Archive for predictions

Even Dr. Doom Is Scared: Tech Ticker, Yahoo Finance

Dr. Doom is freaked out more than he was earlier!

A year ago Roubini was forecasting an 18-month recession with a U-shaped recovery; now, hes now expecting the downturn to last at least 24 months and possibly 36-months. He also sees rising risks of a Japanese-style L-shaped stagnation, i.e. a prolonged period with little or no economic growth.

“I was one of most bearish people [but] the economy has surprised the bears on the downside,” says Roubini of NYUs Stern School and RGE Monitor. “Whats happening in the world now is scary.”

via Even Dr. Doom Is Scared Economy Much Worse Than Roubini Predicted: Tech Ticker, Yahoo Finance.

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Americans’ Standard of Living Permanently Changed: Tech Ticker, Yahoo! Finance

Amazing number: 19.5 square feet of selling space per American consumer!

About 220,000 stores may close this year in America, says our guest, retail consultant Howard Davidowitz of Davidowitz & Associates. As more Americans save and spend less, it’s clear there’s too much retail space. Just visit Web site deadmalls.com and track retail’s growing body count. And luxury retailers? They’re on “life support,” Davidowitz says. 

via Americans’ Standard of Living Permanently Changed: Tech Ticker, Yahoo! Finance.

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Schiff, Gold, and the Dow

Peter Schiff appears on the Laura Ingraham show this morning.

One of the more interesting points he makes is evaluating the value of the Dow in light of ounces of gold. When Bush took office, the Dow was roughly 42 ounces of gold. Now it’s about 9. He expects that by the time Obama leaves office, it’s likely to be around one ounce of gold in value.

He compares the attempts to “fix” the economy to attempting to recreate the debt-based house of cards.

His advice is the same that it’s been for a while, which is refreshing considering that he’s taken some heat for it recently: gold, silver, foreign currency (he calls the dollar’s recent surge a false rally), and foreign stocks and bonds.

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Stimulus Makes It Worse

Peter Schiff has a great interview with Yahoo’s techticker.

The fiscal stimulus bill being debated in Congress not only won’t help the economy, it will make the recession much worse, says Peter Schiff, president of Euro Pacific Capital.

He argues that the “stimulus” package will make this worse. And, if you listen carefully, he says near the end that because the currency is not anchored in gold that this will be an inflationary depression, if we don’t back off and take the hard medicine now.
…the difference is that the economy is in a much worse state going into this depression than it was in the 1930s… and without the discipline of gold, we have a central bank that could create massive inflation. So we could have an inflationary depression.
During the Great Depression, prices fell. But Schiff suggests that what could happen this time is that “prices could be spiraling out of control.”
Interesting points. I wonder to what extent the foreign debt holders will force our hand to prevent that (otherwise their dollar-denominated bonds will be effectively devalued to a fraction of their value). And, if they can’t, won’t they be a little upset when their billions are now relatively worthless?

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Jefferson on Private Bank Currency

Andrew Gause’s “The Secret World of Money” references the following chilling Jefferson quote:
If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.
Thomas Jefferson (Attributed)
3rd president of US (1743 – 1826)

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The Russians Are Coming! And the Chinese, Canadians, EU… and Mexico…

Russia appears to be at it with the psychological warfare again.

This time, Russian “professor” Igor Panarin is spreading FUD about the future of the United States by predicting its dissolution by 2010.

He based the forecast on classified data supplied to him by FAPSI analysts, he says. He predicts that economic, financial and demographic trends will provoke a political and social crisis in the U.S. When the going gets tough, he says, wealthier states will withhold funds from the federal government and effectively secede from the union. Social unrest up to and including a civil war will follow. The U.S. will then split along ethnic lines, and foreign powers will move in.

His former KGB credentials, use of FAPSI data (Russian “NSA”), and speech at an Austrian “information warfare” conference weaken the case for his objectivity.
However, it’s hard to picture things getting so bad that Americans are eager to fall under the sphere of Mexican, Chinese, or Russian influence (although I’m sure that Russia would love to “reclaim” Alaska and Mexican “reconquistas” would welcome renewed control of their “rightful” lands).
Then again, were American political will or military capability weakened, it’s not too hard to picture Russia reclaiming Alaskan territory.
Perhaps the Red Dawn remake will feature this scenario? Either way, allow me to be the first to cry “Wolverines!”

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Saw It Coming

Gary Schilling saw it coming in 2007. What does he see coming now?

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Causabon’s Predictions

Sharon Astyk’s called 2008 pretty well and, with a couple of quibbles, I agree with her 2009 predictions. Sadly.

I think that she might be underestimating a few things:

  • The ability of the US government to pull rabbits out of the hat. When you control the money presses and regulate the financial markets, you can do quite a bit. For a while longer.
  • The interest of foreign governments in keeping us afloat until they can untangle themselves from dollar investments.
  • The ability of banks and industry to manipulate government policy to their liking in the name of “crisis”.
  • The “new coach” mentality changing consumer sentiment. How long Obama has before people lose hope is the big question here.
I think that the big wildcards are on the foreign policy front and their impact on oil, trade, and sentiment:
  • What does China do with an economically, politically, and miliarily weakened US? It also dries up a source of revenue that’s fuelled their growth over the past decades. 
  • What does Russia do in desperation when they don’t have soaring oil revenues to compensate for “holes” in their system?
  • What happens in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iran?
That said, pretty good job on her part. Sadly. I hope I can buy some arable land before it’s too late…

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Fire Sale Ahead

Janszen at iTulip.com is always on target. His latest post, focusing on the latest rate cut insanity and the Fed’s likely next steps is no exception and a a powerful must-read.

Early in the article, he focuses on the potential short-term benefit to consumers being huge discounts. But he also lays out some prophetic advice:

Advice to readers: take advantage of the early 2009 Great American Fire Sale and go out and buy all the generators, chain saws, washing machines, fine linens, and other durable goods you’re going to need for the next few years because by the end of 2009 most of the inventory may be sold through, many retailers will be shut down, and replenishment of stocks of the survivors will likely be meager; our models say that the goods import supply will decline more precipitously than the supply of money available to pay for them. That spells severe stagflation. 

But elsewhere he suggests that consumers would better save their limited funds to prepare for the coming disaster than to spend them. But isn’t that contrary? Besides the obvious need for cash on hand to pay the increasing bills, isn’t the cash going to be worth less once the temporary, bankruptcy-driven deflation passes and the monetary policy-driven inflation kicks in?

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GOP Senator Warns of ‘Riots’ if Automakers Are Bailed Out

“If you look at where we’re going, we’re not on a sustainable course as a country,” DeMint said. “Frankly, GM is in a better financial situation than we are as a country. The only difference is we can print money. But as other countries around the world lose confidence in the value of a dollar – that’s going to come home very shortly.”

http://www.businessandmedia.org/articles/2008/20081211131911.aspx

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