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BEST OF DOUG NOLAND
March 7, 2006
We are in the midst of the Greatest Global Asset Inflation Ever.
Contrary to the entrenched conventional view, this development is the
manifestation of extraordinary underlying Monetary Disorder and as such
has profound ramifications. All the same, surging perceived wealth
stokes the delusion that we live in The Golden Age of Free-Market Global
Capitalism. These are especially precarious times, in particular with
respect to the confluence of Bubbling asset markets, inflated
expectations, an epidemic of leveraged speculation, and wide-open global
Credit. In tandem with excesses, New Paradigm notions become only more
outlandish.
"We have to recognize that the very reason capitalism exists is to
have asset price increases. That is the point of capitalism, so we
shouldn’t bemoan the fact that asset prices are increasing."
Louis-Vincent Gave, in a December interview with the estimable Kate
Welling (Dec. 15, Welling@Weeden, "Brave New World or Bust").
Well, we definitely should bemoan it. Not only is asset inflation
certainly not "the very reason capitalism exists," the recent Global
Asset Bubble Affliction poses a very serious clear and present danger.
The essence of Capitalism is the free market interplay of supply and
demand to determine a structure of relative prices that create favorable
incentives and just rewards – positive impetus for individual economic
agents that in aggregate nurture behavior that is best for the system as
a whole.
Economic Sphere profits should drive the process, not the
circumstance today where a wildly inflating Financial Sphere completely
dominates the creation and dissemination of perceived wealth and
resources. Systemic Asset inflation and Bubbles nurture price
distortions and patently unsound incentives. The essence of robust and
dynamic Capitalism is a market system that adjusts and self-corrects,
rewards and disciplines. Asset inflation and Bubbles have a powerful
propensity to avoid self-correction, while meandering to dangerous and
self-reinforcing extremes.
I find it rather ironic that the most outspoken contemporary
proponents of free market Capitalism seem to have the least appreciation
for its pressing vulnerabilities. In this regard, I will forever pin
blame on the flawed analysis of the circumstances and developments that
culminated with financial collapse and The Great Depression, analysis
championed by Milton Friedman and, later, by his "disciples" including
our new Fed Chairman.
It was too expedient (by the early 1960s) to paint the Roaring
Twenties as the "golden age" of free market Capitalism and Federal
Reserve monetary management, casting blame instead on post-boom Federal
Reserve incompetence. Such a perspective conveniently whitewashed Credit
system and speculative market dynamics that had fueled myriad financial
market Bubbles (acute financial fragilities) and fashioned fateful
Global Economic Bubble Vulnerabilities. Invaluable lessons learned at
deplorable social cost were simply Wiped Away with a Wanton Stroke of
Historical Revisionism. And it remains these days too easy for the
ideologues to intransigently deride the notion of inherent Credit system
and private sector instabilities, a circumstance not all too conducive
to either sound analysis or enlightened policymaking. Especially in an
era of unchecked private-sector "money" and Credit (the reality in which
we must analyze and operate), along with momentous financial and
technological developments, there is great risk in dismissing
Capitalism’s vulnerabilities.
Regrettably, it seems to have been long forgotten that the very
foundation of a stable free market system rests (at certain junctures
tenuously) upon sound money and Credit. That such a notion sounds so
antiquated is an indication of how far analysis has drifted off course.
And, with regard to today’s unsound money and Credit, there has been
ample failure in both the public (gross mismanagement and deficits) and
private sector (reckless speculative excess, gross over-issuance of
suspect Credits, and attendant malfeasance) domains. Such an unsound
monetary backdrop, as we have witnessed, will foment unwieldy booms with
a propensity for increasingly deleterious incentives, asset inflation,
financial and real resource misallocation, destabilizing speculation,
escalating non-productive debt expansion, unjust wealth redistribution,
and progressive structural economic maladjustment. Sure, government
policies – including untenable future obligations and derelict monetary
management – have been prominent factors in fostering the boom. But
Credit system dynamics will invariably play the prevailing role in
shaping the financial and economic landscape. To disregard the structure
and character of the Credit-creating mechanism – the Financial Sphere
generally, is to do injustice to the analysis.
Even analysts that I respect too frequently point blame for the
current state of affairs on the government "printing press." If I could
convince readers of one aspect of my less-than-conventional analysis it
would be to appreciate that the vast majority of contemporary
(electronic) "money" and Credit is created outside of the domain of the
Federal Reserve and resides largely beyond its control. Most zealous
free markets proponents stubbornly adhere to archaic analysis with a
narrow fixation on Fed controlled "money." In reality, unchecked
non-productive Credit expansion is the nucleus of contemporary monetary
inflation. It is also, most disconcertingly, The Bane of Free Market
Capitalism….
Increasingly, the Fed and global central bankers must be observing
the myriad avenues for rampant Credit and speculative excess (associated
with The Global Inflation Trade) that have blossomed of late and wonder
what the heck it will now take to rein things in. The Fed and global
central bankers fell so far behind the curve. The ECB did move again
this week and, more importantly, indicated that there was likely more on
the way. And when, probably in the near future, Japan joins in, we’ll
have the first concerted global "tightening" in quite some time. Little
wonder global bond markets are on edge and currency markets are
unsettled. Not surprisingly, frothy global equity markets were generally
oblivious.
It is certainly not uncommon for highly speculative markets to spite
major fundamental developments until it is too late. Indeed, this is the
very nature of Credit-induced booms and Asset Inflations: system
incentives and rewards become totally defective. It is well-known to
speculators that the greatest potential returns often present themselves
in a final "blow-off" frenzy. If such a dislocation does unfold
throughout global equity markets, it would be very bad news for central
bankers and an unwelcome development for international bonds, not to
mention setting equity markets up for an unavoidable drubbing.
Milton Friedman was in the past fond of claiming that there was no
such thing as destabilizing speculation. He was wrong. We continue to
have a ringside seat for the reprehensible consequences of unsound money
and Credit and the resulting Asset Inflations and Bubbles. My only
consolation will be if lessons are learned and forever retained from the
experience.
Doug Noland is a market strategist at Prudent Bear Funds. Their
website is www.prudentbear.com. |