by MonteQuest » Sun 03 Jul 2005, 13:35:01
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', ' ')The trade deficit assures this will correct. We don't know when.
Here are the three choices to correct the trade deficit.
1. Increase exports over 50%.
2. Increase the savings rate here so we don't have to borrow from foreign central banks.
3. Increase interest rates.
#3 is what we are doing, along with protectionist legislation (tariffs). However, raising short-term rates is not having an effect in long-term rates (Greenspans's conundrum) as they are controlled by the international bond market and the "carry-trade" I spoke of before.
I know of no other mechanism to correct this deficit. If they raise rates too far or too fast, it will send us into a recession and collapse the housing market bubble.
Cross your little fingers!

A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
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MonteQuest
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by MonteQuest » Sun 17 Jul 2005, 15:47:11
Well, let's see how things are panning out.
On December 13, 2004, I posted this thread and made this prediction;
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ince virtually all commodities use petroleum fuel to move from production to consumption, as fuel prices rise whether by market forces or by currency decisions by OPEC to offset the loss in revenue as the dollar declines due to our trade imbalance, all commodity prices must also rise. Whew! What a mouthful! This will create inflation. To curb the inflation, the Fed will raise interest rates.
Oil in December : $41.01
Oil is now: $57.80
Interest rates on December 13, 2004 were: 2.18%
Interest rates July 3, 2005 : 3.36%
From the intitial post, my next prediction:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd as the price of food and other essential commodities rise--along with house payments tied to variable rate mortgages--luxuries and dispensable goods and services will drop out of the family budgets and the standard of living will decline and unemployment will rise.
Currently, the CPI does not include food/energy so the inflation is "hidden." The 20 year bond is 4.35%, as the short-term rate approaches the long-term rate, the carry trade will be risky to investors. How long can low interest rates and easy credit fuel our consumption and GDP growth?
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
by MonteQuest » Fri 22 Jul 2005, 19:48:54
The Federal Reserve has outsourced another American job. China will now dictate the value of the U.S. dollar. The raising of long-term interest rates is now the providence of China. In the short-term especially, the U.S. trade deficit will rise. Why you ask? As the dollar drops our exports become cheaper. Won’t that narrow the deficit?
No, this small devaluation will not move the factories that make the products American’s consume back here; we will just pay more for them. The U.S. trade deficit exists because the factories that produce the real production are increasingly in other countries. We cannot compete with third-world wages making first world products.
Americans cannot go on borrowing from foreign central banks to buy Chinese goods forever. To fix this imbalance, we must do one of three things:
1. Export more and import less.
2. Increase the US savings rate. Borrow at home.
3. Increase interest rates.
The FED tried raising short-term rates as I predicted. It didn’t work; created Greenspan's "conundrum." So now they pulled off a new tact; get the Chinese to raise them for us. Now this has some far-reaching consequences.
When the Chinese revalued the yuan, more than US$200 billion of purchasing power was lost. That $200 billion is the decline in value of U.S. dollar M-3 alone; a broad measure of money supply. If you had your money in dollar denominated assets on the morning of July 20, 2005, you were 2% poorer by the time you left for work.
Here’s what I predicted on Dec 13, 2004:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', 'A')nd as the price of food and other essential commodities rise--along with house payments tied to variable rate mortgages--luxuries and dispensable goods and services will drop out of the family budgets and the standard of living will decline and unemployment will rise.
Here’s what Peter Schiff is C.E.O. and Chief Global Strategist at Euro Pacific Capital, Inc. predicted today as a result of the revaluation::
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '1'). Higher consumer prices.
2. Higher interest rates.
3. Reduced profits for American companies, particularly those dependent on domestic consumption and consumer debt.
4. Lower stock prices, as earnings decline and multiples contract.
5. The busting of the housing bubble, as tighter credit standards and higher interest rates squeeze current home prices.
6. Rising unemployment, as higher interest rates and vanishing home equity slow consumer spending and reduce jobs dependant on that spending.
7. A severe recession as a result of all of the above.
8. Rising federal budget deficits, as recession reduces tax revenue, while higher interest rates and escalating outlays increase expenditures.
Link
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
by MonteQuest » Tue 26 Jul 2005, 17:41:50
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Dezakin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')o, this small devaluation will not move the factories that make the products American’s consume back here; we will just pay more for them. The U.S. trade deficit exists because the factories that produce the real production are increasingly in other countries. We cannot compete with third-world wages making first world products.
Your protectionist US-centric rhetoric is as boring as it is inaccurate, as well as being at odds with your other views. I'm finding it difficult to see what you're arguing except perhaps 'America is going down!'
I am
not a protectionist, nor do I support that view. My statements reflect the consensus of the leading financial markets and the raw facts.
If not for the dollar hegemony, we would already be down. So far, my predictions from Dec 2004 have been spot on. My track record speaks for itself. I misrepresent nothing.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
by MonteQuest » Thu 25 Aug 2005, 16:38:04
Here’s what I predicted on Dec 13, 2004:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd as the price of food and other essential commodities rise--along with house payments tied to variable rate mortgages--luxuries and dispensable goods and services will drop out of the family budgets and the standard of living will decline and unemployment will rise.
Gas prices alone are causing the budgets to change. Even "tipping your waitress" is being cut out.
Gas gripes: readers speak up Readers weigh in on how rising prices at the pump have taken a toll on their lives.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')I am a waitress and my husband works at a lumber yard. He commutes 35 miles round trip every day, 5 days a week. I work at a huge truck stop. Not only are we paying a lot more for gas, my tips are suffering badly. Truck drivers are paying sky-high prices for diesel and guess what, leaving a tip for dinner is an option that they are choosing to do away with. I'm paying more for groceries and everything else, and making less money."
LinkAnd then there is heating oil and natural gas following on the heels of this summer's steep prices at the pump.
Winter forecast for heating homes: costly$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')or low-income individuals, the prospect of higher heating prices is daunting. "Combined with the price of gasoline, low-income people are getting battered," says Jim Nolan, director of the Montana's energy assistance program in Helena.
One of those is Annette Hayden, a resident of Lewistown, Mont. Ms. Hayden, a working single mother with two young boys, is already behind on her utility bill from the summer. "I owe Northwestern Energy $135, and I am paying them $50 to $75 now," she says. "I just can't pay in full."
Like many low-income wage earners, Hayden uses the federal earned-income tax credit to pay off her bills. She also receives help from the federal Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). But two years ago, she got so far behind that the utility threatened to turn off her electricity. "I went to a local church to get $300," she says.
Link
Unemployment is hard to gauge as the books are "cooked". Tell will tell very soon. The carry trade and the housing bubble are still fueling the consumption.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
by Snowrunner » Thu 25 Aug 2005, 20:45:15
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Dezakin', '
')We've seen the threat of the rise of China in the rise of Japan in the 80's and the rise of the post-war european economies in the 60's, and still US manufacturing capacity has actually grown year on year for the past century, and even the last decade. The only thing that is being lost is manufacturing jobs.
What about farm jobs? The only things really that are still being made in the US (or may western nations for that matter) are products that are "time critical".
The last Computer I bought from Apple shipped from China, that wasn't a cheap Mac Mini, but rather a Powerbook for serious dough.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')ou seem to misrepresent all economic data to illustrate doom thats nonexistant, and apparently Riccardian comparative advantage just doesn't happen in your universe.
Just a suggestion: Go to your local $store and have a look at the merchandise, see where it comes from, if you get a chance, go into a major distribution center for say, Walmart etc. and have a look at all those boxes and see where they originate.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')here is a housing bubble, but when it pops it wont spell the implosion of the US economy. The dollar is overvalued with respect to the yuan, but when it adjust it wont spell the end of the US economy either. Everything you see you believe more fragine than a soap bubble, and that just isn't the case.
Two things are keeping the US right now afloat:
1. China needs more time to bring more people from the land into the cities and "prosper" more.
2. The US is STILL the biggest market and Oil is still being traded in USD.
There already has been some rumbling about changing from USD to Euro (and some countries actually have started doing this, granted, those are the ones that don't like the US at all, like, say Iraq, Cuba or North Korea), but the reality is that even OPEC had a slip up or two where they were contemplating this.
Right now the US has a VERY sweet deal, you print the money and get goods for it for practically nothing. Where do people have to go to spend the money? Right, back into the US.
With the increasing defecit though the desire of people to invest money in the US will decrease, especially if they don't think they can get a reeturn for their money, or the USD turns into Monopoly money.
If I'd live in the US right now I'd be afraid, very afraid. Peak Oil (I agree) will be a slow process, with some ups and downs, but there are some VERY serious threats that exist today for the US economy and the moment either OPEC or China decide to pull the plug watch yourself going down the drain.
What scenarios would cause this?
1. Warning shot by china.
If the US continues it saber ratteling they may just dump some of their reserves as a "warning", a good motivation for this would be Taiwan that still only exists because of US protection.
2. China needs more oil.
Again, it could just dump SOME of the USD reserves onto the market, and maybe buy Euros instead. China will be the second largest oil importer soon (if not already) and there are still more people living in China than in all of North America, if China wants oil and can pay OPEC in a good way, why stick with the USD?
When (not if) the housing bubbles burst and the economy does go into a recession (or even depression) China will look for other ways to sell their goods and services, and if the US is not a major contributor anymore and is already on the floor, why not knock 'em out by dumping all of your USD reserves and other investments, deal a couple of years with the rest of the world, then pick up the pieces and move on.
America isn't so much threatened by terrorists, but by her own gluttony over the years.
by MonteQuest » Thu 01 Sep 2005, 01:50:32
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Montequest', 'A')nd as the price of food and other essential commodities rise--along with house payments tied to variable rate mortgages--luxuries and dispensable goods and services will drop out of the family budgets and the standard of living will decline and unemployment will rise.
Fears rise that U.S. standard of living falling$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ASHINGTON - U.S. workers are dissatisfied with the economy and fear their standard of living is declining, according to a survey released Tuesday by the AFL-CIO.
The labor organization's survey of 805 workers found widespread dissatisfaction with their economic situation, even as other indexes show rising consumer confidence and a more plentiful job market.
Rising health care costs, gasoline prices and job outsourcing weighed on the minds of those surveyed by the AFL-CIO.
Seventy percent of those surveyed said their salaries are not keeping pace with rising costs, and 69 percent said most new jobs do not offer good pay or benefits.
Link
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."