* * * * * * * * * * * * 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.
 
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
The Daily Reckoning 

Poitou, France

Wednesday, December 22, 2004

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

*** Over the river, and through the woods... questioning
the highest authority... 

*** Catastrophic successes... who are the owners in our
"ownership society?"

*** Stuck in the middle... living beyond our means... the
final scandal of 2004... and more!

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

Yesterday was the shortest day of the year in the Northern
Hemisphere. Here in France, however, it was barely a day at 
all. The sun never even bothered to come up. Instead, it
was as cloudy and gray at noon as it had been at dawn. 

We couldn't write yesterday. We loaded up the car in the
morning - full to overflowing with packages. Then, we
hooked up a trailer with Elizabeth's horse in it... and
made our way down to the country.

We are so lucky. Hardly a day goes by that we don't realize 
it. Last week was spent traveling from one continent to
another, pretending to do business, but actually attending
holiday parties. This week, we have joined the entire
family out in Poitou (to the Southwest of Paris) for two
weeks of Christmas. All six children are with us... and one 
new daughter-in-law. 

This morning, all the children are at work - painting a new 
library. Well, almost all the children. Henry decided he
had to take the pony out for a ride.

What a glorious way to spend a holiday - watching your
children work! 

But you do not read the Daily Reckoning, dear reader, for
idle chitchat, do you? No, you read it to find out what to
expect from the world's financial markets. If only we knew! 
We can't tell you what will happen. But at least we can
tell you what we think ought to happen.

And yesterday, the Dow rose up nearly another 100 points.
Wow! Either we are wrong... or the Dow is wrong. Somebody
is making a mistake. Of course, according to Efficient
Market Theory... the market can make no mistake. It is like 
a democracy. There is no higher authority than the
voters... or the mass of investors. Whatever they decide is 
supposed to be perfect.

But voters err occasionally. They elected Benito Mussolini
and Adolph Hitler, to cite a few criminal mistakes. Here in 
the United States, they elected Wilson, Lincoln, and Bush
the younger - to mention some misdemeanors. Investors err
too - remember Enron, Webvan, Global Crossing? 

Of course, we make a mistake too, from time to time. We
could be wrong this time. Each time the Dow rises, the more 
wrong we look.

But we continue to think the situation is a bit like
Napoleon's attack on Moscow, whose dismal end we noted a
week ago. The Emperor was warned. A French colonel who had
spent years with the Russian army had begged Bonaparte to
stay home. If the Russians don't kill you, he warned, the
weather will: You will starve. You will freeze. Your men
will die and widows all over France will curse your name.

He might have added that your entire empire would be ruined 
in the aftermath and the Emperor himself exiled to a
deserted island. But none of his alarums rang a bell with
the little Corsican. The troops marched. And by the time
they reached Moscow, the war mongers of the First Empire
must have made the same remark that the neo-conservatives
made when the United States captured Saddam... or stock
market bulls made yesterday: See, we told you it would be a 
big success.

But Napoleon's campaign turned out to be - as our president 
said, correctly but accidentally, of Iraq - a "catastrophic 
success." Gains made in stocks in 2004, we fear, will be
similarly catastrophic.

More news, from our team at The Rude Awakening:

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

Tom Dyson, reporting from Baltimore... 

"We think Rogers' idea has all the same ingredients as
Barnaby's house: it's cheap, it would be a great place to
live, and most importantly, the area will be a magnet for
economic activity, so your investment will most likely
increase in value."

For the whole story, check out today's issue of The Rude
Awakening:

Barnaby's House
http://dailyreckoning.com/body_headline.cfm?id=4366

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

Bill Bonner, back in Poitou... 

*** George W. Bush said yesterday that he favors an
"ownership society." What a pity, Americans own so little
of it. They have mortgaged more of their houses than ever
before. People now buy their houses on margin. And
automobiles are purchased on long-term payment plans. Even
when they go to Wal-Mart, they buy toilet paper and chicken 
soup - on credit!

But wait, if Americans don't own their own stuff, who does? 
Well, we're glad you asked. We used to say of the national
debt that "we owe it to ourselves," which made us feel
better. At least, if we couldn't pay it, we weren't likely
to foreclose on ourselves. But now, more debt than ever is
in foreign hands. Americans don't save. So someone else has 
to supply the savings that Americans take up as credit.
Increasingly, it is the Asians - even the Chinese, who earn 
only 1/25th as much per hour as Americans. About $9
trillion worth of U.S. dollar assets is in the hands of
foreigners - or about $3 trillion net. As long as the
current account deficits continue, so does the amount of
U.S. debt held by people who don't hold U.S. passports.
Yes, ours is an ownership society. And the Asians own it! 

*** Rich people don't buy on credit. Then again, nor do
really poor people. 

"The people who are really going to get hurt," said a
friend in Baltimore, "are the people in the middle. You
know, couples that have bought houses bigger than they
could really afford. They both work. They've mortgaged up
everything. They live beyond their means. God forbid
interest rates rise... or property prices fall."

It's better to be rich, dear reader... or live as though
you were.

*** Well... it looks like we have our final scandal to
finish off 2004. Franklin Raines, the Fannie Mae chief
executive, who had once described the financial institution 
as "being in the American Dream Business," was forced to
step down yesterday. 

According to the Associated Press, "Raines said he had
decided to leave to fulfill a pledge he made during
congressional testimony in October that he would take blame 
if serious accounting problems were found at the company."

We can't help but wonder how many "American dreams" he's
crushing with his accounting shenanigans... 

[Ed. Note: Scandal, scandals... and more scandals... that's 
Prediction #1 for 2005, according to Fleet Street editor,
Chris Mayer. Forget Fannie Mae and ENRON... worldwide
financial conspiracies will be running amuck in the
upcoming year. To find out all seven predictions, and what
you can do to protect yourself and your assets, see here:

Seven Stunning Predictions for 2005 
http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/FST/predictC09 

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

The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: What can we learn from the
housing situation in England? Well, according to John
Mauldin, we seem to be playing follow-the-leader with them
when it comes to the housing market... just six months
behind... 

CANARY IN A COALMINE
by John Mauldin

In 1996, the New York Federal Reserve did a study on what
indicators were the most reliable predictors of a
recession. The only one of six indicators that was
significantly reliable was an inverted yield curve. They
later did a private study with over 20 factors and still
the only dependable indicator was the inverted yield curve. 
I read the studies in 1999. 

In a normal world, short-term rates are lower than
long-term rates. This makes sense, as investors want to be
compensated for the risk of the longer holding period.
There are exceptions to this rule, and at times short-term
rates rise above long term rates, giving rise to what is
known as an inverted yield curve. Typically, when the yield 
curve is inverted or negative for 90 days, you get a
recession in about 12 months. Actually, it is more than
typical. In the United States, every time we have had a
period of negative yield curves, we have had a recession
within a year.

Thus, in August of 2000, as the yield curve in the United
States went negative, I predicted the United States would
enter a recession in the summer of 2001, and since the
stock market loses an average of 43% in a recession, it
followed that the stock market would tank. Quite the out of 
consensus call at the time. Although the NASDAQ was still
in a swan dive, the New York Stock Exchange was climbing to 
within shouting distance of its previous high. The economy
seemed to be moving along quite nicely. But the yield curve 
was staring us right in the face.

Now, I was not the only one that had read the Fed report. I 
am almost sure that every one of the Blue Chip economists
had read it as well. But none predicted a recession. Things 
just looked too good, and none of the other data suggested
a recession in the works. You can bet Greenspan had read
the paper, but he waited until January to start cutting
rates.

I remember calling the author of the paper at the Fed and
asking him whether he thought that we would be in recession 
within a year. "It will be interesting to see," he said. 

While today the U.S. yield curve is slowly flattening, it
is nowhere near an inverted yield curve and not signaling a 
recession. But I have spotted an inverted yield curve in
the world, across the pond, in England. And it worries me,
as I wonder if it is a pre-cursor to problems in the United 
States. Let's survey the current situation in England.

U.K. unemployment is an amazing 2.7%. I am sure there are
examples, but I cannot recall a major economic country with 
such a low unemployment rate. Inflation, although rising,
is still under 2%. Wages rose by 4.4% in the three months
through October, the highest rise in several years and more 
evidence of nascent inflation.

The housing market is doing quite well, thank you. In what
everyone calls a bubble, housing in England still rose
12.5% year over year in November, although only 0.2% in the 
last month. Could it be slowing? U.K. household debt is
140%, which is above U.S. levels.

The Bank of England recently noted, "Any sustained fall in
[house] prices would reduce homeowners' cushion of housing
equity. This might reduce their opportunity to re-mortgage
to consolidate other debts or to lower their monthly
payments. Financing difficulties would be exacerbated if
any fall in house prices were accompanied by a wider
economic slowdown." 

And government spending is on the rise. Quoting the team
from Gavekal, "Just like the United States, the United
Kingdom participated in the supply-side revolution of the
1980s and 1990s. But unlike the U.S., the U.K.'s
supply-side revolution is in danger of being rolled back.
U.K. government expenditures relative to GDP have been on
the rise for seven long years, and the government has
accounted for virtually all employment growth since 2001.
Little by little, increased regulation and ever-rising
public spending are weakening the spirit of enterprise
created by the Thatcher revolution. This is a worrying
development and if left unchecked, will undoubtedly have
very negative effects on the growth prospects of the U.K.
economy, and on their equity market."

The Bank of England is in a hard spot. They have been
steadily raising rates to keep inflation in check and to
rein in the white-hot housing bubble. Since the housing
market is still doing well, and inflation is rising, one
would think they should continue to raise rates. But with
an inverted yield curve and a very strong pound, raising
rates might not be wise, as that could push the country
into recession.

If I lived in England, I would be getting my personal house 
in order. No long only stock funds, switching to bonds and
absolute return type investments and funds. While the Fed
study on yield curves was based on U.S. precedent, the rule 
generally applies everywhere. Thus, precaution is the order 
of the day.

But at the beginning of this essay, I hinted about the
English situation perhaps shedding some light on the United 
States. Let's see if we can make a case.

Hmmm. A strong housing market that might be peaking. A
central bank that has been raising rates. A solid economy
with inflation starting to pick up. A stock market that
looks like it may have peaked? Oh, and did I mention a very 
large trade deficit? Sound familiar, my fellow countrymen
and women?

The only thing we don't have is an inverted yield curve...
yet. However, England did not have one as recently as six
months ago, and was not all that out of bounds a year ago.
I think England may be six to nine months ahead of us in
the softening process.

England may very well be a canary in the coalmine. While
not totally analogous, there are enough similarities that
it gives pause. And bears watching.

Yes, I know many will point to the positive economic data
on both sides of the ocean. But that misses the main point. 
The data stays positive, as will the mainstream economists, 
up until they turn negative. The upshot of the Fed study
was that only the yield curve showed any reliability in its 
predictive ability. Everything else was "noise."

In the late 90's and up until 2002, the vast majority of
pundits told us why "this time it's different. Trade
deficits no longer matter. Now they are all blaming the
trade deficit for the declining dollar. But if that is the
case, why is the British pound and Aussie dollar rising? 

The world of currency valuations and trade deficits is a
very complicated matter. Yes, trade deficits of the type
that the United States is currently experiencing, as well
as that of England and Australia, are unsustainable. But
normally, when one uses the word unsustainable, one does
not think in terms of multiple years, but that is precisely 
what can happen. It is entirely likely, even probable, that 
the U.S. trade deficit will get worse this next year
(barring a drop to $20 oil).

A dropping dollar is not going to magically fix the deficit 
as it did in the 80's. For one thing, the U.S.
manufacturing sector is a smaller percentage of the total
economy than it was 20 or even five years ago. So even if
we see exports grow a significant percentage, it is growth
off a smaller base. It will take many years of outsized
export growth to catch up with our growing imports. Unless, 
of course, we see a recession and imports actually drop.

That means for the trade deficit to come back into balance
imports must go flat or drop. That is not a happy prospect. 
Going to Marshall's [Auerbach of Prudent Bear] latest
piece, as he is commenting upon articles by the IMF and
other English institutions that worry about the housing
bubbles in the US, England, and Australia.

"The humbling reality is that across three decades, only
one economic event has been guaranteed to produce balanced
trade in the English-speaking nations: a recession. When
the economy is contracting, people naturally buy less of
everything, including imports. Needless to say, no one
appears ready to embrace this option, which means that the
endgame will be much worse - even for those who have sought 
to conduct their monetary affairs in a responsible manner,
such as the Bank of England. The current global financial
fragility is unlikely to be saved by mere dollar
devaluation; it is solved when the respecting offending
nations restraining their respective profligate tendencies
and implement policies designed to restore national savings 
to their historic norms. Of course, if all the offending
nations do this together without any countervailing
stimulus from Euroland or Asia, we will see a massive
global contraction.
 
"The Bank of England and IMF may see this checkmate
position coming. They may be concerned they will see a
global income depression on their watch if housing bubbles
burst. They may accordingly be warning global monetary
authorities 1) not let the housing bubbles run any further, 
but perhaps more importantly, 2) not pop these bubbles in
anything other than a careful, deliberate, and incremental
fashion. That would be nice, but history shows us that
there is a reason why we rarely see bubbles popping
gently."

Today, things are all right. The canary is singing away.
But the great imbalances in world trade will be brought
into balance at some point, even if "unsustainable" is a
few years off. It helps to get some early warning signs.
Let's watch that canary closely.

Regards,

John Mauldin
for The Daily Reckoning

Editor's Note: John Mauldin is the creative force behind
the Millennium Wave investment theory and author of the
weekly economic e-mail Thoughts from the Frontline. As well 
as being a frequent contributor to The Daily Reckoning, Mr. 
Mauldin is the author of Bull's Eye Investing (John Wiley & 
Sons), which is currently on The New York Times business
best-seller list.


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