Quoth Michael P.:

>Each day, I am seeing more signs of a downturn.  I am fairly convinced
>that it is real.  Jim D. keeps referring to a Godley-like scenario, which
>seems to make sense.  My question is whether it can unravel into a
>full-blown disaster.  I am not confident one way or another.  I would
>appreciate any feedback that you might have.

Well, even at its healthiest, capitalism has its casualties and growing
pains, but then, there are a lot of those around     just at present.  The
bulls would have their work cut out arguing the insignificance of the stuff
Pen-L, Crash-L and the finance press have been telling me of late.  To wit
(and these are but a sample): 

- investment banks exposed to seriously rotten junk bonds;

- record defaults in the US, and tighter lending policy ensuing;

- US spending outpacing US personal income (prior to the latest crop of
margin calls,. at least);

- a plethora of wireless internet applications lying fallow for want of
venture capital;

- capital goods manufacturers, caught with whopping inventories, are winding
down production (a bit of a problem, that; if Joel Popkin  Co.'s latest
report is right, and machine tools have been responsible for the apparent
productivity improvements over the least few years);

- car manufacturers caught with whopping inventories (GM & Forf for two);

- a trade war between the US and Europe;

- a quarter of US households having their savings on Wall St (quoth Wall St
pundit Henry Kaufman: "At no time in the post-World War II period has the
economic wellbeing of the US and the rest of the world hinged so importantly
on the performance of the American stockmarket");

- a US Producer Price Index showing inflation *after you take out the
soaring energy and volatile food sectors*;

- a serious slump in consumer sentiment in Europe;

- a serious slump in corporate pricing power in Europe;

- the US treasury using T-bills to stem the NASDAQ bleed and the Euro-slide;

- a serious slump in world-wide telecommunications projections (and share
prices);

- the Asian Tiger economy recovery is stalling;

Oh, and Ed Shann of Oz pundit-gurus Access Economics is sounding very Mark
Jones all of a sudden:  "Annual demand is growing at a rate of 1.5mbd, and
lack of investment because of recent low oil prices means that spare
capacity is limited. There is probably less than 3mbd of capacity available
immediately ... Every $US5 on the price of a barrel of oil reduces the
output of industrial nations by about 0.2% and boosts inflation by up to 0.4
percentage points ... The bad news is that demand for oil is much less
responsive to price than two decades ago. Most oil is now used for
transport, rather than industry and power ...  If demand surges due to a
cold Northern Hemisphere winter by more than the usual 3mbd, prices could
easily spike over $US40 a barrel, because stocks are at historic lows. Worse
is possible if supply is disrupted, given the limited spare capacity."  

Bit of a diaper-filler, eh?

Looks like Goldman Sachs' prediction that "the Nasdaq composite index will
rise to between 4800 and 5000 by the end of next year (ie 2000)" might be
just a coupla points optimistic ...

>Too bad Alan Greenspan did not get out a bit sooner without tarnishing his
reputation as a genius.

But mebbe no bad thing that Jowj Dubya Shrub might yet find himself sat atop
this crumbling edifice ...

We're all of us in the gutter, but some us are looking down the drain, eh?

Bearish grunts to all,
Rob.

_______________________________________________
Crashlist resources: http://website.lineone.net/~resource_base
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.wwpublish.com/mailman/listinfo/crashlist

Reply via email to