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Where'd all the forums go?


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2015 Jan 15, 11:29pm   27,429 views  44 comments

by Vicente   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

I see Misc and.... no others. What?

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21   justme   2015 Jan 17, 12:34pm  

EBGuy says

Patrick, can you limit posters to starting one thread a day? I think that could help with the craziness.

I suggested this several years ago.

22   anonymous   2015 Jan 17, 4:23pm  

jazz music says

Those who waited for the great correction were wrong, but for all of the right reasons.

Instead we all got to see a 'tour de force' show of government policy co-opted by the financial sector as those waiting on the sidelines witnessed sound fundamental economics principles overruled by brute force of government on behalf of the financial sector.

Great post.

23   turtledove   2015 Jan 17, 5:07pm  

True, 2012 prices were lower then than they are now... However, financing was very difficult for many. Though some of us might be cash titans, many of us depend on financing to make a purchase of this magnitude.

So if widgets sell normally for $25,000, and I say I'm willing to sell them for $10,000... but you don't have $10,000... Is it still a bargain?

To me the bargain is the point at which the price is the lowest and my ability to pay is at the highest. "Low prices" that I can't afford are irrelevant to me.

24   darlag   2015 Jan 18, 2:28am  

Bellingham Bill says

Our demographics are going to put us in a horrible housing pinch starting right around now.

Bill, you do great analyses. I always enjoy them. In this case though, your overlying assumption is that the economy is improving and will continue to do so. Do the same analysis but factor in a -12% GDP for 2017. See where that takes you. That is where I am coming from. Few people understand how that can happen, much less see that coming.

25   indigenous   2015 Jan 18, 2:51am  

darlag says

Do the same analysis but factor in a -12% GDP for 2017.

What do you see causing that?

26   darlag   2015 Jan 19, 7:34am  

indigenous says

What do you see causing that?

Simple deflation. As I have reiterated in the past, deflation is a psychological occurrence caused by negative social mood. The causality is endogenously regulated (subconscious) and thus the participants do not even realize they are the cause. In fact they look for exogenous causes to blame like news or current events or social upheavals.

The public's mood, in the aggregate, is what is causing the markets around the world to decline, not vice versa. Bad news, social unrest, and the constant war-mongering of late are results of negative social mood - not causes. As the social mood becomes even more negative and intense, the associated public fear and anger will drive politicians from power, put banks out of business, increase unemployment, start more wars, lower hemlines, foster protests, darken movies, etc.

I picked -12% because that is what it was at the height of the Great Depression. I look for it to be much worse this time, as this is an Elliott Wave peak of greater degree than the Great Depression. Historically, GDP was -18% after WWI, 1920-21, but the Fed was new to the game at that time and so did nothing about it. The economy fixed itself in just a couple of years without "help" from government. When government helps, bad things happen as we learned in the Great Depression and we are learning all over again today.

27   indigenous   2015 Jan 19, 7:53am  

I don't disagree with this, as I think that reality is actually just agreement. As you say the state constantly pushing war and other things creates a dystopian reality.

But from what i read the cause needs to be more concrete, i.e. when the entitlement SHTF that will be the cause of a real depression as at that point the state will no longer be able to kick the can down the road. In 2030 the last of the boomers will be 65 and that is when the SHTF, that is when the debt service will be at least a double digit percentage of the budget and the rest will get eaten up by entitlements.

28   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 10:31am  

darlag says

deflation is a psychological occurrence caused by negative social mood

that and nobody has any money (or credit) any more.

Obviously*, our consumer economy runs on consumers having spending power.

Consumers enjoy spending power by having DISCRETIONARY income (not just disposable)

Discretionary income = gross income - taxes - all compelled payments

Housing has always put a heavy drag on discretionary income, since we stopped living under trees in lean-tos at least.

shows how Japan has had two major regimes -- the certainly inflationary 1973-93 and the "deflationary" 93-now period.

But the latter is a consequence of the first -- Japan's baby boom turned 25 in 1975 and what followed was 20 years of easy credit expansion, until everyone was loaded up with all the debt they could carry.

When the last yen was borrowed ca 1989, boom, it all collapsed and everyone had to work themselves out of the debt trap they'd gotten stuck in.

shows how Japan overshot on housing specu-investment in the 1980s.

Nobody understands how land valuation serves as both a mainsail for the economy (when consumer credit flows into it) and a sail anchor (when everyone is tapped out from their borrowing binge).

* except to Austrians and other right-wing schools.

29   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 10:47am  

darlag says

Few people understand how that can happen, much less see that coming.

I can see it if DC falls into complete paralysis due to a (D) president (either Hillary or Sanders will do) and a (R) congress that has larger majorities but not the 2/3 required in the Senate to override vetoes.

The Fed doesn't really have the mandate to save the system from itself. Or maybe it does, but that is a regime we haven't really been in.

The 1990, 2001, and 2008 recessions came after pretty big boom-times.

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/?g=XAQ

compares consumer debt leverage (blue) with corporate debt leverage (red)

The story here is easy to see -- corporations got tapped out in the late 80s and late 90s, consumers loaded up debt in the 80s that they backed off on in the 90s, but when corporate debt really overshot in the dotcom recession consumers picked up the ball with a vengeance 2001-2007 as corporations were able to deleverage/default.

Note how leverage has been falling since 2010 though. We're not in an expansionary regime yet.

I've left off government debt since that's what's allowed everyone to deleverage 2010-now.

Kill that factor through gov't borrowing/spending cutbacks and hello depression, yes.

real gov't spending per capita

should that fall to 2000 levels, yeah, things will get ugly here fast

But TBH, I see a 'tax cuts for all!' regime coming this decade. Sanders wants MMT, maybe the GOP will go along with it if they get the flat tax regime they want. Not sure what Clinton wants.

Should the GOP take the presidency, I expect we'll see a replay of Reaganomics -- tax cuts and spending increases, since deficits don't matter when the GOP is proposing the budget.

30   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 11:37am  

^ yup, I didn't have Thing 1 of an economics education in 16+ years of public schooling in California (not taking economics in college didn't result in missing anything but still).

It was coming across Henry George's original treatise on wealth that really opened my eyes.

Here's something from P&P:

Advancing civilization tends to increase the power of human labor to satisfy human desires.

[i.e. since Man is a learning animal, labor gets more skillful at producing goods and services year after year, and capital infrastructure investment continues to multiply the laborer's productive ability in many areas]

We should be able to eliminate poverty. But workers cannot reap these benefits because they are intercepted. Land is necessary to labor. When it has been reduced to private ownership, the increased productivity of labor only increases rent. Thus, all the advantages of progress go to those who own land. Wages do not increase — wages cannot increase. The more labor produces, the more it must pay for the opportunity to make anything at all.

I first really saw this when I moved to Cupertino in 2000 and rents were rising faster than they could update the HTML on their websites.

real (2009 dollars) per-capita housing, health, and education costs per capita (age 15-64).

same data transformed by per-capita (age 15-64) cost divided by hours per week at average wage needed to pay these costs.

This shows one could get by working 10 hrs/week in 1980, now it takes 20 hrs a week to pay housing, health, and education.

Brutal.

31   darlag   2015 Jan 19, 11:38am  

Bellingham Bill says

Obviously*, our consumer economy runs on consumers having spending power.

If implied in "spending" is also borrowing power Austrians can't see that for good reason... it isn't true. That is the myth being perpetrated by a Keynesian mentality... that borrowing and spending drive the economy. The reality is that production and saving are the paths prosperity. In a world with negative savings rates and armpit deep in debt, you can try to borrow and spend all you want but eventually you will have to produce something. And you won't be able to do that successfully until you free yourself from debt.

I rest my case:

Bellingham Bill says

same data transformed by per-capita (age 15-64) cost divided by hours per week at average wage needed to pay these costs.

This shows one could get by working 10 hrs/week in 1980, now it takes 20 hrs a week to pay housing, health, and education.

Brutal.

32   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 11:56am  

darlag says

that borrowing and spending drive the economy

this is still true and obvious if you look at history. We go into the unsustainable zone when the borrowing is funding consumption (and/or stock speculation) and not bona fide goods-producing capital investment -- and the crash will come eventually.

I don't care about Keynesian analysis, just what has happened before and will happen again.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_cycle#Credit.2Fdebt_cycle

Steve Keen is my main man here, so I'm a Keensian not a Keynesian I guess.

So if you want to see what's going to happen down the road, it's best to look at credit leveraging in the economy now.

Part of the main problem we have is all our data is aggregated, it'd be much more helpful to look at the data on a per-quintile basis (to understand how the middle 3 quintiles of the distribution are doing)

Keen goes even further by attempting to model the entire f'in economy at the individual actor level.

http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/minsky/

Now, I don't know if he actually knows what he's doing, but I admire the attempt.

As for leveraging, Japan has shown everyone that gov't can go to the moon.

all you need is tax cuts & a printing press, and the will to use it. Austrians need to understand that Weimar/Zimbabwe only happens when the shelves go bare and consumers bid up prices on scarcity. WE ARE NOT IN THAT REGIME NOW (largely thanks to 1.357+ billion China needing our dollars and know-how to continue moving themselves out of medieval-level poverty, plus food security from marvelous productivity gains in factory farming since the 1950s).

Sanders is promoting MMT aka 'hey man let's just print'.

http://www.economonitor.com/lrwray/2014/12/27/not-dead-yet-post-keynesian-economics-lives-on-at-umkc/

Knowing what I know about housing inflation, I don't think this is the best idea (landlords are all 'yess, come little pretties into my trap'), but it's certainly better less-worse than repeating the 1930s.

33   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 12:19pm  

darlag says

production and saving are the paths to prosperity

aka capital concentration, yes. But money in the bank is at the end of the day IRRELEVANT.

What matters is production vs consumption of wealth, and distribution of opportunity, so potential wealth creators become actual wealth creators and not unhappy spectators in the economy.

Wealth at its most elemental is the condition of having no unmet needs and wants. It is also the ability to create the goods and services that provide this utility ("capital").

It is not money, really. Money is just an implementation detail, the markers we trade to determine who gets to take what from the store.

This is no longer the pre-war developmental era. We are living in the Jetson's economy of push-button plenty, we just don't know it, due to the rife rent-seeking from all angles liberating from us our disposable incomes.

Give me $5000 ($800 in 1970 money), and I can live like a King for a year, since I'm no longer on the housing and education treadmill (and my wants are simple -- an interesting non-fiction book or two hours cycling up a scenic road is Good Enough for me). Health insurance is my dominant expense now, but I haven't been hit with a major health expense since 2009, and that was just ~$600 out-of-pocket.

34   darlag   2015 Jan 19, 12:58pm  

Bellingham Bill says

What matters is production vs consumption of wealth, and distribution of opportunity, so potential wealth creators become actual wealth creators and not unhappy spectators in the economy.

Like I've said in the past, I enjoy your analyses. My only (slight) disagreement with your statement is that money in the bank is irrelevant. Even in an inflating economy it is not irrelevant but it is foolish. In a deflating economy it is absolutely necessary.

I think the idea that slight inflation is necessary for progress was an idea born of the 20th century, perpetuated by the banking industry, and co-opted by the Federal Reserve to justify skimming their annual profits from an ignorant population of working class producers. Inflation and deflation are normal cycles that have happened for all of history. Sometimes the booms and busts were extreme but they always leveled themselves rather quickly without state intervention. Today, intervention is the norm and the current boom is so levered that the bust will be catastrophic. Whenever government tries to intervene in the business cycle, greed and avarice dominate the decision process. Nothing good ever happens when the state decides to tell the populace what it should have or want. I am reminded of a quote from Milton Friedman,

"Indeed, a major source of objection to a free economy is precisely
that... it gives people what they want instead of what a particular
group thinks they ought to want. Underlying most arguments against
the free market is a lack of belief in freedom itself."

35   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 1:37pm  

darlag says

Whenever government tries to intervene in the business cycle

that's just it, since the postwar management revolution of the 1960s, VisiCalc in the 1970s, 123 & Microsoft Excel in the 1980s, the internet in the 1990s, and touch phones today (j/k), I don't think we face a 'business cycle' any more -- of business over-investing in productive capacity, outrunning demand.

Japan has shown government has a pretty big bazooka to intervene with, and the benefits of such intervention is to eventually (hopefully...) reset the game for the debtor classes, at the expense of the "savers" aka 1%.

" free market is a lack of belief in freedom itself"

I'll believe in the "free market" freedom of minarchists when there's good land free for the taking again.

and my doctor has enough time on his hands to make housecalls for that matter.

this is why I'm a left-libertarian and not a right-libertarian.

http://foldvary.blogspot.com/2012/03/self-destruction-of-libertarian-party.html

36   darlag   2015 Jan 19, 2:43pm  

Bellingham Bill says

I don't think we face a 'business cycle' any more -- of business over-investing in productive capacity, outrunning demand.

From an Austrian, and perhaps more cogently, a Socionomic point of view, it is not over-investment that causes the problems. It is mal-investment. Low or no interest credit will make a business go into debt in an attempt to make a profit in an area of production for which there may not be sufficient demand. Worse, he may not be qualified to produce a product of that nature and thus manufactures an inferior product simply because the funding is available and the risk is minimal. I believe the real estate market is doing this now. Low mortgage rates have created a new bubble in both the residential and commercial areas. When Treasury yields start to rise significantly in the coming months, real estate will again take a big hit, probably bigger that 2006.

Mal-investment tends to be much less a problem when a businessman must put his own capital at risk, or at least meet adequate credit qualifications. Subsidies, tax credits and the like are just stealing from those who produced and saved to provide an unqualified advantage to a privileged group. In keeping with the real estate theme, the reduction of FHA down payments to 3% this year is simply creating another round of sub-prime loans. Apparently no lessons were learned from the last debacle.

37   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 4:50pm  

darlag says

When Treasury yields start to rise significantly in the coming months,

this is going to be the Test of Theories heh

says no inflating rates in my lifetime, LOL

38   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 4:53pm  

darlag says

the reduction of FHA down payments to 3% this year is simply creating another round of sub-prime loans

not in the slightest. Getting more people out of the maws of the "income property" brigade is a good thing.

FHA losing 200 bps on bad loan principal is neither here nor there in the scheme of things.

Rates going up with the economy going down simply doesn't compute for me now. We'll see!

One of the beauty things about the QE injection is that all that money is still pinging around the system. Until we have off world colonies, printed money has nowhere else to go.

shows the scale of the money pumps (blue). Red is federal spending.

Funny how the GOP successfully mau-maud Bernanke to slow down the QE leading up to the 2012 election.

http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2011/09/20/full-text-republicans-letter-to-bernanke-questioning-more-fed-action/

39   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 8:40pm  

Funny how the longer we go the lower it goes.

My thesis is that the more debt we make, the lower interest rates have to go.

In Japanese, that's 積み上げより債務、金利は下がらせる

which of course they've been giving us a preview of this dynamic since 1993.

40   Bellingham Bill   2015 Jan 19, 11:46pm  

"Manufacturers, which have benefited from the export competitiveness generated by a weaker yen, have been limited in their hiring. The number of jobs in the sector was 10.19 million in November, matching the lowest level since December 2012, when the figure hit a level unseen since 1961"

US has 12M mfg jobs, with a population base almost ~2.5X greater:

41   MisdemeanorRebel   2015 Jan 20, 10:10am  

Bellingham Bill says

I don't get it man, somebody "disliked" my treasury chart above.

They also disliked this post. There's a serial disliker whose goal it is is to dislike anything that doesn't confirm their biases. Even fact-based stuff.

I suspect the disliker doesn't believe in evidence, empirical knowledge, or reality based information.

42   MAGA   2015 Jan 20, 12:14pm  

No more Real Estate postings? Has Patrick sold out to NAR?

43   Patrick   2015 Jan 20, 7:58pm  

definitely not sold out, just trying something different.

44   MAGA   2015 Jan 20, 8:02pm  


definitely not sold out, just trying something different.

Here is something different for you:

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