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Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Poll ended at Thu 13 Mar 2008, 12:26:02

yes
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no
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Total votes : 39

Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 12 Feb 2008, 21:09:38

Wealth isn't destroyed it's transferred.

The wealth of resources of our planet in conjunction with our expanding knowledge and various economic systems has served to generate the abstract wealth we have today.

The root problem is we have a private debt based money system based on a central bank model which encourages cartel formation. Furthermore, these cartels can manipulate booms and busts in order to transfer wealth and power from the general public to the cartel. Yet further, the excessive boom phases also serve to deplete our resource base at a high rate and influence unmanagable population growth.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby CrudeAwakening » Tue 12 Feb 2008, 21:13:21

No actual money is lost (in aggregate) in a bear market. What is lost is the paper value of assets, or people's perception of wealth, which was based on a value which was mutually agreed by marginal market participants, and was always subject to renegotiation.

The money supply doesn't collapse when the stock market collapses, the only thing that changes is the ability to exchange claims on wealth (stocks) for a more liquid form of wealth (i.e. money) at values that were previously accepted.

No real wealth was lost when the Tulip mania subsided - instead, previously inflated perceptions of wealth were brought back to earth. But that's not to say that there aren't winners and losers during a bear market of course.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby BigTex » Tue 12 Feb 2008, 21:26:25

But wait, one measure of wealth is certainly the value-added as a result of human expertise manipulating natural resources, right?

And the banksters have applied that reasoning to their development of financial instruments--i.e., the banksters have taken basic financial instruments (the natural resources) and performed some value-added voodoo to make the underlying securities more valuable by packaging, repackaging, bundling, unbundling and all sorts of leveraging shenanigans. The bear market is, in turn, taking back the "wealth" that these instruments created, sort of like dumping oil back into a well after pumping it to the surface...right?

If this reasoning sounds strained, it is, but this is how this crap was sold in the first place. The elaborate financial intruments were sold as value-added to basic instruments as a result of the expertise of the developers of the financial instruments.

The wealth was never there in the first place.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby phaster » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 00:24:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'I')f the stock market or housing declines 'wiping out trillions of dollars of wealth' was there any money actually lost? Why? Why would it matter?


depends:

a) If ya were lucky enuf to short the market, I'd say NO!

b) I just looked up the definition of "wealth" using the built in dictionary application in OS X and it stated "an abundance of valuable possessions or money" so in case I'd say NO again, because unless you sell the stock or real estate, you still possess the object, but the market place has placed a lower value on the item.

the problem IMHO is when the market lowers the perceived value of stocks or real estate, then market players are less apt to participate, so the economic system grows less quickly, or if enuf players sit on the side lines, the market even begins to contract.

c) IF you entered the market and bought an asset such as real estate or stocks that have decline in value from the price point you entered at, AND do not have financial reserves to ride out a market down turn, THEN it sucks to be you!

BTW found an interesting article on economic bubbles, thought other people might interesting, it was done by a VC guy who saw the "dot com" crash, called the "sub prime" bubble and thinks the next big bubble is in alt energy and infrastructure.

The article was in this months harpers, but I found a PDF of the article on another website...

http://www.michaelstephens.net/docs/next_bubble.pdf
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby CrudeAwakening » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 03:22:16

Does the action of people bidding against each other in an auction, thereby raising the price of whatever asset they are bidding for, create wealth? Of course not.

Bidding up exchange values and creating wealth are different things. Similarly, bidding down exchange values and destroying wealth are different things.

Real wealth is inherent in an objects utility value; exchange value is secondary. There is more real wealth in $100 worth of food than there is in a $100 bank deposit, although their exchange value is the same.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby cube » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 04:09:52

A bull market is not representative of true wealth, instead it is only an illusion of wealth. A bear market is the collapse of a bull market which again is ONLY an illusion so no true wealth was actually destroyed.

A bull market is like selling all the furniture in your house to throw a party. You're guaranteed to have bang up party for the night but you're going to have a nasty hang over tomorrow morning or perhaps for the rest of the week. Furthermore you'll be recovering on the floor because remember you just sold off your furniture. :-D
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 04:53:42

Excellent points of view. Thanks! ; - )
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby cube » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 06:09:28

I think most people (not PO forum members but people in general) believe:
up == good
down == bad

I totally disagree. I think the most economically destructive actions are taken during the bull market phase. As what bankers like to joke: "Bad loans are made during good times."

Taking a no-doc 0% down payment adjustable rate home mortgage loan with negative amortization is a wealth destroyer not a creator. Lying about your income to buy a bigger house does NOT provide a stable foundation for future growth. See what I mean?

I think bull markets actually destroy wealth because that's when people act stupid and make bad investment decisions such as paying the financial equivalent of a house just for 1 tulip flower! (17th century tulip mania) However there is a delayed reaction from committing an action and actually feeling the consequences of action. Bull markets are when wealth is destroyed but the pain is not felt until in the bear market phase.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby mkwin » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 06:21:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ow is it possible that 61% (so far) think stocks or real estate do not have a "monetary or exchange value."? Never mind if you think it is a bubble, or is un-sustainable, or is frothy, or is abstract, or does not spring directly from Gaia's bosom. If you can buy it or sell it, it is a form of wealth by definition.


Exactly.

Equities and property are assets, in fact historically property (along with precious metals) was the only forms of wealth and, in economics, assets are wealth.

The valuation of these assets change based on current and expected economic conditions. The vast majority of bull markets are not financial bubbles and not all bull markets are based on unrealistic valuations but they are based on the prevailing economic conditions at the time. Is current the bull market in oil a bubble or based on economic realities? . As these conditions change the valuation of the assets change and these stores of wealth shrink or expand in value. Different stores of wealth have a greater risk of loss but that is reflected in the expected return.

The recent global property bull market has been partly based on a structural economic change in inflation and interest rates and partly speculation (i.e. bubble mentality) but property bear and bull markets have happened regularly for hundreds of years.

I propose the following assets are a store of wealth:

Precious metals
Property
Cash
Commodities
Government bonds
Equities
Corporate bonds
Futures, options and other financial instruments

This talk of ‘paper’ wealth is just nonsense. I would prefer to have paper government bonds hidden away in times of an economic depression than a cartload of gold that is going to get stolen by the hungry masses. Yes different assets have different risk profiles but you can’t claim some are ‘real’ while others are ‘paper’ wealth’.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby mkwin » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 06:27:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think bull markets actually destroy wealth because that's when people act stupid and make bad investment decisions such as paying the financial equivalent of a house just for 1 tulip flower! (17th century tulip mania) However there is a delayed reaction from committing an action and actually feeling the consequences of action. Bull markets are when wealth is destroyed but the pain is not felt until in the bear market phase.


Again, not all bull markets are comparable to a legendry bubble that occurred hundreds of years ago. More recent examples obviously include the dotcom bubble but, in general, you can count the amount of definitive bubbles on your fingers whereas there are thousands of clear bull markets. Is the gold bull market a bubble? What about copper or steel? What about grain? Are all of the recent bull markets a bubble? Of course not. Bull markets do not = bubble unless significant speculation is behind the price rises.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby cube » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 07:46:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mkwin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think bull markets actually destroy wealth because that's when people act stupid and make bad investment decisions such as paying the financial equivalent of a house just for 1 tulip flower! (17th century tulip mania) However there is a delayed reaction from committing an action and actually feeling the consequences of action. Bull markets are when wealth is destroyed but the pain is not felt until in the bear market phase.


Again, not all bull markets are comparable to a legendry bubble that occurred hundreds of years ago. More recent examples obviously include the dotcom bubble but, in general, you can count the amount of definitive bubbles on your fingers whereas there are thousands of clear bull markets. Is the gold bull market a bubble? What about copper or steel? What about grain? Are all of the recent bull markets a bubble? Of course not. Bull markets do not = bubble unless significant speculation is behind the price rises.
Okay so maybe the tulip mania is wee bit on the extreme side. I guess I should of explained better. A bull market is simply just a generic term. A bubble is more specifically when things get out of control and all common sense goes out the window. The dot com and housing boom were bubbles too although not as crazy. $150 for an e-commerce company stock that produces no profit. Giving out no-doc home loans. Yes I think those are examples of common-sense going waaaaaay out the window so that makes it a bubble according to my definition.

As for commodities we are currently in the bull market phase. When gold goes up to maybe $5000 / troy ounce then I'll call it a bubble but we're not there yet. EVERY bubble will eventually have "over-capacity". At the top of the housing boom there were more homes being built then sold. This caused a huge number of homes to just sit empty, aka excess supply. Getting back to commodities if for example world crude oil production capacity were to far outstrip demand then that would be a sign of a bubble. Correct me if I'm wrong but the last time we had an oil bubble "excess crude oil production capacity" was about 10% above demand. Using today's numbers we'd need over 8 mbpd of excess capacity to qualify as a "bubble". Currently we have only 1 mbpd. All those analysts within mainstream media calling this an "oil bubble" don't know what the hell they're talking about. I'm very bullish on commodities and yes where I allocate my investments definitely show it too. :)
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby mkwin » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 08:27:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')VERY bubble will eventually have "over-capacity".


Bubbles by definition are episodes of market mania where speculation is a key characteristic. Capacity is not really the issue the issue is an unrealistic market value driven higher by further speculation until reality hits home and the house of cards falls in on itself.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')ll those analysts within mainstream media calling this an "oil bubble" don't know what the hell they're talking about.


I don't think many people are suggesting the oil price is in a bubble. This was my point. People seem to equate rising asset and commodity values to 'froth' or a bubble but the vast majority of bull markets are not bubbles but based closely on economic drivers and realities.

I would also argue that $5000 for gold might not indicate a bubble. If there is a sustained period of economic crises it may be a fair value for a highly sought store of wealth. The only way it could be considered a bubble is if speculation drove the price higher as people were expecting the price to continue rising indefinitely.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby cube » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 08:57:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mkwin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')VERY bubble will eventually have "over-capacity".


Bubbles by definition are episodes of market mania where speculation is a key characteristic. Capacity is not really the issue the issue is an unrealistic market value driven higher by further speculation until reality hits home and the house of cards falls in on itself.
You are correct. Capacity and a market bubble are 2 completely different topics much like politics and money. But the 2 seem to compliment each other more times than not. In a bubble an asset/commodity price goes up way high. We can agree with that. If something goes up then everybody wants to make a profit off it. If tulips go up then people will grow tulip flowers. If homes go up then contractors will build more homes. An increase in prices leads to over-production. This is why I said a bubble will eventually have over-capacity. Oil is an exception because there are geological constraints of course. :P

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mkwin', 'I') would also argue that $5000 for gold might not indicate a bubble. If there is a sustained period of economic crises it may be a fair value for a highly sought store of wealth.
hmm..you do have a point. Who knows? If the US dollar losses it's status as the world reserve currency then $5000 for gold might look cheap! Most US dollars are actually over seas and not within US borders. If the world "dumped" the dollar all that money would come rushing back into the USA causing seriously nasty inflation.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 10:41:17

Bull markets are turned into bubbles when they become one way bets! ; - )
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby Doly » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 11:00:22

My two pennies:

According to the definition of wealth posted, wealth are the things that have a monetary value.

A bear market destroys money, obviously. The question is: does it also destroy the things that cost money?

Obviously, not immediately. If something is repriced, even if it's given away for free when it was expensive before, it isn't destroyed.

But as a secondary effect, if some stuff that you own is repriced to a lower value, you will feel less wealthy, and that will change your decisions about how to use your money. Specifically, you are likely to spend less money, and in particular, you may invest less to create things with a monetary value, or to maintain the stuff you already have. For example, if the value of your home drops catastrophically, you may feel less inclined to do those home improvements you were thinking of or you may stop doing maintenance repairs. Same thing applies to a company that chooses to lay off staff and trim operations.

So, as a secondary effect, bear markets destroy wealth.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby phaster » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 13:45:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mkwin', '
')I propose the following assets are a store of wealth:

Precious metals
Property
Cash
Commodities
Government bonds
Equities
Corporate bonds
Futures, options and other financial instruments

This talk of ‘paper’ wealth is just nonsense. I would prefer to have paper government bonds hidden away in times of an economic depression than a cartload of gold that is going to get stolen by the hungry masses. Yes different assets have different risk profiles but you can’t claim some are ‘real’ while others are ‘paper’ wealth’.



IMHO ya missed the most important one which is "knowledge and education" that is because you can take it where ever ya go, and with "knowledge and education" its is possible to build a store of wealth
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby yesplease » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 16:37:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', 'B')ut as a secondary effect, if some stuff that you own is repriced to a lower value, you will feel less wealthy, and that will change your decisions about how to use your money. Specifically, you are likely to spend less money, and in particular, you may invest less to create things with a monetary value, or to maintain the stuff you already have. For example, if the value of your home drops catastrophically, you may feel less inclined to do those home improvements you were thinking of or you may stop doing maintenance repairs. Same thing applies to a company that chooses to lay off staff and trim operations.

So, as a secondary effect, bear markets destroy wealth.
Like others have mentioned, if it's a true bear market, and not a bubble, take something like Rhodium compared to housing in the states, there won't be any significant drop in price to the point where people with these assets neglect or walk away from them.

In a bubble however, assets are overvalued and eventually have to come down to earth, so to speak. Lets say, as an example, we use one of those abandoned tract homes as an example. People buy in at 350k, can't keep up with payments, and the place is abandoned, and there's maintenance repairs that the places goes without. According to our economy, the price of the home will eventually drop until it's sold. At that point, the seller will likely fix up what was ignored before, so, while asset integrity may have dropped on the short term, it will likely still be recouped on the long term. The largest shift IMO is that significant amounts of wealth changes hands. I suppose it could be said that going w/o certain maintenance repairs could result in disproportionately larger repairs at some later point in time, compared to doing them when they need to be done, but on the other hand, building a large amount of houses at once may also have been less costly than building them in smaller numbers over a longer time. Rising energy costs may also cut into any loss of wealth as a result of disporportionate repairs due to a bubble.

I think with a high degree of confidence that it depends, but as a whole no wealth is lost due to bubbles. There may be a slight loss or gain in wealth depending on local conditions, but unless we carpet bomb the unused houses I don't see how a significant amount of wealth can be lost.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby LoneSnark » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 18:14:56

As I understand it, a brear market implies that, in general, society has been wreckless with its investment and instead of creating wealth by producing what people want it has destroyed it by producing what people do not want.

As such, a bear market itself is not destructive, but it is a sign that society as a whole has been destructive in the immediate past.

Now, it does not end there; a bear market curtails investments, sometimes to zero, so further wealth creation is being prevented, but it is not being destroyed.

Now, if your average recession becomes a monetary depression then real wealth is being destroyed in droves, as companies producing what people want and need go bankrupt due to their customers inability to find cash (see the early 1930s for a 'money drought').
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby kmann » Thu 14 Feb 2008, 16:39:03

Hurricanes, earthquakes, tornados, and wars destroy wealth. Bear markets do not. However, they may inhibit the ability to produce more wealth.
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Re: Do bear markets destroy wealth?

Unread postby MrBill » Mon 18 Feb 2008, 07:18:35

Every transaction involves a buyer and a seller. The buyer benefits when they buy a share or a house and it goes up in price, but the seller does not.

Conversely, when the seller sells to the buyer and the price of the share or house falls the buyer is worse off, but the seller still has the proceeds from the sale price.

Therefore, bear markets by definition cannot destroy wealth. They help to re-distribute wealth from buyers to sellers.

However, as assets can be used as collateral for the purposes of borrowing money a fall in asset prices makes the underlying loan more risky. Less collateral value to cover the value of the loan. The borrower may still repay the loan as agreed, but it increases the likelihood of default.

It matters as the price of any asset is negotiable, but the value of the debt is absolute. If the asset price falls below the value of the debt then the debtor can default on that pledge, but real wealth is destroyed as the lender has to re-coup that loss from their own assets or accumulated wealth. Therefore, falling markets tend to increase the relative value of debt in real terms.

On the other hand it would be wrong for governments to artificially support asset prices - equity or houses for example - because this is just really discriminating against one class of asset holders for the benefit of another. Homeowners at the expense of renters and would be house buyers that have been priced out of the market for first time buyers. Stock buyers at the expense of sellers who correctly calculated - or guessed - that the stock's current price did not accurately reflect the present value of the company's future earnings. Speculators and borrowers at the expense of savers and value-investors.

kmann wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')urricanes, earthquakes, tornados, and wars destroy wealth. Bear markets do not. However, they may inhibit the ability to produce more wealth.


Yes, contrary to popular belief these natural disasters actually do destroy wealth even if they generate a positive GDP just like divorces (I think this example was given as well) do not create any wealth.

If a house is destroyed and needs to be rebuilt then this may appear on paper like an increase in GDP, but if that house were not destroyed then it would still be an economic asset as its owner/occupant would not be paying rent, and the money needed to replace that house would be deployed profitably (we hope) elsewhere. If there were no natural disasters, and far fewer fires, then insurance premiums would fall and collectively we would all pay less insurance and therefore have more disposable income to save, spend or invest.

Ditto for a divorce. Although on paper it appears to create economic value-added for the lawyer that is just accumulated wealth that is expropriated per se from the couple that is getting a divorce. They both end up poorer as the lawyers take their cut of their assets. If not for the costs of the divorce then that couple would have more accumulated savings, and if monetized, that capital could be put to work to earn more income over time.

And the same arguments would go for wars. Yes, wars destroy stuff, and it creates GDP to replace that stuff. Sometimes with newer and better stuff. But the value of stuff destroyed is lost. Had that war not occured then supposedly that land, labor, capital and know-how would be profitably (we hope) deployed to raising living standards and creating wealth through growth in other areas of the economy like educating students instead of re-building water and sewer systems that have been destroyed - i.e. their useful economic life cut short.

Even if the amounts spent on the military-defense complex are large that money is better spent on improving living standards than destroying infrastructure that needs to be re-built again. Some useful technology may result as an after-thought of military spending, but that same technology can be generated in the civilian world at a fraction of the cost and without the necessary waste of war. Dropping bombs and destroying military hardware are costs. Not investments.

However, even paid market pundits that should know better get the basics wrong. No wonder we often find that public policy is at dramatic odds to our long-term financial well-being?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ow do you collect those income taxes early?
Give taxpayers strong incentives to do in-service rollovers from their 401(k) balances to self-directed IRAs. This provision is already available in many employers' plans and there is no reason you would have to stop contributing to your 401(k) and enjoying the matching contributions as you get vested.

The next step is to convert those IRAs to Roth IRAs, settling your future tax liabilities immediately. The Treasury could remove the age and income tests to simplify this process and Congress could easily offer some incentives (spread the taxes over a few years, offer a lower tax rate if you do it this year, or some creative strategy) to savers.

At this point, wise investors will have a wider choice of investments at their discount brokers. They might even choose to reallocate their investments to cash or sectors that might profit in a bear market. It's your money; you will have to live on it in retirement; you can choose how to invest it; just don't withdraw your savings and spend them before retirement.

Everybody wins
The taxpayers get more control over their investments; both the state and federal governments will add to their coffers, and these employee benefit plans might actually benefit employees.


A $4 trillion win-win-win plan to pay for economic stimulus

So if everyone sells to protect themselves from a bear market who is buying? 'What a maroon', as Bugs Bunny would say!

(see my response at the very bottom) ; - ))
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