海角大神

Retreat from stock market, impending European implosion worrying

An overall retreat from the US stock market, coupled with worries of a global recession and bear market has Bonner predicting investors won鈥檛 be getting off the hook very easily. The odds are high enough for him to advise wise investors to start looking for cover.

|
Emilio Morenatti/AP
A demonstrator encourages drivers to blow their horns in front the Caixa Bank during a protest in Barcelona, Spain, March 31, 2012. The European Union urged Spain Thursday to come clean on how it plans to finance the overhaul of its banking sector. European instability, possibly leading to a global recession, has Bonner advising investors to look for cover.

Yesterday, we promised to tell you more about our L-shaped non-recovery. It鈥檚 already lasted 5 years since subprime cracked up鈥 It could last another 5鈥10鈥20鈥谤 even 100 years.

Okay, 100 is probably an exaggeration, but who knows?

鈥淎n About-Face for Investors,鈥 says The Wall Street Journal.

As predicted in this space, the 鈥Facebook debacle turns high hopes into potentially mood-souring skepticism.鈥

鈥淩etreat from the stock market continues,鈥 reports The New York Times:

鈥淚鈥檓 just extremely skeptical about the ability of a retail purchaser to be able to play on a level field in the market,鈥 said [Alex] Tsesis, who is 45 and lives in Chicago. 鈥淚鈥檓 just trying to get out of stocks.鈥

Investors had a chance to think over the long weekend. When the markets opened on Tuesday morning, they were ready to act. The Dow rose 125 points. Gold dropped $20. They dumped Facebook.

But it hardly matters. Up one day. Down the next. Who cares? The big trend is what matters. And the big trend now, we believe, is down. Down for stocks. Down for the economy.

When this happens, it can last a very long time. For evidence, we give you exhibit #1 鈥 Japan!

Yesterday, The Financial Times reported that a thousand yen invested in stocks in 1985, 鈥渆ven including dividends and inflation鈥 has made exactly nothing.鈥

Colleague Justice Litle elaborates:

鈥淪tocks for the long run鈥 is a mantra of conventional investors everywhere. It is also the name of a book by Wharton finance professor (and babbling permabull) Jeremy Siegel.

Whenever the market outlook grows cloudy, or even downright bleak, we are urged to remember: It鈥檚 the long run that counts.

And yet, how鈥檚 this for 鈥渓ong run:鈥 A yen-denominated investment in Japanese stocks, made in 1985, has been dead money for 27 years.

Japan鈥檚 dead presidents have gone nowhere鈥nd made nothing for investors. They have been dead鈥ead鈥ead鈥or an entire generation.

鈥淚f it can happen to Japanese stocks,鈥 asks Justice, 鈥渃ould it happen to American ones?鈥

Certainly 鈥 there is no real reason why not.

America has already 鈥渢urned Japanese鈥 in respect to perpetual ZIRP (zero interest rate monetary policy). Structural unemployment issues, and the utter failure of stimulus programs 鈥 so much for 鈥渟hovel ready!鈥 鈥 resemble the Japanese experience. Like their Japanese counterparts, American policy makers have no new ideas鈥 only tired old bad ones.

Back in the USA, investors are leaving the stock market. Mutual fund outflows continue at a rate of about $3 billion a month. The Dow is almost back to where it began the year. Trading volume is subdued.

As of last Friday, Facebook shares were down about 16% from the IPO price. Yesterday, they kept going down, closing below $29. The WSJ continues:

鈥淔acebook鈥檚 banged-up share price and the technical snarls that bollixed up the stock鈥檚 first day of trading on the Nasdaq鈥ave left some small investors even more glum鈥︹

They鈥檙e probably not nearly as glum now as they will be later. The Dow is still above 12,000; stocks may not be at their peak, but they are far from their bottom. You鈥檒l know it when you get to a real bottom. Investors are so glum you have to hide their guns. That鈥檚 when you get P/E ratios of 5 and dividend yields of 5%. That鈥檚 when you get bargains. Someday, unless this really is a new era, they will be real bargains. This day they are not.

The WSJ is wrong鈥谤 perhaps premature. Investors have not done an about face. Not yet. They鈥檝e wheeled around a few degrees from their comfortable bullish trajectory of a few months ago. But they will have to keep turning in order to change course by a full 180 degrees. Then, watch out below!

What could make investors spin further against stocks? Two things:

First, Europe could blow up much worse than people expect. The eurozone has been on the brink of disaster for so long, most people think it will stay on the brink forever鈥s if there were an invisible barrier that keeps them from going over the edge.

We are connoisseurs of disaster here at The Daily Reckoning. Not that we like them; we just appreciate them. They clear away a lot of dead wood. And, yes, dead presidents. People invest badly. They spend unwisely. All is well 鈥檛il the disaster hits. Then, the dead presidents disappear.

One thing we鈥檝e noticed is that disasters seem to take longer than you expect to start鈥nd then they move faster than you anticipated. Remember the dot.com blow-up? You could see it coming for years. Then, when it happened鈥t blew up fast. Poof鈥undreds of billions in dead presidents鈥one!

So too the collapse of the housing industry 鈥 particularly those 鈥榣ow-docs, cash back, subprime mortgages鈥 鈥 was visible long before it happened. We waited. We waited. And we waited some more. And then, when the catastrophe began, things happened so fast we couldn鈥檛 keep up with them.

The breakdown in Europe could happen fast too.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know about you,鈥 said a hedge fund manager we talked to last weekend, 鈥渂ut if I were in Greece, I鈥檇 be looking for a way to get my money out of the country. There鈥檚 a very good chance the Greeks will convert euro deposits to drachma. They will probably close the banks. The Greeks will probably riot and burn banks鈥f not bankers.

鈥淪o, what would you do if you were in Spain鈥谤 Italy? Wouldn鈥檛 you be trying to read the handwriting on the wall too? And wouldn鈥檛 you want to get your money out too?

鈥淥f course you would. That鈥檚 why the Swiss are talking about imposing negative interest rates, to try to discourage other Europeans from exchanging their euros from Swiss francs.

鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to look very far ahead to see what would happen. Just wait 鈥檛il people start lining up in front of the banks to get their money out. If you were in Athens and you saw people lining up to get their money out of the banks鈥ouldn鈥檛 you get in line too? Most people would. And the banks don鈥檛 have enough money to honor all those depositors鈥 claims. So the banks have to go broke鈥nd the whole thing falls down hard.鈥

According to the news media, everyone is making plans for when Greece says auf wiedersehen to the euro. But even an 鈥渙rderly鈥 exit of Greece from the euro is estimated to cost $1 trillion. And there isn鈥檛 enough money in all the banks in Euroland to pay for a disorderly exit.

Which is one reason we鈥檙e keeping our 鈥淐rash Alert鈥 flag flying.

The other major reason for guarding against a crash is this: all the world鈥檚 major economies are approaching recession.

Old friend Marc Faber says he expects a global recession either in the last quarter of this year or early in 2013. Asked about the odds, Faber put them at 鈥100%.鈥

One hundred percent does not sound like odds to us. It sounds like certainty. We doubt anything in economics is that sure. But let鈥檚 say the odds of a 鈥榮ynchronized worldwide recession鈥 are only 50%. That still puts a lot of empty space between today鈥檚 stock prices and a recession-inspired bottom. We wouldn鈥檛 want to be standing in that space, lest the market crash down upon our heads.

You know, dear reader, that it is futile to make predications, especially about the future, as Yogi Berra would say. But heck, we鈥檒l take a guess. The euro zone won鈥檛 fall apart鈥t least, not completely. The Germans will give way. It won鈥檛 be pretty. No 鈥榚legant solution鈥 will be found. Instead, an awkward, ugly鈥ven grotesque鈥ombination of concessions, compromise, and craven corruption will keep the European project together. In fact, it will be more together than ever. Francois Hollande and Angela Merkel will find a way to preserve the union. Most likely, the Europeans will learn from the US. They will write a huge check to member states to cover鈥谤 partially cover鈥he debts of the past. The union will be responsible for the debts of, say, Greece or Ireland. It will be a scheme vaguely reminiscent of the Brady Bonds, or Alexander Hamilton鈥檚 takeover of state debt after the American Revolution, with new debt backed by the EU鈥f extremely long duration (long enough to allow inflation to cut down the real value of the bonds.) The debts of the future, on the other hand, will be the responsibility of member states (lenders beware!). Everyone can save face. Lenders (banks) will get their money (more or less). Borrowers can avoid disorderly defaults and bankruptcy (more or less). And Germany and France can hold onto their beloved European Union (more or less) 鈥nd still not be on the hook for Greek behavior going forward.

But as to the second danger 鈥 that of a global recession and bear market 鈥 investors won鈥檛 be so lucky. The odds may not be 100%, but they are high enough so that a wise investor will take cover.

Beware the disappearance of dead presidents in a crash. Then, beware again: the dead presidents could stay dead for a long, long time.

Regards,

Bill Bonner
听蹿辞谤 The Daily Reckoning

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Retreat from stock market, impending European implosion worrying
Read this article in
/Business/The-Daily-Reckoning/2012/0601/Retreat-from-stock-market-impending-European-implosion-worrying
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe