Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Grantham Nails It: "The Industry So Much Prefers Bullishness...So Does The Press"

Grantham Nails It: "The Industry So Much Prefers Bullishness...So Does The Press":

In his most recent quarterly letter titled appropriately enough "The Longest Quarterly Letter Ever" GMO's Jeremy Grantham literally kills it. Well, maybe not literally but certainly metaphorically.


Do yourself a favor and read the whole thing cover to cover, but in the meantime here is a choice selection:








Believe in history. In investing Santayana is right: history repeats and repeats, and forget it at your peril. All bubbles break, all investment frenzies pass away. You absolutely must ignore the vested interests of the industry and the inevitable cheerleaders who will assure you that this time it’s a new high plateau or a permanently higher level of productivity, even if that view comes from the Federal Reserve itself. No. Make that, especially if it comes from there. The market is gloriously inefficient and wanders far from fair price but eventually, after breaking your heart and your patience (and, for professionals, those of their clients too), it will go back to fair value. Your task is to survive until that happens.



...








Try to contain natural optimism. Optimism has probably been a positive survival characteristic. Our species is optimistic, and successful people are probably more optimistic than average. Some societies are also more optimistic than others: the U.S. and Australia are my two picks. I’m sure (but I’m glad I don’t have to prove it) that it has a lot to do with their economic success. The U.S. in particular encourages risk-taking: failed entrepreneurs are valued, not shunned. While 800 internet start-ups in the U.S. rather than Germany’s more modest 80 are likely to lose a lot more money, a few of those 800 turn out to be today’s Amazons and Facebooks. You don’t have to be better; the laws of averages will look after it for you. But optimism comes with a downside, especially for investors: optimists don’t like to hear bad news. Tell a European you think there’s a housing bubble and you’ll have a reasonable discussion. Tell an Australian and you’ll have World War III. Been there, done that! And in a real stock bubble like that of 2000, bearish news in the U.S. will be greeted like news of the bubonic plague; bearish professionals will be fired just to avoid the dissonance of hearing the bear case, and this is an example where the better the case is made, the more unpleasantness it will elicit. Here again it is easier for an individual to stay cool than it is for a professional who is surrounded by hot news all day long (and sometimes irate clients too). Not easy, but easier.



...








Resist the crowd: cherish numbers only. We can agree that in real life as opposed to theoretical life, this is the hardest advice to take: the enthusiasm of a crowd is hard to resist. Watching neighbors get rich at the end of a bubble while you sit it out patiently is pure torture. The best way to resist is to do your own simple measurements of value, or find a reliable source (and check their calculations from time to time). Then hero-worship the numbers and try to ignore everything else. Ignore especially short-term news: the ebb and flow of economic and political news is irrelevant. Stock values are based on their entire future value of dividends and earnings going out many decades into the future. Shorter-term economic dips have no appreciable long-term effect on individual companies, let alone the broad asset classes that you should concentrate on. Leave those complexities to the professionals, who will on average lose money trying to decipher them



...








If you can be patient and ignore the crowd, you will likely win. But to imagine you can, and to then adopt a flawed approach that allows you to be seduced or intimidated by the crowd into jumping in late or getting out early is to guarantee a pure disaster. You must know your pain and patience thresholds accurately and not play over your head. If you cannot resist temptation, you absolutely MUST NOT manage your own money. There are no Investors Anonymous meetings to attend.



...








On the other hand, if you have patience, a decent pain threshold, an ability to withstand herd mentality, perhaps one credit of college level math, and a reputation for common sense, then go for it. In my opinion, you hold enough cards and will beat most professionals (which is sadly, but realistically, a relatively modest hurdle) and may even do very well indeed.



...








the current U.S. capitalist system appears to contain some potentially fatal flaws. Therefore, we should ask what it would take for our system to evolve in time to save our bacon. Clearly, a better balance with regulations would be a help. This requires reasonably enlightened regulations, which are unlikely to be produced until big money’s influence in Congress, and particularly in elections, decreases. This would necessitate legal changes all the way up to the Supreme Court. It’s a long haul, but a handful of other democratic countries in northern Europe have been successful, and with the stakes so high we have little alternative but to change our ways.



...








Karl Marx went on and on about the tendency of capitalism to so fixate on growth that in time it would forget the need to put on a friendly face for society and would drive home too clearly and brutally its advantage over labor. Ironically, in some way he and Engels looked forward to globalization and the supranational company because they argued it would make capitalism even more powerful, over reaching, and eventually reckless. It would, they claimed, offer the capitalists more rope to hang themselves with or, rather, to be hung with, in the workers’ revolution. The rope for the job, they suggested with black humor, would be bought from briskly competing capitalists, eager till the end for a good deal. Well, time marches on and it’s going to be hard to have a workers’ revolution with no workers. Organizing robotic machine tools will not be easy. However, Marx and Engels certainly got the part right about globalization and the supranational company increasing the power of capital at the expense of labor. To interfere with Marx’s apocalyptic vision, we need some enlightened governmental moderation of the new globalized Juggernaut (even slightly enlightened would be encouraging) before capitalism gets so cocky that we have some serious social reaction.



...








Capitalism, by ignoring the finite nature of resources and by neglecting the long-term well-being of the planet and its potentially crucial biodiversity, threatens our existence. Fifty and one-hundred-year horizons are important despite the “tyranny of the discount rate,” and grandchildren do have value. My conclusion is that capitalism does admittedly do a thousand things better than other systems: it only currently fails in two or three. Unfortunately for us all, even a single one of these failings may bring capitalism down and us with it.



...








the S&P 500 is materially overpriced, with an imputed return on our 7-year forecast of about 1% real, and because the high quality quarter of the S&P is priced to deliver 5.5% real (about a fair return), the 75% balance of the S&P has a slightly negative return. The rest of the world’s equities were (when I sat down to write this in January) on average slightly cheap at close to 7% real, so that non U.S. equities plus U.S. quality stocks offered a slightly higher average return than normal (a normal mix is about 6.1% real). (Today, after a dazzling rally, the forecast for the same global equity mix has dropped by 1.1%, to very slightly expensive.)



....








The 800-pound gorilla (the one that prefers bond holders to bamboo) is not in the room yet, but you can hear him thumping his chest up in the hills. He will come eventually, and before he does, you should remember that stocks are underrated inflation hedges. The underlying corporations have real assets, employ real people, and sometime even make real things, although a good idea embedded in a small thing (like an iPad) or a service is just as good. Equities have been tested over and over again in different places and in different decades and they have always been found to be very effective hedges. Serious resources – oil and copper in the ground and forestry and farmland – will almost certainly also be good and very probably much better than broad stocks in the short run. Gold may be good too.... But for stocks to work dependably as inflation hedges one has to have a several-year time horizon: in the short term, rising inflation can hurt stocks badly, for as mentioned last quarter, inflation is usually a powerful negative behavioral input. Investors hate jumps in inflation because they sharply raise the levels of uncertainty.



...








When I read the 120 contradictory bits of advice in the Financial Times alone, I find myself asking the question: who is an expert? To the extent that anyone has profitably specialized in this type of problem, I suppose it is George Soros. There are also, in my opinion, one or two investment management groups that seem to talk sense (which groups will go nameless for weasely competitive reasons). This is the problem: these probable experts are much more worried than the general market. This fact is giving rise to a new, tentative but definitely uncomfortable theory: perhaps the default assumption when dealing with ignorance or lack of confidence and skill is to assume everything will muddle through okay. Certainly we were amazed by this attitude generally displayed by the world (and most competitors) in the build-up to the 2000 and 2008 bubbles. Now we at GMO are calmly sitting around playing equities by the numbers, which are not too bad, and the market in general seems quite relaxed, while those few who look like experts on this crisis are pulling out their hair in fright. As I said, this is just a theory. But it is scary.



... and the punchline ....








The U.S. market was terrible for the last 10 years, gaining a pathetic 0.5% per year overall, after inflation adjustments and even including dividends. Without dividends, the index itself has not gone up a penny in real terms from mid-1997 to end-2011, or 14½ years. This is getting to be a long time! Are we expected to be bullish out of patriotism? You might think so given the flood of optimistic views for the last 10 years (or is it 100?). The industry so much prefers bullishness. It is much, much better for business. So, in general, does the press, and I do sympathize – optimism really does make for more compelling reading. I’ll tell you what. Try taking it out on the army of well-known bulls who blew the trumpets in 1999 and 2007 and waved everyone into the rather bloody breach. (Did you know that trumpeters were killed out of hand in the Middle Ages because of their pernicious role? How about that for a precedent when we get to the next burst bubble?)



Alas, now it's different.


Full letter (pdf)



Tuesday, February 07, 2012

Nifty EPS Growth Slows To 26 Month Low

Nifty EPS Growth Slows To 26 Month Low:



The Nifty Earnings Per Share (EPS) Growth – as revealed by the National Stock Exchange – is slowing.


image


We are again diverging from the P/E which has now crossed 19.


If you think that looking at one year is bad, then let’s see longer terms. EPS Growth of the Nifty, annualized for:


1 year: 7.37%


2 years: 9.5%


3 years: 10.0%


4 years: 4.6%


5 years: 6.2%


7 years: 10.0%


These are not figures that warrant a 19 P/E, to be honest. Don’t get me wrong, 10% or 8% are good growth rates. But when you pay a P/E of 15-21, you would expect more, one thinks.





Sunday, February 05, 2012

How Europe Has Evolved From A Democracy To A Bankocracy And Why Austerity Will Lead To Chaos

How Europe Has Evolved From A Democracy To A Bankocracy And Why Austerity Will Lead To Chaos:

In one of the clearest (and most optically pleasing) discussions of recent months, David McWiliams (of Punk Economics) succinctly explains how Europe has evolved from a democracy to a bankocracy, the implications of which lead to austerity for the people and a Franco-German imposition (the 'fiscal compact') that can only lead to social unrest and chaos. In this brief (and expertly illustrated) video, the Irish economist clarifies Europe's 'dirty little secret' where economic policy is being run almost exclusively for the banks which, as we see in Greece and Ireland, means the political elite are becoming more and more detached from the people. The terror of the r-word (referendum) looms large as McWilliams analogizes the two ways out of a debt crisis (squeeze the debtor or forgive the debtor) with the catholic and protestant perspectives on sin and forgiveness. While falling short of calling for governments to go full-Keynesian (everyone knows you never go full-Keynesian), he (focusing on the problems of the current hopeful solution) summarizes the fiscal union as envisaged by France and Germany (which actually penalizes countries that are in trouble, rather than help them) as not a friendly-union but a vindictive strait-jacket put in place to help banks, not countries. It comes as no surprise to him that the price of Gold (and Bunds) is firm as the 'example' that Greece is likely to set (or face extreme social upheaval) will domino-like stumble across the other troubled nations and as he points "we have been warned". Our view remains that austerity works if countries manage to cut expenses while keeping a balance. Alas, the balance is out of skew due to 30 years of runaway full-Keynesianism, which leads indeed to the problems that McWilliams so well espouses.



Weekly Bull/Bear Recap: Jan. 30 - Feb. 3, 2012

Weekly Bull/Bear Recap: Jan. 30 - Feb. 3, 2012:

Submitted by Rational Capitalist Speculator



Bull


+ The U.S. economy is now in a sustainable expansion:



+ The global economic outlook is improving:



+ In Eurozone political and financial news, European nations take one step closer to integration with 25 out of 27 nations signing the new fiscal compact treaty. Moreover, leaders signal strong resolve to save the region, as talk of initiating a €1.5 Tn bailout fund is making the rounds. Meanwhile, the Spanish 10-yr yield breaks under 5%, the Italian 10-yr yield breaks under 6%, the Belgian 10-yr yield breaks under 3.7%, and the French 10-yr yield breaks under 3%. Markets signal that a strong firewall is in place for a Greek and/or Portuguese default. As a hefty insurance policy, the second LTRO on February 29th will likely be more than double the size of the first one (@ ? €1Tn), thus reinforcing the firewall for the banking system from a Greek or Portuguese default. Besides, the Greek default has been on investors’ radars for so long, even martians on Pluto know that Greece is defaulting. A climax would result in a rally as uncertainty is lifted.


Bear


- The end game is coming into view for the Eurozone:



  • Germany has demanded that Greece cede its budgetary sovereignty to the EU, a request Greece has declined. Furthermore, stiff resistance from Greek political leaders to implement further austerity makes for another “Papandreaou referendum-like” showdown with the troika. And for the trifecta, the Hellenic republic has warned that it may need even more bailout cash.

  • Portuguese bond yields are repeatedly hitting record highs; hard default #2 is rapidly approaching.

  • In Ireland, a solid majority demand a referendum (guaranteeing a defeat for the army of unelected technocrats in Brussels). As Hollande eloquently stated, “Where democracy retreats and politics pulls back, the markets advance.”

  • Hollande is creating daylight between himself and Sarkozy in the French presidential election (here’s a primer on what he wants to do).


- On the region’s economic front, austerity is biting, hard. Italian business confidence slumps to the lowest in 2 years. While Germany is benefiting from a weaker Euro, it’s coming at the expense of the rest of the Eurozone; the region’s unemployment rate remains near the highest since 1998. French consumer spending dives 0.7% vs. expectations of a gain of +0.2%. Even worse, German December retail sales tank 1.4% vs. expectations of a 0.5% gain (the 4th decline in last 5 prints); so much for a low unemployment rate. Meanwhile, on the financial front, banks are using some of the LTRO money to buy sovereign bonds; but that’s about it. They continue to de-leverage, cutting off credit to the Eurozone and undermining any recovery in the region. Furthermore, post-crisis highs in FX swaps between the ECB and the Fed point to tight liquidity conditions, despite unprecedented worldwide coordinated monetary loosening.


- The throes of stagflation are in plain view; China “unexpectedly” holds off on reducing reserve requirements for banks, opting instead for reverse-repurchase contracts. Simultaneously, here’s what a popping housing bubble looks like. Protests are progressively more intense.


- On the U.S. economic front, the S&P Case-Schiller index flags a deepening double-dip for the 99%’s largest asset. Lower home prices will anchor consumer confidence over the medium-term. Over the short-term, rising gas prices are starting to damage confidence; the Conference Board’s survey disappoints, printing 61.1 vs. expectations of 68.0 (led by a decline in the present situation).


- Israel/Iran continues to bubble underneath the facade of bullish sentiment. No groundbreaking announcements were made after the UN inspection. Instead, it’s looking increasingly clear that the U.S. is no longer in control of the situation; an Israeli unilateral attack could come in as soon as 3 months.

Saturday, February 04, 2012

Who Took My Easy Button?

Who Took My Easy Button?:

Who Took My Easy Button?

By John Mauldin

February 4, 2012


>


Who Took My Easy Button?

Putting a Good Employment Number in Perspective

When a College Education Isn’t Enough

We’re All Turning Greek

Who Can Afford Health Care?


>


Everyone knows by now that the US is facing difficult choices. Depending on what assumptions you use, the unfunded liabilities of Social Security and Medicare are between $50 and $80 trillion and rising. It really doesn’t matter, as there is no way that much money can be found, given the current system, even under the best of assumptions. Things not only must change, they will change. Either we will make the difficult choices or those changes will be forced by the market. And the longer we put off the difficult choices, the more painful the consequences.


This week we begin a series on the choices facing the US, having covered Europe in the first three letters of the year. In order to make the best of a difficult situation, we need to understand the consequences of the choices we make. “Cut spending,” say some. “Tax the rich,” say others. “Cut out waste and corruption” is always a popular choice. “Do all of the above,” intone others.


There are over 3,000 different tax programs that allow for deductions, as Congress has passed out income tax benefits to almost everyone over the past 100 years. In fact, if we cut out all so-called “tax expenditures” (the deductions we get), the budget would be very close to balanced! But there is some group that sees each one of those tax deductions as vital to the future of the republic. Some are quite big, like charity and mortgage-interest deductions, or agricultural subsidies. Others are small and focused on keeping specific industries competitive and even viable. Your municipal bond interest-rate deduction keeps local funding and borrowing costs low. Local government interest rates would rise dramatically if that was repealed. Some, like the earned-income tax credit, are seen as a way to help out those with less income. All have their beneficiaries.


Who Took My Easy Button?


There is a television commercial in the US that offers an “easy button.” Simply push it and the product you want will appear.


With regard to the problems facing the country in the next few years, there is no “easy button.” There are no easy choices. And the choices we eventually make will have both short-term and long-term consequences. Cutting spending will reduce GDP and tax revenues in the short term, as we see in Europe as countries struggle with “austerity.” Raising taxes will also slow the economy for a time and reduce potential private employment over the longer term. If the choices were easy or obvious, even politicians in our admittedly dysfunctional political system could make them.


If the US does not make a choice as to how to get its deficit under control in 2013, the political realities are that it will not happen until 2015, at best, and more likely 2017. By then we will be in a situation that looks like today’s Italy at best (if it’s 2015) and Greece at worst (if we wait till 2017). Greece is a disaster we all know about. Italy faces a very difficult set of choices that will mean recessions and slow growth, or eventual default. Or Germany has to allow the ECB to target Italian (and then, perforce, Spanish) bond rates to make it possible for Italy to pay back its debts while only suffering a recession, which will not be good for the value of the euro or the inflation level. (And this assumes that Greece and Portugal exit the euro, by the way.)



The US does not want to find itself in a situation where we are faced with the choice between a depression or the Fed monetizing the deficits and debt as we try to find a new balance. Both are disastrous, just in different ways. And not only for the US but for the world. Not dealing with the problem in the near future (in 2013) will necessitate far more draconian cuts in services that we see as essential (healthcare, military, education, and pensions) and far higher taxes than anything we can even contemplate today.


Are things really so dire? I would submit they are. It is simply economic reality. A country cannot run deficits that are 8-10% of GDP forever (and that is the path we are on, under rosy economic assumptions that assume no recessions in the next ten years). In the US, we will soon cross over 100% of federal debt-to-GDP. At some point simply servicing the debt (paying the interest) will eat deep into the budget and decimate what we now think of as critical services and programs that we think of as fundamental rights. When a crisis comes, nothing is off the table. All the sacred cows of today? Some will get led to the altar and sacrificed for the greater good of the others.


In one sense the US is lucky. The basic choice we face can be stated simply: how much health care do we want and how do we want to pay for it? If we want the health-care program in place today, then we either have to raise taxes or cut other programs. Or we have to seriously reform the US medical system and how much we pay for it. Or maybe all of the above. But raising taxes as much as we’d need to would seriously impact employment, both potential and real.


So, as we start on this series, I am going to try to put a human face on the consequences of our choices. Because, in the end, what we are really talking about is jobs and health care. And every solution will have consequences that impact both. So, with that as a preface, let’s jump in by starting with the employment numbers that came out today.


Putting a Good Employment Number in Perspective


The non-farm employment report that came out this morning was good. 243,000 jobs, and they were not just in the health-care and food and beverage categories, but across the board. Unemployment dropped to 8.3%.


There were some early comments that the unemployment number was lower because another 1.1 million people dropped out of the work force, no longer looking for work. If you read just the simple number, you might think that. But there were asterisks all over this report, telling us we had to look deeper. A lot deeper.


First, this was the normal month for annual revisions, when the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) makes adjustments to the prior year’s data, based on new information. And there were some extensive revisions. So the number in the workforce did not actually drop. Those who thought so “completely missed that this million+ people isn’t some new January phenomenon, but a result of the BLS using the 2010 census data to have more accurate data. In other words, the changes in the Household Survey to the various measures had taken place over the years prior to 2010, but for simplicity’s sake, the BLS incorporates these changes into one month (which they clearly point out).” (Source: The Big Picture)


Spread out over 10 years, 1 million people is not all that much on a per-month basis. If you just looked at the numbers in the actual release, it would also lead you to believe that somehow last month around 1.2 million working white men and women just disappeared, or that the number of working Hispanics rose by 800,000. There are a lot more of those types of anomalies. But they are also explained by the fact that the BLS incorporated the recent 2010 census data into their formulas. Apparently, the Census Bureau found a lot more Hispanics and Asians in the country than they did in 2000, and that forced the BLS to make adjustments in their estimates, as they did with their numbers of people in the workforce.


All these numbers need to be taken with a large dose of salt, as they are subject to large revisions. This past year the BLS adjusted the employment numbers on a monthly basis, mostly upward, as more jobs were created than they estimated, which is normal for a recovery. In the last recession, they had to go back and adjust the prior numbers downward. It is simply the result of using models and making estimates. The BLS is very straightforward about how they make their models. You can re-create them if you want to. If you go through that process, you get a better understanding of the extent to which the monthly employment number is just an estimate.


For instance, last month, rather notoriously, the BLS found 42,000 new delivery jobs. No real surprise, as Fedex and UPS and other delivery companies hire more workers for the holiday season, and as more and more of us shop online. But those are temporary jobs, and the BLS likes to use seasonal adjustments to smooth out such anomalies. A friend of mine talked with them today, and they said that they recognized the problem and had made adjustments to their models to take into account the new seasonality of holiday hiring. Next December there will be no surprise of 40,000 temporary jobs showing up in the data. And did they back them out in this release? Yes, but in the revised December data.


If you subtracted 42,000 jobs from last month’s number the non-farm payroll number would have been close to a loss. What would that have done to the stock market? But if they used the current, revised data, it would have shown 207,000 new jobs, which is a good number and much stronger than the first estimate. In fact, the last three months have averaged 200,000 new jobs a month, when we look at the revisions.


And that is the point. These are the best estimates the BLS can come up with. They are very clear about how they go about making the estimates. If you have a better way, then by all means propose it. (In fact, there are a lot of people who do just that. Clearly, they have more time on their hands than I do!)


But anyone who trades on this number is gambling. It can be revised up or down, even years later. I find the preoccupation of the market with that number amusing.


But what is not amusing is the reality that is masked by the joyful response of the stock market to the good news. This was a good employment number, not a great one. It takes about 125,000 new jobs just to keep up with population growth each month. That means we created roughly 120,000 jobs that helped bring down the unemployment number. The US economy has created almost 3 million jobs in the last two years. That means we only need another 7 million to get back to where we were in 2007! Look at the graph of the total numbers of jobs in the country, as of last month. (From the St. Louis Fed FRED database)



So even if we reclassify 1 million workers as Hispanic, Asian, or Black, we are still down 7 million jobs. As I detailed about a year ago, even if we create 250,000 new jobs a month, it will take almost five years to get back to where we were in 2007. That is IF we can avoid a recession in the meantime. Such a growth rate would require whole new industries and new types of work, much like computers and technology in the ’80s and ’90s. (I think that could happen, but that is a story for another book.)


Is it any wonder that the Conference Board Consumer Sentiment number that came out on Monday dropped precipitously, falling to 61.1 from 64.8 (revised up from 64.5)? The present-situation component led the decline, falling from 46.5 (previously 46.7) to 38.4. The expectations component dropped slightly, from 77 (previously 76.4) to 76.2. “The decline went against expectations of increasing confidence and is a sign of consumers’ uncertain views of the economic recovery.” This in spite of the fact that today’s employment number was so much better than consensus expectations. Things may be getting statistically better, but we don’t feel all that content.


And while we should enjoy the better employment numbers, we need to take a peek at another, less sanguine, number in the BLS report, and that is wages and income. Let’s look at this chart from my favorite slicer and dicer of data, Greg Weldon, who makes his return to Thoughts from the Frontline after being absent for too long. A chart from the maestro of statistics will help bring the problem into focus. First, look at how real (after-inflation) disposable personal income has gone flat since 2000, after rising in line with inflation for a very long time. (Go to www.weldononline.com for subscription information.)



The above suggests there has been little growth in disposable income for five years. But it is worse than that. This next chart, from Rich Yamarone of Bloomberg, who was on a panel with me Wednesday night, shows that government transfer payments have been an increasing share of disposable income since the beginning of 2008. Without that government spending, consumer spending would be much worse than it is. But then so is the federal deficit. There is no free lunch.



It gets worse. Madeline Schnapps of TrimTabs shot me a note about her frustration with the employment numbers. TrimTabs tracks federal withholding taxes to give them an advance estimate of the employment number. In the past, the more taxes that were withheld, the more jobs there were. For the past few months, their data has shown fewer jobs than the BLS estimates. I called her late tonight, and she answered (I know, neither of us has a life outside of numbers). She was still mystified. The last time their data was this different from the BLS numbers was in the last recession, when the BLS estimated too many jobs and later went back to revise their numbers, which were then more in line with TrimTabs tax data.


I suggested that the problem may be that even though more people are working, they are making less money and thus paying less in taxes. But that thought is not apparent in the data. Average hourly wages are not down all that much. But self-employment income is not included in that figure. And many people have been forced into “self-employment,” which can mean part-time contract work or consulting, and the drop in income is being missed by the data.


When a College Education Isn’t Enough


That leads us to the next bit of data from the BLS, brought to my attention by Philippa Dunne of The Liscio Report (www.theliscioreport.com). It needs no set-up:


“And in another set of forecasts, on Wednesday, the BLS released its occupational projections through 2020. They make very glum reading. The five job titles with the biggest projected increases in numerical terms: registered nurses, retail salespersons, home health aides, personal care aides, and office clerks. Of those, the first requires no more than an associate’s degree; the last, a high-school diploma; and the middle three, less than high school. Of the top 20 occupations, just five require an associate’s degree or more. All together, 30% of the projected job openings over the decade will require less than a high-school diploma, and 40%, only a high school diploma. Less than 20% will require a bachelor’s or more. Almost three-quarters will require no more than brief on-the-job training, and 85% will require no previous relevant job experience.


“All those politicians and pundits who love to talk about the need to educate the citizenry—along with the proponents of the job-skill mismatch theory of persistent unemployment—should check in with these projections. They paint a picture of a low-wage, low-skill labor force. And though the U.S. is still a destination for world-class scientists and the producer of great innovations, it’s hard to imagine how that can be sustained on the base of such an uneducated, unskilled labor force. We can only hope for some upside surprises.”


And that squares with the anecdotal evidence I am getting from my kids. Now, let’s put a personal face on the employment data. Long-time readers know I have seven kids, five of whom are adopted. Six are out in the labor force – or want to be. I have pushed them to get college degrees, for very good reasons. My oldest son worked part-time for 8 years doing manual labor while going to college to get that degree. He works for one of the large shipping companies, is a union member, and has seen his hours cut the last few years, except around the holidays when gifts are shipped. He has a son and supports his family. And can’t make ends meet.


He has been trying to get a new part-time job or another full-time job. Anyone who meets him is instantly attracted to him. Everyone likes Henry. Smart, funny, polite, and hard-working. And black. (Every white man in America should have a black son. It changes your world view. But that’s another story.) All-Dallas Area football player in high school and strong as an ox, thus working on the loading docks was a good job when he started out. It paid better than most jobs, as well.


To meet him you would think he could land a good job in a minute, but he can’t even get an interview. It used to be that you placed an ad in the paper and people called and then came by the office. You met them and put a face to their application. Up until about 2000 I myself did that.


Then came the internet. Now, every place wants you to fill out an application online. Employers sift through the resumes and find what look to be the top picks and then call them up for an interview. How do you get to the top? Employers want experience in today’s job market, where there are four people unemployed for every job opening. Those are the applications that get looked at first. Henry did manual labor while going through school, an honorable and worthy job. But it did not get him any “experience” for an office or retail job. Even with his shiny new college degree, think he can get to the top of the pile of applications? There are lots of college degrees in the pile and they have “relevant” experience. What’s a human resources person to do?


About 2000, when we needed someone to work for us and could not draw on anyone we knew, we started to go (at Tiffani’s insistence) to this “new” thing called monster.com. You could post a job position and those interested would email a resume. Today, if you post a good job, even with very specific guidelines, you can quickly get several hundred resumes. Overwhelming, actually. I recently hired a new assistant, Mary, who may be one of the better staff I have ever had work for me. I “found” her because one of my other employees suggested her for some specific temporary work that needed to get done, as they had worked together before and she had the special knowledge we needed.


We kept finding work for her to do, and I needed an assistant and realized she was perfect. But would I have found her if I went to the internet? Probably not, as she is not what I thought I was looking for. But how would I have known, just looking at a (virtual) piece of paper?


For fun, I started looking at job postings. Check out this one:


“Customer Service Professionals – ROCK STAR applicants only!


“We are looking for the best of the best; average will not do! – Do you have exceptional problems solving skills? – Can you think outside the box? – Do you impress everyone you meet with your creativity and adaptability? Then we have the position for you! We’re looking for dynamic, professional, creative problem solvers for our client in Hillsboro. – This position involves responding to unique….


And what are they willing to pay this Rock Star Applicant? A princely $12-15 per hour. Which may sound like a lot to my Chinese readers, but it’s barely enough to support a household with children, even in Texas. And it certainly doesn’t leave much in the way of “disposable” income.


When you survey the jobs available online, pay attention to how many people have looked at the job opportunity. If it has been up for a few weeks it may have been viewed many thousands of times. There are four people looking for jobs, for every job opening.


I could go down the list with my other kids. It is a tough world out there right now. Kind of like the ’70s, when I was starting out. It took me a long time to get more than a few nickels to rub together. But we made it.


We’re All Turning Greek


Upon reflection, I have been somewhat (though not intentionally) cavalier when talking about the European crisis. I write in terms of trade balances and labor-cost disparities. Greek labor has risen 30% more than German labor, so Greece must either leave the euro or see their relative wages drop over time. The same with Portugal and the other peripheral countries.


It all makes such perfect economic sense, at least in theory. But try telling a Greek that he is overpaid by 30% compared to a German. And for the good of the country he needs to take a pay and lifestyle cut. The safe thing to do would be to put it in a memo and not be around when he reads it. Think a politician can get elected on that platform?


And yet, that is not unlike what we are going through in the US. We are seeing wages pulled down as jobs become subject to a larger labor market, not just in China or Mexico but also in the US. It costs about half in terms of employee costs to make a car in the South as it does with union labor in Detroit. Jobs and companies move to take advantage of business climate, costs, and taxes.


We are subject to the same wage disparities that the Greeks are dealing with. Yes, we have lots of capital and amazingly productive workers (as measured by output per hour and cost), but low-skill manufacturing jobs are leaving the country. We have seen a boom in manufacturing of late, but much of the demand is for higher-skill workers. The US manufactures as much as it ever did in terms of output, we just do it with a lot fewer workers.


Sidebar note: Mining (natural resources) and logging in the US employs more than manufacturing. Look it up.


And now let’s turn to a few thoughts on health care. Once again, indulge me while I put personal face on the problem.


Who Can Afford Health Care?


On the panel last Wednesday was good friend Mark Yusko of Morgan Creek. He noted that an acquaintance of his, who was worth north of $10 million, had just had four stents put in his arteries. The hospital bill was $288,000. As he was over 65, Medicare paid everything. He paid nothing. Yet he is worth $10 million. I am not judging, by the way. My mother gets veteran benefits and Medicare, as well as Social Security. I will most likely take Medicare and Social Security when the time comes, if it is still there for me, even though I could afford not to. If my income were of the same stripe as Mitt Romney’s, you can bet I would pay just 15% of it in taxes. Hold that thought.


On the same panel, Rich Yamarone said he had a stent put in last year. The bill was $90,000, and he was also nothing out of pocket, as insurance paid for it. His employer had paid for that insurance, so he used it. Just as I use my insurance when I need it. Hold that thought.


A good friend of mine recently had hip surgery, for a problem known of in advance by his insurance company. So they are not paying, saying it was pre-existing. And will not pay for the follow-up costs that are now looming, as it looks like he will need a full hip replacement. And he can’t afford it. So he lives with steadily growing pain, while an attorney tries to get the insurance company to pony up. Hold that thought.


Two weeks ago my #2 daughter (in birth order – otherwise they are all #1) had some medical work done and mentioned a lump in her throat. The scan came back, and it was not good. The growths on her thyroid were almost as big as the thyroid. I called my doctor (Mike Roizen, Head of Wellness at the Cleveland Clinic) and asked what to do, and he gave us a referral to what he said would be the best doctor in Dallas for this type of thing. We went to see him last Monday, thinking we would schedule a biopsy and hoping we could do it soon.


He said we could do a biopsy, but given the scan we already had, if it were his daughter he would removw the thyroid as soon as possible, whether or not the growth was malignant, and then do the biopsy. He had an opening a week later and she is scheduled for this coming Tuesday. Both he and Roizen agreed, and both told us the odds are quite high that it is benign, although complicated by the fact that Melissa’s mother had thyroid cancer some 20 years ago.


Why talk about this with you? Here is the rest of the story. She is the one child I have with no insurance. I knew it and kept hoping she would get a job that included insurance. Now that looks like a bad economic choice.


I gently asked the doctor about costs. It was not as much as I feared, but definitely not cheap. As maybe in the mid-range of tens of thousands of dollars. His fee was the minor part. (I was actually surprised at how low as it was. I make more than that for an hour-long speech, and what skills and training do I have? Just saying.) But then he quietly said that the costs would go up a lot if it was malignant, as just the drugs to kill a thyroid cancer would be $25-30,000. The good news is that if it is a thyroid cancer, there is a proven therapy to beat it. Actually, the exact same treatment (radioactive iodine) as her mother had some 20 years ago.


I didn’t bother to call other hospitals to negotiate a better price, or find a less expensive doctor. I simply had them schedule it. This is my daughter. It is her life, not a new car. Time seems to be of the essence. And life has blessed me that I can afford it.


But that’s the point. How many people find themselves in that situation and their father can’t step in? Or there is no father? You then go to a free clinic or an emergency room and try to get someone to help you, even though it’s not an emergency. Or you put it off until it is an emergency, or it’s too late.


Talk to your friends in the health-care world. And especially the nurses, who are the real soldiers on the front line. The stories they tell us about how broken our medical system is have shocked even me at times. And it is not just a system that has no money. It is a system that we expect to take care of all the needs that, in my youth, were considered as minor. And that is expected to take care of the homeless and the mentally unstable. Drug users. And a lot of people who do not take care of themselves with a simple, healthy diet and exercise, but expect full service when their bodies rebel, crowding out the service and driving up the costs for those who are in real need.


Medicare fraud? It costs us into the hundreds of billions. Doctors who test for everything because they are afraid of being sued if they miss something, running up costs sky-high? An unbelievable lack of technology in this day and age, because of government rules? Insurance and paperwork? Costs that are the highest in the world by a wide margin, yet no better outcomes?


And all staffed by amazing people who care a lot but are overwhelmed and caught up in a system they want to see changed.


The litany goes on and on. So, is the answer to simply to put hour heads down and accept the higher costs and rising taxes? Or let a bureaucracy control costs and require everyone to buy insurance, even if they can’t afford it on the $15 an hour the average worker makes before taxes? Or let a “free” market somehow set the price of health care, working with private insurance and safety nets? All in a world of unlimited demand? Because when you or someone you love is sick or hurt, you want the best care you can get as soon as you can get it.


It seems simple. We need to have more-universal coverage. But there is a limit as to what any nation can afford. We look at countries with universal health care, but it is not something that many of us would be familiar with. Could we really ration health care at the end of life, which is where a large portion of our expense in the US goes? Or give up our right to sue if something goes wrong?


We have promised the Boomer generation more health care than we will be able to afford, without major reforms in what we spend our taxes on. And if we raise taxes enough to even come close to what we need, the shock to our economic body will mean recessions, higher unemployment, and fewer jobs which pay less.


Some point to this country or that and ask, why can’t we be like them? They have better healthcare and seem to be able to afford it. But those countries did not move overnight to universal health care. It took time, lots of time, for them to adjust to their current systems.


Could we in the US adjust over time? Of course. But that is like saying the Greeks can adjust over time. In a decade or so things will sort themselves out on the Aegean. In the meantime, it will be an economic disaster. The same would be true for the US.


Raising taxes as much as will be needed to pay for the currently planned programs will take decades of adjustment, and could cause a depression in the meantime. That is just the economic reality. And I am not talking about the Bush tax cuts. Repealing those does not even get us 10% of the way to paying for the current programs, as well as the other “services,” like Social Security, the military, education, parks, and the BLS. (Well, at least I would miss the BLS data, even if my kids might not.)


Not to make hard choices on the deficit, taxes, and health care is to choose to allow the market, via interest rates, to force us into even harder choices. And that’s not in some distant future but in the next all-too-few years.


There are no easy choices. As we will see, raising taxes has consequences in the short and medium term. The transition to where 30%, then 40%, of the economy will be taxes will be wrenching. If we can believe the polls, dialing back health care will not be popular. Raising taxes is no less popular. We want more health care, and we want someone else to pay for it. But there is no one else. It is just “we the people.”


And what we do will define our job market for decades. There are no easy choices. We all marshal the “facts” as we see them to support our personal choices on jobs and health care, but it is far more complicated than most anyone wants to admit. There will be costs for whatever choices we make, even if we decide to do nothing at this time.


And with that thought I will end here, although there is much more that can be said.


It’s 6 AM and time to hit the send button – somehow, I have been up all night. I will close the letter for the first time in years without a personal end note, as I have already been “personal” enough. Have a great week.


Your thinking about health care more than he wants to analyst,


John Mauldin


John@FrontlineThoughts.com




Thursday, February 02, 2012

Hudson: The Neo-Rentier Economy � Multiplier Effect

Hudson: The Neo-Rentier Economy � Multiplier Effect

To make a long story short, the end product of capitalism thus has become a Neo-Rentier Economy – something that Industrial Capitalism set out to replace in is Progressive Era from the late 19th century to early 20th century. A financial class now plays the role that landlords used to play: a class living off special privilege. Most economic rent now ends up being paid as interest, interrupting the circular flow between production and consumption.