And, Eventually, the Good News
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Let’s start with these two data points . .
. Item: INFLATION FEARS – As my great friend Joe Cherner pointed out to me yesterday, the 5-year Treasury
Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) are now yielding less than
zero. (Click the link and scroll
down.) That is, they promise to pay 2% a
year interest . . .
but so concerned are folks about inflation that they were yesterday willing to shell out
$1,084 for each $1,000 bond. On April 15,
2012, when the bonds mature, yesterday’s buyers will have lost a hair more on
each bond – $84 – than they will have received in interest payments from it. That’s why the yield works out to less than
zero. Except that the face value of these bonds
is inflation adjusted. And that’s why people are paying so much for
them. The math is a
little complicated, but it all boils down to a return of “three-hundredths of
one percent below inflation.” And to some, being protected against “all but
three-hundredths of one percent of inflation” seems pretty attractive these
days. With the Fed flooding the financial system
with money, and with the US dollar sinking against foreign currencies, rising
inflation is likely. Not good. Item: CREDIT FEARS – As another great friend pointed out to
me yesterday, S&P and Moody’s last week both reaffirmed
their triple-A ratings of the bonds of a company called MBIA, an insurer of
those “collateralized mortgage obligations” that have
everyone so spooked. And yet (here was
my friend’s punch line), MBIA’s bonds yield 14%. See? The rating agencies are saying, “Not to worry
– MBIA is a top quality credit.
Triple-A. Highest rating there
is.”
This is
important, because if MBIA is a triple-A credit, then the bonds it insures are
triple-A. If MBIA is dropped down a few
notches, so too many of the bonds it insures. (How did S&P
and Moody’s come to reaffirm MBIA’s triple-A rating? I have no idea. But I am reminded of Roger Lowenstein’s
wonderful Sunday Times Magazine piece
recently in which he describes
how, to get then Fed Chairman William McChesney
Martin to lower interest rates, LBJ allegedly slammed him against a wall and
physically beat him.) With home prices falling, foreclosures
rising, and a recession looming, there is the fear of a vicious cycle: more
foreclosures leading to further home-price declines leading to worsening
consumer confidence, a deeper recession, and
. . . Not good. What are we to draw from these data points? First, that this
is an even better time than usual to live beneath your means . . . to save for
a rainy day . . . to diversify
. . . to keep your transaction costs low . . . to take risk
seriously . . . to expect lower interest rates but higher inflation
which leads to higher interest rates
which leads to more business failures, deeper recession, and lower interest rates . . . in short, a
roller coaster ride. The world rarely ends, so this will
ultimately be a column of good news, but first it does appear that the chickens, as they had to, are indeed
coming home to roost. We laughed at
Europeans in their funny little cars as we drove ever bigger and bigger SUVs . . . but guess who’s going broke? We looked the
other way when homes and condos were rising to crazy heights and mortgage
lenders were making “no doc” loans and “liars loans” – loans the Fed and other
regulators could easily have tamped down but didn’t. We borrowed
massively to cut taxes on the rich and then to finance an ill-conceived war,
taking our National Debt up from under $1 trillion (about 30% of GDP) at the
start of Reagan’s first term to $10 trillion (nearly 70% of GDP) by the end of
George W. Bush’s. We allowed the
gap between the rich and everyone else – and the ranks of the uninsured – to chasm. (Did you see this past Sunday’s “60 Minutes” piece
on the group of volunteers who have begun offering free weekend health care
clinics in We watched – or, rather,
didn’t watch – as Wall Street paid itself gigantic bonuses for creating
securities and taking risks whose magnitude we do not yet know. (But we do know that when the CEO exited a
hemorrhaging Merrill Lynch, he left with $161 million in cash and benefits.) And as long ago
as 1974, we stamped our foot at the notion of increasing the gas tax by a dime
a year, forever (and using that flood of revenue to lower the income tax, so we would be taxing the thing we wanted to discourage while reducing the tax on work
and investment that we wanted to encourage).
Yes, this would
have sent the price per gallon to $4 by 2008 . . .
but it got there anyway. The difference
is, had we launched this in 1974, spurred on by OPEC’s quadrupling the price of
oil, our vehicles would today get 80 miles to the gallon (so the cost of
driving a mile would actually be lower in real terms than it was), Detroit
would lead the automotive world, our trade deficit would be far lower, our dollar
stronger, our air cleaner, our families more prosperous, our military less
entangled, and more.* *I blame
So here we are . . . and here, now, the
good news . . . Begin with this
delightful perspective from the New
Yorker: . . . A
few minutes later, it was Arthur Gray on the line, from the We have, I think,
at least four macro forces going for us. First, of course,
we are a hard-working, ingenious people.
Our political and economic system is flawed, but it’s still about the
best there is for adapting to changed circumstances. Second, the
dollar has sunk so low, with no end necessarily in sight, that Third, we will
have a new President soon who may be able to sweep into office much as Reagan
did, when things were also precarious (nearly unprecedented inflation married
to nearly unprecedented unemployment, with no way out) and infuse us, and our
neighbors around the world, with confidence and hope. Psychology can be self-fulfilling (all we
have to fear is fear itself), and markets have as much to do with psychology as
with economics. (But economics matters,
too, so the next President will, I hope, make the kinds of smart decisions Bill
Clinton did, not repeat the disastrous ones of the past seven years.) Fourth, there is
technology. Faithful readers may recall
Ray Kurzweil’s prediction that
technological progress will be 32 times as rapid over the next half century as
over the last. There are all sorts of perils
in this; but also the potential for a tremendous wave of prosperity that will
lift billions of boats, and overwhelm (in a good way) today’s seemingly
intractable economic problems. The sun will come
out tomorrow. But maybe not literally
tomorrow.
The market, demanding 14%, is
saying, “You have got to be kidding.”
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Andrew Tobias