Thursday, September 22, 2016

MONEY 103 - ECONOMY


THIS IS MY 103RD BLOG ON UNDERSTANDING MONEY TOOLS

In this blog I am going to start by covering recent world financial news, and then speculate on common sense resolves.  Repeating, my basic premise is always “cause and effect”.  Use this information for your “money tools”.

I will start with the broad statement that the American public in general is naïve, non-carrying or dumb.  I should give them more credit, but credit is hard to find.  The reasons for my comments come from my travels around the world.  In other countries people make a concerted effort to stay on top of their national politics as well as what is happening in the rest of the world/world events, not with the people here.

It is increasingly difficult to make a distinction between fact and fiction with what comes out of the media and government. With a presidential election year we are finding slanted facts, and media that should be objective taking definite sides.

Let’s look first as to what I can determine as real financial facts.  Consumerism worldwide is down; people are not buying as expected and projected.  As I have been watching world transportations for over a year it is not a surprise to me to see that South Korean Hanjin shipping, one of the largest world shippers, in bankruptcy protection.  This parallels the problems with other major shippers like Sundt, Hyundai and Maersk.  Maersk is splitting their company into two divisions. Usually this is done to either sell  assets or place troubled assets in bankruptcy/reorganization structure.  Our retail sales, most recent negative .5% when excluding auto sales, which are financed mainly by manufacturers.  Smells of recession.

What do we have? The middle class, the buyers in the world, have pulled in their appetite for consumption.  We see this so well in America as our growth has diminished to a realistic and tepid 1.1% from a governmental projected 2.25% early this year.  I see the trend continuing with the Generation Z kids being born year 2000 and after desiring more technology, but simpler way of life. The latter years of the Millennials being 35 to let’s say 40 year’s of age are still more materialistic like the baby boomers, but younger people have changed desires for style of living.  Demographics are changing.

Rather than ramble at this point I am going to highlight major concerning facts:
-       World debt, debt, debt.  A lot of it corporate and not being paid off as with countries like Greece, Italy, Spain, Puerto Rico, Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela and the third world.  Zero interest rates were to assist and now look like nightmares.
-       Auto sales for August substantially down.  Ford Motor sales down 9% with the average manufacturer negative 5%.  Ford is moving their smaller car manufacturing out of the USA; most recently to Mexico.  Mexico doesn’t have the OSHA safety mandates, legal issues and an average worker pay is $3.50 per hour.
-       State and local pensions are “under funded/upside down” $1.9 trillion. Managers of pensions need to restructure their paradigms/projections from their expectations of 6-8% returns.  The Fed Pensions can rely on the government to print money, state and local governments can not.  Don’t expect the monthly pension checks you were promised year’s ago!
-       Walmart stores laying off 7,000 jobs bringing higher wage people from the “backroom” to the front of the stores at low paying minimum wage.
-       Technology is projected to lay off 100,000 workers, salivating to employ HB-1 foreign workers at a fraction the price.
-       Driverless autos, buses, and eventually trucks predicted to cost 4 million jobs.
-       I have a doctor friend head of a department in the Phoenix, AZ, area who estimates that 60% of the new hiring is HB-1 workers mainly from Pakistan and India.
-       McDonald’s laying off accountants and hiring HB-1 employees.  I didn’t know there was a scarcity of accountants in the USA!
-       Incomes were stated to rise 5.2% for the middle income, however that was the first increase in wages since 2007, and we are still way behind the average factory worker hourly pay, even from 35 years ago.
-       Two weeks ago the Federal Reserve Bank had a meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, along with their 12 Federal Reserve Districts.  I doubt if any increase of Fed interest rate will happen before elections, perhaps in December. (Watch out bond holders!)  Although the Feds would love to get us off Keynesian policies and more onto a realistic free market, they know that any increase in rates will throw us into a recession; the stock markets and perhaps real estate, will take a dive.  The Feds discussed two possibilities for a recovery of recession that I thought interesting.  One was negative interest rates.  Don’t screw around like Japan and Switzerland are doing very ineffectively but force people to buy things and go negative rates 5% or more for holding money in banks. (This is one reason worldwide that companies building home safes/vaults are doing exceptionally well at the moment.  Also, countries are looking at doing away with large paper currency, like our $100 bill, so that it would take a lot of paper to fill a safe with small denominations!)  The second thing the Fed discussed was buying in the debt (bonds) of US corporations. Yes, instead of another Quantitative Easing just become a Fascist country and become quasi partners with corporate America.  At the moment, the S&P 500 companies are averaging an outgo of money of 112% negative to earnings. That doesn’t mean all companies are in dire straights but many are.  They are trying to hold dividend payouts to support stock prices and maintain bond payments, while their earnings are dwindling. American corporate bankruptcies have increased 50% over the last fiscal year.

Okay, I could keep going with stats, none of which are to be proud of, but let me draw logical conclusions to all of this.  With our enormous public and private debt, second only to Japan, there are only three possible resolves I see; restructure debt with world creditors, default on debt and bonds (which we won’t do) and kick the can down the road until we implode (debt and growth are inverse in relationship to one another!)

The big push right now is globalization.  Who is behind this?  Big corporations and big money.  They want cheaper labor. Do you think for one second they sincerely care about people in third world countries when most don’t care about their fellow citizens?  The only way globalization could stand a chance of working is if the top 1% wealthy gave up their money and assets as they control over 50% of the world’s assets. They would share, and that isn’t going to happen. 1% of the world’s population that we are talking about is 70 million.  What are we going to do with the rest of the world’s 6.93 billion people?  We are talking future robotic factories, driverless cars, buses, trains, trucks and then perhaps airplanes.  With any resolve to all the billions of unemployed people not needed I can only see three possibilities, none of which are a pretty picture.  One as history has always proven is a major world war, two would be selective breeding controlled by the wealthy for the most intelligent and genetically capable or three, a man-made, worldwide disease with no cure to eliminate most of the world’s population.

(I think we are playing a very risky game building up nuclear weapons near the Russian border. We are the key player in NATO and the UN.  We would never permit such an encroachment if Russia did this to our border. Look at Cuba.)

I think big corporations and money have shot the “golden goose”.  If you don’t pay higher wages, our people can’t afford the goods produced by the big companies!  Read up on Henry Ford!

With all of this said, I think I will go have a scotch!  Everything is cause and effect and we have caused these messes.


No comments:

Post a Comment