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Sent: Friday, June 16, 2000 9:55 AM
Subject: US Media Blackout: Speculative Bubble Ready to Pop
From: Mark Sonnenblick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Executive Intelligence Review
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Central Bank Warning: US Bubble Will Pop - US Blackout of Story

By John Hoefle

June13, 2000


This warning in the attachment was the biggest story in Europe
over the past 3 days, even in the international editions of the
Wall Street Journal, NY Times and Washington Post (IHT) and was
on all the wires.  But there was a total blackout in their US
editions and in all but a few media here.

Everybody should know about this, and, Rense.com is the key
source of news for many people here and abroad.

http://www.rense.com The Bank for International Settlements
(BIS), in a report issued on June 5, and in a major international
press conference accompanying the release of the report at its
headquarters in Basel, Switzerland the same day that a global
financial crash is right around the corner.  While that
assessment has been Everybody should know about this, and,
Rense.com is the key source of news for many people here and
abroad.

http://www.rense.com The Bank for International Settlements
(BIS), in a report issued on June 5, and in a major international
press conference accompanying the release of the report at its
headquarters in Basel, Switzerland the same day that a global
financial crash is right around the corner.  While that
assessment has been given banner headlines throughout Europe, the
warning has been blacked out of the U.S. press.  "One point on
which virtually everyone would agree is that the current rate of
expansion of domestic demand in the United States is
unsustainable and potentially inflationary," the BIS stated in
its 70th Annual Report.  The report goes on to say that "it could
be argued that the sooner the bubble deflates, the better."

In remarks at the BIS Annual Meeting the same day, BIS President
Urban Baeckstroam threw cold water on the assertions by the U.S.
President's Working Group on Financial Markets (a.k.a.  the
Plunge Protection Group) that the U.S.  economy was headed for a
"soft landing."

"We have witnessed too many crises in the last decade not to know
that market confidence can shift suddenly," Baeckstrom said.  "A
soft landing is by no means assured."

He also warned of the rising levels of household and corporate
debt in the United States, and the growing dependence of the
United States upon foreign goods and money-flows.  "Household and
corporate balance sheets may look healthy when asset prices are
stable or increasing, but what will they look like if prices
fall?" he asked.

To underscore the BIS's warnings, the German economic daily
Handelsblatt, in a commentary by Klaus Engelen on June 6 entitled
"Dangerous Dynamic on Financial Markets," noted that while the
International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development had proven records of
not seeing financial crises in advance, the BIS had warned of
instability in the emerging markets before the Mexican and Asian
crises erupted.  However, Engelen said, "all such earlier
warnings from Basel had been ignored by euphoric markets." Market
participants are still not paying sufficient attention to the
"emphatic warnings of the BIS concerning ever higher financial
asset prices and the unsustainable foreign trade imbalances, in
particular the U.S.  current account deficit which is running out
of control."

Engelen said that the issue was not one of how big the chances
were of a soft landing, but rather whether there is any chance at
all to prevent a hard landing.

The blunt warnings reflect the realization by the BIS that the
current global financial and monetary system is unsustainable,
and that major changes are required to keep the system together.
Such warnings, as far as they go, are valid, and represent a
better understanding of the state of the world than anything
flowing out of official Washington, but they still fall far short
of reality.

- Hard Landing, or Mid-Air Explosion?  -

The whole debate about "soft landing" versus "hard landing" is a
fraud.

The idea behind the soft landing is that the U.S.  economy is
growing so fast, that the pace of growth is unsustainable and
might trigger inflation.

Therefore, to slow the pace of growth and head off potential
inflation, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has been
raising interest rates. By gently putting the brakes on the
economy, to use the aircraft metaphor, the Fed hopes to bring the
economy down from its lofty heights to a safe and soft landing.
The hard-landing crowd likewise assumes that the plane will land,
but perhaps with significant damage.  What is absent from this
controlled discussion is a third possibility, that of a mid-air
explosion.

In citing "the record U.S.  current account deficit," the BIS
pointed squarely to the fact that the U.S.  economy is being
subsidized by the rest of the world.  The current account balance
({{Figure 1}}), which hit a record $100 billion deficit for the
fourth quarter of 1999, represents the extent to which the U.S.
economy is dependent upon foreign goods and investments. The
deficit reflects both the inadequacy of U.S. goods-production to
meet the needs of the nation's population, and the extent to
which foreign funds have flooded into the country to participate
in the U.S.  market bubble and purchase other U.S.  assets.
Were this inflow to be interrupted or reversed, by a stock market
crash or a sharp decline in the value of the dollar, the
"soaring" U.S.  economy would be lucky to make it to the ground
in one piece.

Controlled Burn -

One aspect of the effort to bring the U.S.  economy in for a soft
landing, is the attempt to deflate the overblown U.S.  stock
market without triggering an investor panic.  Make the change
gradually enough, and the public will stay in the market even as
it declines, a variation of the frog-in-the-pot theory. (It is
said--I've certainly never tested it--that one can put a frog in
a pot of water on a stove, and that if one heats the water slowly
enough, the frog will stay in the pot until it boils.)

But a controlled and limited deflation of a bubble is a tricky
operation, one which can easily get out of hand and trigger the
very panic one is trying to prevent.

An analogy for the danger is the fire set by the U.S.  National
Park Service on May 4 in the Bandelier National Monument in New
Mexico.  The fire, intentionally set as a "controlled burn" to
burn brush and dried timber on 1,000 acres in order to reduce the
danger of a wildfire, rapidly went completely out of control,
triggering the very wildfire it was designed to prevent.  The
result was the immolation of some 48,000 acres, the destruction
of more than 200 homes and apartment buildings in the nearby town
of Los Alamos, and the destruction of parts of the Los Alamos
National Laboratory.

The 33% drop in the Nasdaq from mid-March to mid-April, including
a 25% drop in just the week of April 10, shows all the hallmarks
of a controlled burn ({{Figure 2}}).  The drop was preceded by an
international media propaganda campaign, beginning in Europe and
then spreading to the United States, about the unsustainable
nature of the "Internet bubble" and the necessity of a
"correction." One key aspect of the propaganda campaign was to
prepare the public psychologically for the sharp drop, to keep
"investors" from panicking and fleeing the market.  That aspect
of the campaign was successful, as no panic occurred; the market
stabilized, at least in the short-term, at a lower level, without
an immediate collapse.

That does not mean, however, that no damage was done.  The sharp
drop in tech stocks generated serious losses for many investors,
those not warned of the central bankers' plans.  Hardest hit were
those who had hitched their futures to the Internet, and those
playing with borrowed money.  Some $2.2 trillion in value (albeit
virtual, rather than real) evaporated between March 10, when the
value of all stocks traded on the Nasdaq peaked at $6.7 trillion,
and April 14, when it dropped to $4.5 trillion.  Many of the
investors who got wiped out were playing with borrowed money, as
indicated by the sharp drop in margin debt outstanding, by
clients of the brokers which belong to the New York Stock
Exchange.  After rising 55% to $279 billion from September 1999
through March 2000, margin debt fell by $27 billion--nearly
10%--during April, ending the month at $252 billion ({{Figure
3}}).  Most of that reduction was due to investors getting hit
with margin calls, and having to sell stock--and their most
valuable stock at that--in order to pay their debts.

The impact of such market declines goes well beyond the markets
themselves.

Many people working in the tech sector have taken stock options
in lieu of higher salaries, betting that the money made from
rising stock prices will more than offset the lower wages.
While this gamble has made many millionaires in a rising market,
it will have the reverse effect in a declining one.  Many
would-be stock-option millionaires are under water, the option
prices on their stock higher than the current market prices,
rendering their options worthless.  Some of these have borrowed
heavily against that planned stock-option money; in California's
Santa Clara County, the home of Silicon Valley, for example, the
median price of a single-family home was $577,820 in April, up
45% in one year; nationally, the median price for a single-family
home was $136,700, suggesting hard times ahead for the Silicon
Valley real estate market, as well as for other high-tech centers
such as Northern Virginia and Austin, Texas.  The commercial real
estate market will also suffer from the shakeout on the tech
sector, since all the new Internet companies required lots of
office space, the demand sharply increasing rents in many areas.

The danger is also great in New York City which, according to a
study by the New York Fed, is more dependent than ever upon Wall
Street.  The July 1999 study by the bank's Jason Bram and James
Orr, shows that the securities sector generated 19% of the city's
earnings in 1998, nearly double its contribution in 1987 and more
than four times higher than in 1969.  The securities sector
itself employed 4.5% of the city's workforce in 1998, and given
the U.S.  Department of Commerce's estimate that each job on Wall
Street generates two additional jobs in other sectors, Wall
Street is directly or indirectly responsible for roughly 14% of
the total employment in New York City.

In fact, according to economist James Parrott, Wall Street
workers accounted for an astonishing 97% of the increase in the
city's payrolls between 1990 and 1997.

There is an unexpected bright spot in the city's economy,
according to the Fed study, and that is manufacturing, or rather
the lack thereof.  The manufacturing sector accounted for nearly
half of the city's job losses and more than two-thirds of the
decline in real earnings during the city's slump in the early
1970s, and was "a severe drag" on the local economy during the
1989-92 recession, as well.  Today, manufacturing accounts for
just 6% of local earnings, compared to 20% in 1969.  "Because its
importance to the city's economy has diminished significantly,
another decline in the manufacturing sector would likely put far
less pressure on the local economy than was true in previous
downturns," bubbleheads Bram and Orr concluded, showing that the
Fed doesn't have a clue when it comes to physical economy.

- Reorganization and Manipulation -

Coincident with the newly emerging bear market is a
reorganization of certain financial warfare operations,
particularly the large hedge funds.

Julian Robertson's Tiger Management group of hedge funds, which
once had $23 billion under management and controlled many times
that through leverage, has closed down, said to be a victim of
Robertson's bet that the Old Economy would prevail over the New.
The impression is given that Robertson was an old-style investor
who just didn't understand the new era, when in fact Robertson
was one of the bloodiest speculators on the planet.  Stanley
Shopkorn, the man who, as head trader at Salomon Brothers, is
credited with doing much to prevent the Black Monday Crash of
1987 from melting down the financial system, and is now an
investment guru with the $10 billion Moore Capital hedge fund
group, is taking a sabbatical this summer to cruise the
Mediterranean.

Then there's the case of drug-legalizer George Soros and his
Soros Fund Management, at one time worth $22 billion.  After the
March-April slide of the Nasdaq, Soros announced he was
downsizing his operation into a more conservative style of
investing.  With the change came the resignations of his two top
fund managers, Stanley Druckenmiller and Nicholas Roditi, and the
departures of chief financial officer Peter Streinger and chief
executive Duncan Hennes.

Nominally, the reorganization at Soros Fund Management comes as a
result of sharp losses on the tech stocks in the wake of the
April-May Nasdaq slide, but there are indications that the truth
runs deeper.  Last autumn, with his funds down slightly for the
year, Soros made a sharp push into technology stocks, buying
enough to end the year up 35%.  Between mid-October and mid-March
the Nasdaq Composite Index nearly doubled, rising an
unprecedented 88%.  Some Wall Street observers have attributed a
significant portion of that rise to Soros's heavy buying.

The timing between the controlled burn of the Nasdaq and the
announcement of the reorganization of the Soros funds, suggests
the possibility that Soros also played a role in setting that
particular fire.

The idea of an orchestrated run-up and take-down in this highly
manipulated environment is nothing new.  By running up the Nasdaq
at the end of the year, large profits could be gained to offset
losses--particularly hidden losses--from the spring and summer
turmoil.  Once in the new year, the insiders could sell off into
a rising market, taking one last profit fling while sticking the
suckers with the looming losses.  Even investors in the Soros
funds, which were down 22% for the year as of the end of April,
could have covered their losses with offsetting bets.

- Hyperinflation -

Beginning with the global financial crisis which broke out in
Asia in the summer of 1997, and continuing through the subsequent
"Russian," "Long Term Capital Management," "Brazilian," "Tiger,"
and other, better-hidden events, the central bankers have
responded to each crisis with what Soros himself called "a wall
of money." Throwing money at problems is nothing new for the
bankers, as the sharp growth in the U.S.  money supply since 1992
indicates ({{Figure 4}}).  But as the money flows in, the
instability grows and the crises come ever faster and larger.
That is because the increased money for the bubble comes by
further cannibalizing the physical economy, heaping ever more
financial claims on an economy whose ability to pay those claims
is shrinking.

The result is a self-accelerating, leveraged turbulence which,
according to LaRouche, has reached the point where the monetary
aggregates are now growing faster than the financial aggregates.
In such a period, the money will begin to lose value faster than
it can plug the holes, leading to a Weimar-style hyperinflation,
where the value of money itself goes into a free-fall.

Another aspect of this nascent hyperinflation is the surge in
commodity prices in the recent period, typified by the rise in
the price of oil. One of the factors in this is the accelerating
level of mergers in the economy ({{Figure 5}}).  Due to the
extraordinary levels of debt taken on in these mergers, the
companies are forced to raise prices in order to show a profit.
Thus, the attempt to outpace the collapse via consolidation,
actually brings closer the demise.

While the warnings issued by the BIS have some validity, the
solutions it puts forward do not.  The BIS does not wish to kill
this global financial parasite--which would be tantamount to
suicide--but merely to exert tighter control over its growth, to
avoid killing its host.  The BIS is, as its report shows, in
favor of the continued deregulation and globalization of
financial markets, taking ever more control out of the hands of
nation-states and giving it to the oligarchic forces which
control the financial system and the BIS itself.  It is not the
process, but the perceived excess, which the BIS deplores.

Thus, the BIS, like the speculators it is trying to curb, is
doomed by its inability to break free of its own failed axioms.
They are all actors on a stage, not controlling the action, but
being controlled by it, in a tragedy of historic proportion. Only
by stepping out of their roles can they survive.

####


MainPage

http://www.rense.com

A complimentary copy of the June 16 Executive Inteligence Review
(EIR) (which includes graphics and several other articles on and
quotes from the BIS report) will be sent to any of your reader
who calls 1-888-347-3258 and mentions you.



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   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
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