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2013: Rebuild Me A Crisis, One Dollar At A Time

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By: Brady Willett, FallStreet.com
 

GoldSeek.com
 

For the first time since 2007 the book value of the largest U.S. home builders is set to post an annual increase. This suggests that after a lost decade*, the worst is finally over.

Unfortunately, with the Federal Reserve actively suppressing interest rates and purchasing MBS and the U.S. government now in year four of $1 trillion+ deficits, potentially unstable footings have provided the framework for the recovery in U.S. housing market. For that matter, with home builders having grown their outstanding share count from approximately 1.2 billion shares in 2007 to more than 1.6 billion today, the sad reality is that there has been no book value increase on a per share basis. Put another way, a 142% increase is required for the above U.S. home builders to reach 2006 book value levels, but a 218% increase would be needed to do so on a per share basis (using an unfathomable 10% perpetual annual growth rate, U.S. homebuilders are 19-years away from matching the book value levels seen in 2006).

A distant cousin to ‘kick the can down the road’, the influx of cash generated from a successful stock dilution does not increase shareholder value. Rather, other things being equal the net benefit to shareholders from dilution, on a per share basis, is always nil. In a similar spirit, money out of thin air and/or running massive fiscal deficits does not increase economic output or jobs per se (Granted, more money and cheap debt can rouse phantasms of economic vigor over the near-term, but there is no precedent of a printing press or government debt issuance producing lasting economic benefit). In fact, grand printing schemes have historically, without exception, always failed miserably, and government debt accumulation has a tendency to produce slower growth relative to less indebted countries (See Reinhart and Rogoff).

All this said, the beguiling questions churning into focus today are as follows: what if money printing and excessive government borrowing no longer have a negative impact on exchange rates and government interest rates? What if a new paradigm of infinite fiat has somehow cured the tribulations that have accompanied government debt explosions in the past? Confused? Welcome to the outrageous contradiction that is 2013…

After The Booms and Busts, Rebuilding A Bubble

At the end of 1980 the Fed’s M2 reading was just over $1.6 trillion. When compared to U.S. nominal GDP of $3 trillion this meant that for every dollar (in this measure of the money supply) there was $1.88 in economic output. At or near record lows leading into 2013, it is clear that new dollars are having a diminishing effect on the economy, or that the Fed, as it prints, is diluting the dollars already in cicrulation.

Not to be outdone, the U.S. government has done its best to dilute the amount of economic output represented by each outstanding dollar of debt. In 1980 for every dollar in economic output (nominal) there was 31 cents in debt while today there is more Federal debt than there is economic output (and don’t even get us started on unfunded liabilities). Commonly observed as ‘debt/GDP’, a different twist here is GDP/Debt.

If an individual continually earned less with every new dollar borrowed they would quickly go bankrupt. This is not the case with the U.S. government. Over the last 112 years the U.S. government has run annual deficits 72% of the time and since 1980 deficits have occurred 88% of time. That the U.S. government has only managed to log 4 surpluses since 1980 and the baby boomer generation is just starting to place serious pressure on Social Security and Medicare does not bode well for the fiscal future of the United States.

If left unchecked the above trends alone are enough to worry that either a U.S. dollar and/or sovereign crisis is around the corner.

Why Bother Turning The Corner?

With the conclusion that fiscal and monetary machinations are past the point of the return – or that the Keynesians will not suddenly find a new religion – the only question regarding the brewing sovereign/currency crisis(es) is when. Here the crystal ball turns murky. After all, the Federal Reserve has been awarded a temporary reprieve from traditional monetary constraints thanks to two interrelated themes.

#1 The Competition Stinks

In 2007 reports of the dollar’s reserve currency demise were ripe as the Euro gained traction in central bank coffers. Today there are mainstream analysts forecasting the death of the Euro. These and other tails readily tell us that there is currently no serious challenge to the U.S. dollar! Moreover, the two greatest contenders – the Euro and Yen – are faced with problems far more serious and immediate than those aligned against the dollar. Thus, thanks to the sheer size of its markets and its relatively attractive fundamentals, the dollar is not so much the cleanest dirty shirt, but, at times, the only shirt large swaths of capital can wear.

#2 Fear of Breaking The Norm

Be it dreams of a gold dinar and pricing oil in Euros, or harsh words from countries like Brazil and Russia, a bevy of anti-dollar sentiments have taken shape in recent years. However, beyond central banks slowly pecking away at gold, not much has really changed: The vast majority of central banks carry more dollars than any other currency, the vast majority of institutional money prefers to run in the Treasury market, and key countries like China are loath to stop using the dollar and/or purchasing Treasuries due to the negative shock that doing so would wrought on their economies. With so many actors terrified of rocking the boat, grotesque debt is permitted to grow unfettered thanks to the nearly universal conclusion that ending USD hegemony now would cause a global crisis of unthinkable proportions.

In short, each new dollar and Treasury issue fortify the speculation that the day of reckoning is drawing near, even as pinpointing potential crisis’ catalysts remain elusive.

continue at GoldSeek.com:

http://news.goldseek.com/FallStreet/1358184058.php



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