feed anyone no
matter how much its value increases in the marketplace. So why is 
it so enthusiastically pursued by the major capitalist
countries?"

The reason, at least until recently, is that the "major
capitalist countries" have been using their fictitious capital to 
finance consumption of "other countries'" material goods. Thus
far, the most major of the capitalist countries, the United
States, has been able to profit from the system because since the 
establishment of the Bretton Woods system, and increasingly since 
its demise, the world has balanced its accounts in dollars.

"Until now," writes Wang, "U.S. dollars [have counted] for 60-70% 
in settlement transactions and currency reserves. However, before 
the 'fictitious capital' era, more exactly, before the fictitious 
economy began inflating insanely in the 1990s, America could not
possibly capture surplus products from other countries on such a
large scale simply by taking advantage of the dollar's special
status in the world... Lured by the concept of the 'new economy', 
international capital flew into the American securities market
and purchased American capital, thus resulting in the great
performance of U.S. dollar and abnormal exuberance in the
American security market."

And here we arrive at the crux of Wang's argument that a war is
brewing. "While [fictitious capital] has been bringing to America 
economic prosperity and hegemonic power over money," he suggests, 
"it has its own inborn weakness. In order to sustain such
prosperity and hegemonic power, America has to keep unilateral
inflow of international capital to the American market... If
America loses its hegemonic power over money, its domestic
consumption level will plunge 30-40%. Such an outcome would be
devastating for the US economy. It could be more harmful to the
economy than the Great Depression of 1929 to 1933."

Japan's example suggests, as your editors have oft reminded you,
that a collapse in asset values in a fictitious economy can
adversely affect the real economy for a long time.

In the era of fictitious capital, Wang surmises, America must
keep its hegemonic power over money in order to keep feeding the
enormous yaw in its consumerist belly. Hegemonic power over money 
requires that international capital keep flowing into the market
from all participating economies. Should the financial market
collapse, the economy would sink into depression.

America's reigning financial monopolies, he believes, (whoever
they may be), would not stand for it.

Addison Wiggin
The Daily Reckoning

Editor's note: Addison Wiggin is the editorial director of the
Daily Reckoning. He is also the author, with Bill Bonner, of the
New York Times Business best-seller Financial Reckoning Day:
Surviving The Soft Depression of the 21st Century, (John Wiley &
Sons). For more, see:

The Best Investment Book I've Ever Read!
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