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-Caveat Lector-

                Gary North's REALITY CHECK

Issue 347                                      May 29, 2004

                   DETOUR ON EASY STREET

     Because of the American stock market boom, 1982-2000,
tens of millions of Americans began to believe that they
will be able to retire rich.  This was always an illusion.
They bought shares way too late in the cycle.  The masses
always do.  But Greenspan's asset bubble, 1995-2000,
persuaded millions of Americans that Easy Street is wide
and level.  It never is.  Thrift Lane and Discount Road are
where the money is, but they are side streets, unpaved.

     The middle class's illusion of easy retirement is
becoming more visible, year by year: the stagnant stock
market.  But no one who has adopted a pleasant fantasy ever
wants to abandon it.  Economic reality eventually forces
itself on men's consciousness, but usually only after the
magnitude of the on-paper losses have become inescapably
visible to their wives.

     Most Americans will retire into poverty: those who
become dependent on Social Security/Medicare.  But their
poverty will be American-style poverty, meaning a lifestyle
beyond most people's dreams a century ago, or even a decade
ago in China and India.

     Maybe 20% of them will retire in comfort, if they
retire before 2015.  Most of these 20%, who live in the
post-2015 world, will see their lifestyles decline as their
pension fund income shrinks with the fall in the value of
money.  The best hedge against inflation, as Ludwig von
Mises once said, is age.

     A few people will retire rich and remain well off,
maybe 20% of 20%.  But there are always big winners in
every generation.

     The performance of the stock market since 2000 points
to the dead end of Easy Street.  The stock market has gone
nowhere.  Stock brokers' assurances to clients that "now is
the time to buy" are common, but they are less and less
believed.  Stock brokers in Japan had the same message
after 1989, but the Japanese stock market today is still
only about 25% of what it was in late 1989.  Few investors
in Japan believe Japanese stock brokers any longer.  Anyone
who did believe them after 1989 is much, much poorer than
if he had simply bought long-term Japanese government bonds
and then gone fishing.

     The steady, relentless decline of the Japanese stock
market after 1989 was not random.  Yet American economists,
because they believe in random-walk investing theory, in
1990 would not have predicted what has happened.  They
would not have seen what would have been obvious to an
Austrian School free market economist, namely, that the
1985-89 stock market boom had been a bubble created by
central bank inflation, and the stock market would not soon
recover.  That it would decline as much as it has for as
long as it has would not have been obvious, even to an
Austrian School economist, but that it would not recover
soon would have been.


RANDOM WALK ANALYSIS

     In the 1970s, random-walk theory became the rage in
academic economic circles.  Academic economic circles are
filled with salaried college teachers, mainly employed at
taxpayers' expense.  These scholars spend their early
careers seeking academic tenure, i.e., personal immunity
from the free market.  Nobody can fire them merely for
being wrong.  They may preach a modified version of the
free market, but they seek a personal arrangement that is
reminiscent of medieval guild socialism.

     Academic economists invest in two things, mainly:
their homes (heavily mortgaged, like everyone else's) and
their pension fund, which is probably run by TIAA-CREF.
They do not invest their own money by themselves.

     Random-walk theory is based on a highly sophisticated
series of mathematical, statistical, and historical
studies, all with a simple conclusion: "No one can
consistently beat any investment market if the market is
large and allows open entry."  This conclusion comforts
academic economists, who find in it solace for the fact
that they, despite their Ph.D's, cannot beat the stock
market or the bond market.

     The unstated corollary of random walk theory is this:
"Warren Buffett is a myth."

     The theory, stripped of its equations, rests on a
theory of discounting.  This theory concludes that the
competition of all market forecasters leads to a collective
assessment that is the best that anyone can consistently
attain.  The economic future has been discounted by the
stock market or bond market more accurately than you or I
can do it.  (Remember: "There is no Warren Buffett.")
Today's market price for a capital asset reflects the best
assessments, backed up by money, of all participants.  "Put
your money where your mouth is, and then shut up.  The
market will speak.  Listen to the market."

     Every time I think of random-walk theory, I think of
Johnny Carson in his "Amazing Karnak" costume.  The turban
was the key.  I also recall fondly that, as he approached
the table from which he would make his amazing
correlations, he would trip over the step.  Every time.

     Karnak worked backwards.  He was given a sealed
envelope, which he placed at his forehead.  He then
intuited the answer, which he would tell the audience.
Then he tore off the end of the envelope and blew into it,
extracting the paper with the question on it, which he
would then read aloud.  The routine went something like
this.  Answer: "He shot down 27 Japanese fighter planes in
World War II."  Question:  "Why was Mitsuo Yokomoto kicked
out of the Japanese Air Force?"

     Academic economists also work backwards, just as
Karnak did.  It goes something like this.  Answer: "They
received the Nobel Prize in economics in 1997."  Question:
"Why were Professors Merton and Scholes able to lose
investors $3.5 billion as advisors to Long Term Capital
Management in 1998?"

     Always, it comes back to this.  Answer: "Warren
Buffett."  Question: "What is the longest-running urban
myth in investing?"

     If random-walk theory is correct, then the next move
of the stock market is random.  All known facts have been
discounted in the only way that counts: "Gentlemen, place
your bets."  So, your chance of betting the next market
tick, up or down, is the same as calling heads or tails
when flipping a non-loaded coin.

     The theory's personal investment conclusion is this:
"Don't waste your time studying the stock market.  Buy a
no-load index fund."

     Its unstated corollary is this: "The best minds who do
all that sophisticated work and put all that money at risk
are boneheads.  They should instead buy an index fund."

     The collective investment conclusion is this: "When
everyone takes our advice and does this, the world's single
no-load index fund's assets should be allocated among all
stocks by random distribution."  Think of a guy named Joe
frantically flipping coins.  If all the best minds stopped
trying to beat the market, then Joe and his coin would be
the best asset-allocation strategy that anyone could
legitimately hope for.

     Except for Warren Buffett.

     The stock market is walking.  It is not walking
randomly.  Where is it walking?


SMITHERS, WHAT'S GOING ON HERE?

     Andrew Smithers, his ID says, is the founder and
chairman of Smithers & Co, which advises leading
fund-management companies worldwide on asset allocation.
He also advises the likes of us once in a while.  These
days, his advice is anything but random walk.  It's more
like non-random run: "Fire!  Fire!  Run for your lives!"

     In the May 16 "Sunday Times" of London, his article
appeared: "The longer you play, the more you lose."  He
made this observation:

     Unlike most articles about investment, which tell
     people how to make money, this one will try to
     persuade you not to lose it. Shares, bonds and
     property are all overpriced and even more
     recondite things such as gold seem to lack
     appeal.

     Well, that surely takes the wind out of everyone's
sails.  Then what's good?  Cash.  He means near-cash
assets.  There isn't enough actual cash in the system to
let everyone get more than a few coins and a couple of low-
denomination bills.  Digits rule the capital markets.

     Cash is the thing to hold and we are lucky in
     Britain that money on deposit gives a decent
     return. This is a rather negative view, but
     please blame the markets rather than me.

     It's a lot more negative in the United States, where
we have no such luck.  After income taxes and price
inflation, the return on cash today is negative.

     The problem is, he says, that stocks performed
admirably for almost three decades, 1973-2000: in the 10%
per annum range, even after price inflation.  But. . . .

     Long periods of high returns can be obtained only
     if shares become thoroughly overvalued and they
     are inevitably followed by long periods of poor
     returns.

     We are in the early years of one of these poor
     periods.

     This brings us to random-walk theory.  Smithers
compares investing to playing roulette.

     If you play roulette, the chances of red coming
     up on the next spin of the wheel are never
     influenced by the number of times red has come up
     recently. Stock markets are different; the past
     is a guide to the future. But it's not much of a
     guide for the short term.

     So, Smithers is a random walker with respect to the
short run (undefined).  But at some point (undefined), the
market's walk will become a stagger.  Maybe even a fall.

     Investing in overvalued stock markets is like
     playing roulette -- the longer you play, the more
     certain you are to lose money. Although the odds
     against you on each spin of the wheel are small,
     over time this small disadvantage turns into a
     near certainty of loss. Investors who hold shares
     today may make money in the next 12 months, but
     the chances are that most of them will lose. Over
     the next five years the odds will worsen.

     At this point, he went into a lot of economists'
mumbo-jumbo, such as the Q ratio.  That's a form of
etiquette for economists, rather like shaking hands.  No
one pays any attention to the details.  What matters is his
conclusion.  Here is his:

     Using the Q ratio or the cyclically adjusted p/e,
     and looking at either the American or British
     stock market, the most optimistic conclusion is
     that shares are about 45% overvalued.

     Well, then, what about bonds?  If stocks are headed
for bad times, will bonds be a safe haven?  No.

     Sadly, their prospects are not very good either.
     Government bonds yield some 4.5% in America and
     5% in Britain.

     Because the Bank of England is aiming at an
     inflation rate of about 2% a year, this suggests
     that the real return -- after allowing for rising
     prices -- will be in the 3% region. This is a
     little on the low side, particularly when the
     budget deficit is so high and the economy appears
     to have little spare capacity.

     There is a high chance that the Bank will push up
     short-term interest rates, and when this happens
     bond prices are far more likely to fall than
     rise.

     Bond yields now are not much better than the
     return on cash, which has the added advantage
     that your investment cannot go down in price.

     In the United States, cash does go down in price,
i.e., it falls in relation to prices in general, especially
after the IRS takes its percentage off the top.  But I
digress.  Smithers then begins to hum a favorite tune from
"Snow White," namely, "Some day my prince will come."

     As equity markets usually overshoot when they are
     falling, there is a strong chance they will move
     from being overvalued today to being significantly
     undervalued in a few years. If Wall Street fell by
     a third, it would be fairly valued, but on past
     experience it could easily become undervalued and
     fall to half today's level. Having cash to invest
     then will be a great advantage.

     Next, he takes on the British urban housing market,
which isn't as wild as Australia's, but is wilder than the
United States' housing market.

     The value of Britain's housing stock as a
     proportion of GDP has probably never been as high
     as it is today. The last time things were as out
     of line as they are now was in 1973, when we had
     the secondary banking crisis.

Then what, exactly, do we know?  This:

     What we know is that the markets are overvalued;
     what we don't know is whether the next spin of
     the roulette wheel will turn up red, black or
     even green, the bad "one in 37" chance, when
     nearly all the punters lose.

http://tinyurl.com/2755x

     He doesn't mention the obvious: buy a negative index
fund like Rydex Ursa.  If he's right, you'll make money.


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IT'S NOT ENTIRELY A GAME

     Investing is not really like playing roulette. Capital
markets are not a game.  Well, not entirely. Gambling is not
creative.  It does not produce wealth.  It offers ways to
make money by bearing risks, but these risks are imposed by
the game itself, not by real life.  Winners gain at the
expense of losers.  The game has odds, and the house runs
the game so as to benefit the house.

     If you understand the rules, you can identify the
house.

     The house in today's world is obvious only to a few
players.  The house is a cartel of central banks and their
large commercial bank beneficiaries.  It really is a house
because it creates special rules that are enforced by law.
It therefore imposes unique risks that the free market
would not impose.  Like a roulette wheel, the system is
rigged.

     If you are in the division of labor economy, you have
to play the cartel's game.  But the game's rules don't
cover every contingency.  The game has unintended
consequences.  So, we have to become entrepreneurs.  We
have to forecast the future.  We have to put our money
where our mouths are, or at least where our brains are.  We
had better know the cartel's game.

     To understand the cartel's game better, click here:

                 http://tinyurl.com/ypdpt


CAPITAL MARKETS GIVETH AND ALSO TAKETH AWAY

     Capital markets perform many important services, not
the least of which is removing money from people who don't
efficiently serve the desires of consumers, as demonstrated
by consumers' spending decisions, and transferring it to
people who do.

     But what about companies that meet the needs of
consumers but which rarely or never turn a profit?  These
firms are great for consumers but not so great for
investors, especially those investors who got in late.
Such companies can continue to subsidize consumers, but
only by luring in new investors.  This transfers money from
investors to consumers by way of high-paid senior
executives.  Investors think it's an investment in the
booming future.  In fact, it's a huge wealth-redistribution
program for the consumers in the present.  It is as if the
consumers were running a roulette wheel, and the investors
were lined up to put their chips on the table.  "Round and
round it goes.  Where it stops, nobody knows."  This is the
house talking, of course.

     The transfer of wealth from investors to consumers was
what the NASDAQ bubble was, 1996-2000.  That was what the
Nikkei bubble was, 1985-1989.  As a book buyer, I love
Amazon.  I am not an investor in Amazon.  I love to receive
subsidies based on other people's faith.  "Now faith is the
substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not
seen" (Hebrews 11:1).  But I do not like to pay subsidies.

     Smithers says there is a pattern in today's markets.
The move of the stock market was upward for almost three
decades, despite the day-to-day fluctuations.  He thinks
that upward moves that are not matched by upward
productivity are not sustainable.

     The problem is, how has this been sustained so far?  I
have an answer: By lots of people coming into the stock
market who have in fact been the beneficiaries of other
people's rising productivity.  The broad masses of the
public have become two-income families.  They work longer
in order to pay 30% to 40% of their income to the
government.  They have not stayed ahead of price inflation.
But members of the upper 20% have prospered, as usual.
They are the main buyers of shares, along with the pension
funds.  They have bid up share prices.  The would-be
retirees have kept their money in the stock market, and the
people who have in fact prospered from this economy have
joined them as investors.

     This can go on until these people, who are fast
approaching retirement age, at last decide to retire.  Then
the stock market's move, despite fluctuations, will become
a downward move.  I think Smithers' estimate of 45%
overvaluation is wildly optimistic in the long run.

     But will the stock market go up until the shareholders
start retiring?  Not if China's booming economy goes into a
slump, taking Asia with it.  Not if interest rates rise in
the United States because China's central bank decides to
stop buying U.S. T-bills with its newly counterfeited yuan.

     We are still waiting for the Dow and the S&P 500 to
reach their peak of 2000.  Four years after the hoped-for
10% per annum increase, the stock market is down.  There is
no enthusiasm for stocks.  There is still hope -- hope
based on Snow White's song about the prince.  Meanwhile,
most people sing another song, "Hi, ho, hi ho; it's off to
work we go."

     There will come a time when getting a job as a Wal-
Mart greeter will be regarded as a triumph.  I expect to
live to see that day.


SAVING FOR A GOVERNMENT-GUARANTEED SUNNY DAY

     As consumers, Americans are experts.  We get so much
practice.  As savers, we are not equally skilled.  The
savings rate in the United States is still ahead of the
growth of population, but not by much.  As Ludwig von Mises
wrote almost half a century ago,

          What raises wage rates and allots to the
     wage earners an ever increasing portion of the
     output which has been enhanced by additional
     capital accumulation is the fact that the rate of
     capital accumulation exceeds the rate of increase
     in population. . . . What has improved the wage
     earners' standard of living is the fact that the
     capital equipment per head of the men eager to
     earn wages has increased.  ("The Anti-
     Capitalistic Mentality," Van Nostrand, 1956, pp.
     88, 89)

http://tinyurl.com/2ub35

     Take a look at the Table 1 in the following series of
tables.  They were produced by Dr. Margo Thorning, who has
been monitoring this information for at least a decade.
The top line, "Net Private Domestic Saving," shows what has
been happening.  From 1960 to 1985, it was just under 10%.
>From 1986-1990, it fell to just under 8%.  In 1991 to 2001,
it was down to 6.2%.  In 2001, it was a little over 2%.

     "Net Private Domestic Investment" was 8.6% in 2001, a
figure fairly constant for four decades.  But "Net Inflow
of Foreign Saving" was over 4% in 2001, higher than ever
before.  Foreigners provided U.S. capital by buying U.S.
owned assets.  American consumers are spending the money.
We are running a $500+ billion a year current accounts
deficit with foreign nations.

     As shown in Table 1, U.S. domestic saving
     available for private investment has declined
     from an average of 9.7 percent of GDP over the
     1960-1980 period to only 4.9 percent from 1991-
     2001. Thus, an inflow of foreign saving has
     provided much of the wherewithal for the surge in
     investment during the latter half of the 1990s.

http://tinyurl.com/2wzeh

     So, domestic saving and investment are falling in the
United States.  There is an ominous shift in Americans'
mentality, i.e., the 20% of Americans who provide most of
the saving.  They are beginning to act as if they were
exclusively wage earners.  So, Americans are ceasing to be
a nation of net investors.  The economy is rising today
because investment is still positive, although the rate of
increase is declining.  But we are steadily eating our seed
corn.  We are selling our capital abroad.

     Americans have the legal right to do this, and should
have this right.  But Mises warned against this present-
oriented outlook.

     To content oneself with what one has already got
     or can easily get, and to abstain apathetically
     from any attempts to improve one's own material
     conditions, is not a virtue (p. 4).

http://tinyurl.com/2a77p


CONCLUSION

     I am convinced that Smithers is correct.  The end of
the compound rate of return in the American stock market,
2000-2004, is a herald of things to come -- if things go
well.  But he does not think things will go well.  He
thinks the stock market will decline.  So will the bond
market.  He isn't even optimistic about gold.

     I am more optimistic about gold than I am about stocks
and bonds.  Gold is little more than a blip in the
overall economy.  A tiny increase in demand, worldwide,
will push up its price.  But the overall trend of the
American capital markets is unfavorable, because saving and
investment are slowing in America.

     There has also been enormous misallocation of capital
because of decades of monetary manipulation, all over the
world.  This has led to a vast increase in debt.  The
problem that we are now facing, worldwide, is the fact that
the free market will eventually find a way to reallocate
this capital and also reallocate the ownership of debt and
its underlying capital assets.  How can this be done
without suffering a cataclysm?  No one knows.  But Austrian
economists know this much: the likelihood of an inflationary
cataclysm is more likely in a world of central banking than
a deflationary cataclysm.

     The alternative to this market-imposed re-allocation
of capital and ownership and prices is a continuation of
the present misallocation: the steady erosion of the value
of money and the steady increase of debt.  This process is
sometimes called "pouring good money after bad."  In the
case of central bank policy, however, it's more like
"pouring bad money after slightly less bad money" until
there is no monetary value at all.  It is a world in which,
to quote John Schaub, "nothing down" becomes "nothing
left."

     When the re-allocation comes, you had better be out of
debt for anything that can easily be repossessed.  If you
can't afford to lose it, own it debt-free.  But remember
this: you can afford to lose most things if you can
repurchase similar things with cash in the secondary
markets.  Also, if you can make your monthly payments, a
lender will not repossess your home.  There will be too
many repossessed homes on his books.  Just meet your
payments.

     This means that you had better keep your job.
Conclusion: keep improving the skills that enable you to
keep your job.  Then start accumulating cash.  Buy some re-
possessed homes.  Creditors will be anxious to sell them.

     As to beating the market, I recommend Smithers'
opening words:

     Unlike most articles about investment, which tell
     people how to make money, this one will try to
     persuade you not to lose it.

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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is 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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