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A Recession Worth Having
Bill Bonner

No big news from the markets yesterday. Inflation and deflation fought to a draw…and then called it a day.

The Dow fell 65 points - and we noticed that copper was down about 25% from its high. Copper, as you no-doubt know, dear reader, is regarded as the metal with a Ph.D. in economics. When it goes down, the economy tends to go down with it.

You don't have to be a genius to figure out why. Copper is used in making machines and houses. When demand for copper goes down, so does business activity.

After landing those blows, deflation followed up with a nice combination of jabs. Building permits were reported at a 14-year low. And in Southern California, house sales sank to a 20-year low.

Wiring new houses takes a lot of copper; so when there are fewer new houses, there is also less demand for copper. And less demand for financing - which is a good thing, since financing is less available anyway. Financial stocks have already lost $74 billion of value this year. Moody's is down 50%. Merrill (NYSE:MER) is down almost 50%. KKR Financial has dropped from 27 down to 14.

And when housing and finance go down…it shouldn't be long before the entire economy follows.

"The bottom line," writes David Rosenberg of Merrill, "is that housing and consumer spending were joined at the hip…and now that hip is going in for replacement."

Consumers can't make money from rising house prices. And they can't borrow money either. All they can do is to spend the money they earn. Ouch. Ouch. And in an economy that relies on consumer spending for 70% of its GDP, a falloff in consumer spending is very bad news.

Yes, dear reader…a recession is probably on the way. Maybe it is here already. And it will probably be a real recession this time, not just a phony recession such as we had in 2001. This time the consumer will actually have to cut back on his spending. This time, consumer credit will actually go down. In short, this will be a recession worth having.

When the dotcoms went down, it affected no more than about 10% of the economy - at the most. When residential housing goes down, the damage will be much more widespread, long-lasting and deeper.

Even the art market is beginning to get hammered. A report in the International Herald Tribune tells us that while prices have held fairly steady, it has come at a large cost in sales. At Christie's, for example, 19% of the stuff for sale at a recent auction "hit the dust," meaning - it didn't sell. At Sotheby's the total rose to 27%; lots at a recent auction didn't make the minimum prices set by sellers. In other words, prices weren't allowed to get to a market-clearing level. Result: no sales. And no information. We don't know how low prices would have gone if they had been allowed to fully express themselves.

Turns out, the auction houses are giving sellers 'guarantees' that effectively stop the market-clearing process. If the price drops below the guarantee, the object is simply removed from the sale. In art, as in houses, it will take a long time to discover where what things are really worth.

But if we were a judge, we'd still have to give the day to inflation - on points. For while copper is getting knocked down, platinum never looked stronger. It's at a record high and punching hard.

A headliner item on the inflation side was the price of wheat, which also rose to an all-time high.

"Grocery bills keep growing," says an article in the Dallas Morning News. And the U.N. goes further, with a report saying that not only are prices rising - the world's food supply is shrinking.

Shrinking? How could the world's food supply be going down when the world's population is growing so rapidly? How could farmers produce less food when they have so much more technology to work with? How could food production decline when so many marginal properties are being put into production? We don't know. But if it is true that farm output has peaked out, prices of agricultural commodities should rise even more steeply in the years ahead.

Meanwhile, the American Farm Bureau tells us that it costs more than 10% more to feed people this year than it did a year ago - up to $42.26 for a group of ten. Not in Switzerland, says our old friend Marc Faber. Only in America could you feed 10 people on so little money. But the key point is that prices are rising sharply. Remember, inflation packs a wallop - especially among the marginal middle and lower classes, where food is a large percentage of the family budget.

Then again, as they have to pay more for food and fuel…they will have less left over. Which, of course, means less consumer spending…recession…falling demand…and…what?…falling prices! Go figure…

We don't have time to figure…we've got to run and catch another plane…

Ta-ta…

*** We're in the air again…this time down to sunny Florida.

As long term Daily Reckoning sufferers might recall, we were moving to Florida in order to save taxes. Well, we weren't really moving to Florida. We do not live in the United States at all. But if we weren't going to live in the United States it seemed like an extravagance to not live in a high-tax state like Maryland. We've been paying taxes to the state of Maryland for the last 12 years - all the while barely setting foot in the Old Line State.

Along came a tax attorney with some good advice: move. Specifically, move to Florida; the Sunshine State doesn't have an income tax.

So here we are, setting up non-residence.

"Wait a minute," said an attorney yesterday. "Why do you need to be a resident of any state…since you don't really live in the United States?"

It was a good question. Too bad we didn't have a good answer. Because it now looks as though we've been paying taxes for nothing. Of course, all taxpayers pay taxes for nothing…or next to nothing. But we didn't have to pay Maryland after all. We're going to ask for our money back.

*** Where would you rather live, dear reader, Paris, France, or Paris, Texas?

In Paris, France, you have art, culture, food, architecture, theatre, films, restaurants, cafés, bistros and museums. But Paris, Texas, has its charms too.

Actually, we can't think of any. But in Paris, France, you will pay $1 million or so for a 1,400 sq. ft. apartment with nothing in it. In Paris, Texas, on the other hand, for only $84,000 you can buy a 3-bedroom house, 1,352 sq. ft., with a laundry room, garage and patio.

We saw a photo of it in today's USA Today. Ugly as sin. Still, what do you expect for $84,000?

More to come…on the humbug of modern American win-win capitalism…on vernacular architecture…on the Wow Factor…and more!

Until then,

Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning

Bill Bonner is the founder and president of Agora Publishing, one of the world's most successful consumer newsletter publishing companies, and the author of the free daily e-mail The Daily Reckoning. Bill's passion for international travel and big ideas are reflected in the company he's successfully built. In 1979, he began publishing International Living and Hulbert's Financial Digest. Since then, Agora has grown to include dozens of newsletters focusing on finance, health and travel. Since the early '90s Bill has vigorously expanded from Agora's home base in Baltimore, opening offices in London, Paris, Bonn, Waterford, Ireland and Johannesburg, South Africa.

 

 

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