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I Have Some Bad News About the Economy


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2022 Oct 15, 5:36am   13,800 views  297 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (60)   💰tip   ignore  

https://www.hennessysview.com/p/i-have-some-bad-news-about-the-economy?publication_id=572577&post_id=78488561&isFreemail=true


Accounts are widely out of balance

How bad, you might be asking yourself, will the economy get? We’re about to find out.




The orange line is US wealth. The blue line is US GDP. The gap is the amount of wealth American households and non-profits must surrender. You see, these two lines must move in lockstep. They do over time. When they get out of sync, something will put them back into sync.

The gap is debt.

Accounts must be settled. It’s called “a reckoning.” And the reckoning is here knocking on the door.

To put this gap into historical perspective, here’s an extended view of the same data with Dr. Hunt’s markups.




From 1951 to about 1997—the year the Monica Lewinsky story broke and Howe and Strauss published The Fourth Turning—the two lines moved in lockstep. Then Alan Greenspan decided to tinker, to grow wealth without growing GDP and without kicking off inflation. ...

What that gap represents is one of two things:

Money stolen from other people (other economies).

Money stolen from future generations of Americans.

How We Borrow from the Future
A few years ago, in the 1990s, we heard a lot of stories parents going to jail for identify theft perpetrated against their own children. About 1990, the government required babies to have a Social Security Number before they left the hospital. (I remember because it happened between our second and third children.)

Some shiftless parents soon realized they could apply for credit using their kids’ SSNs. They could default, and the creditor could do nothing. You can’t collect from a six-week-old infant.

This, of course, constituted credit fraud, so the parents who did this (and there were many) went to jail. (Not sure what happened to their kids who were left with no parents and lousy FICO score, but that’s not the point.)

The point is, all of us have been doing what those parents do only legally. The government allows us to run up our kids’ and grand kids’ debt as long as we do it with the government’s approved identity-theft programs.

So we did.

If you look at that chart, about 1/3 of our household and non-profit wealth is stolen from other generations or other countries. And we have to pay it back. Now. Or soon. ...

How We Borrow from the World
Some months ago, I wrote a series of posts about the US dollar (USD) as the world’s reserve currency and the petrodollar. (Here and here.) To summarize, almost all international debt is settled with USD regardless of the two local currencies involved. Britain settles its debts with Costa Rica in USD, etc. This includes the oil markets. Saudi Arabia, in turn, buys US treasuries (national debt) as a store of value for its copious oil profits. This allows the US run up massive debt knowing there’s always a market for our bonds.

Until there’s not.

Have you notice that Saudi Arbia is drifting out of the US orbit?

I wrote it about in those earlier posts, but the most certain sign of the Kingdom’s pending divorce with from Uncle Sam happened this week. Saudi Arabia disclosed that Joe Biden tried to strong-arm the Saudis into delaying OPEC+ oil production cuts until after the November elections. In diplomatic worlds, this was a slap in the face insult to the US and, particularly, to the Biden regime.

Rumors say Biden threatened to cut military sales to the Saudis if the OPEC+ cuts were announced before the elections. Not only did OPEC+ announce the cuts on its timetable, the Kingdom told the world about Biden’s threat (without disclosing the exact terms or names). Among “partners,” such public humiliation is a sign of pending breakup.

In return, the State Department and Joe Biden announced they would reevaluate the US’s strategic arrangements with Saudi Arabia after the election. That should be interesting.

What it means is that the US might not have as eager a buyer for debt as we’ve grown accustomed to. And that means the price of US treasuries will decline. Less demand means lower prices. When the price of bond goes down, the interest goes up. ...

I’m not saying the Saudis are about to stop taking our checks—I’m saying the for the first time since the Nixon administration, they’re acting like they might. Which means the are going to demand a bigger discount—the difference between the face value of the bond and sale price. That discount is the interest, and the bigger the discount, the less cash we have to spend tomorrow.

That’s one way to close that gap. You reduce the amount of cash you get in return for a future promise to pay. The amount you owe stays the same, but the amount you get now gets smaller.

How Our Kids Get Their Money Back
Remember the two ways we built that gap between wealth and GDP? That’s the first way. The holder of US treasuries want to cash their bonds, and they don’t want to buy new ones.

The gap begins to shrink, and that shrinking is mostly in household wealth.

The second way is intergenerational theft. So how do our kids and grandkids force their accounts settled?

Have you heard about the labor participation rate? Have you heard about the labor shortage?

An odd thing about the jobs numbers in recent months. While the number of “new jobs,” also known as “new hires,” has been strong, the number of people working has been going down, down, down. Why is that? ...

The kids aren’t taking our post-dated checks, either. They’re simply not participating in the US economy—at least, not in the official US economy. They siphoning of that excess household wealth NOW, in the present. They are not working in ways that grows the blue line (GDP). They’re shrinking the gap by lowering the orange line (wealth).

Wonder where inflation is coming from? We’re spending the excess household wealth without increasing the products and services available to buy with it. Inflation is how future generations close that gap. They spend your excess wealth without producing. And it’s happening right before our eyes. ...

In truth, we will only lose our ill-gotten gains.

While, we didn’t personally rob from the kids and foreigners, we were participants in a rigged game—a game that’s getting unrigged in a hurry. We enjoyed the spoils of the petrodollar and zero interest rates.

This account-settling process is called a reckoning, which sound harsh because it is.

https://www.epsilontheory.com/hollow-men-hollow-markets-hollow-world-2/

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288   AD   2024 Oct 27, 3:10pm  

WookieMan says

Why would you overpay for coffee? My wife used to get Starbucks a lot and she finally listened to me, you can make better coffee at home. Get up 5 minutes earlier and brew some beans you like for 25¢ a cup if that.


consumer trends and demographic changes

as its harder for Starbucks to continue growing as the replacement generations (born after 1995) are not as interested as younger generations like Gen X in spending the money at a Starbucks

Starbucks is going to have to adapt and adjust , and this may mean a major re-branding or re-defining effort

.
289   WookieMan   2024 Oct 27, 7:32pm  

AD says

Starbucks is going to have to adapt and adjust , and this may mean a major re-branding or re-defining effort

Repricing effort. Younger generations saw their parents get smashed in the housing bust. There's not as many consumers anymore. I can buy a bag of better quality coffee for 5 visits to Starbucks. Younger folks are waking up. You can have good/better coffee 7 days a week without leaving the house for 20¢ a cup instead of $5 not including gas.

Dunkin and Starbucks are trash if you've had good coffee. I liken it to wine or whiskey. I don't partake, but people in the know ain't drinking shit.
290   AD   2024 Oct 28, 10:09am  

WookieMan says

Younger folks are waking up.


I agree as far as demographic trends as the "replacement generation" consumers may be more thrifty or value-conscious.

Look at the Amazon-effect as far as value shopping, whereas someone will go to a bricks-and-mortar store and compare the prices to Amazon.

I like use a Moka coffee pot to make as close-to-expresso as possible such as using Bustelo coffee. May mix a little hazelnut flavor coffee grounds in the express coffee grounds. One of the most sustainable ways of making coffee.

.
291   WookieMan   2024 Oct 28, 10:19am  

AD says

Look at the Amazon-effect as far as value shopping, whereas someone will go to a bricks-and-mortar store and compare the prices to Amazon.

I legit just don't buy anything anymore. I can go two weeks without buying a thing. $0. I've stopped spending on myself. Wife buys for the kids, but I personally don't buy much if anything anymore. $100-200/mo? Mostly beer. Maybe a gas station snack. I'm a cheap date.
292   GNL   2024 Oct 28, 1:36pm  

WookieMan says

AD says


Look at the Amazon-effect as far as value shopping, whereas someone will go to a bricks-and-mortar store and compare the prices to Amazon.

I legit just don't buy anything anymore. I can go two weeks without buying a thing. $0. I've stopped spending on myself. Wife buys for the kids, but I personally don't buy much if anything anymore. $100-200/mo? Mostly beer. Maybe a gas station snack. I'm a cheap date.

The older I get, the more I realize I don't need nor want all of this shit I got.
293   WookieMan   2024 Oct 28, 8:08pm  

GNL says

The older I get, the more I realize I don't need nor want all of this shit I got.

We're gonna be moving late spring 2025. Besides furniture and cooking gear, I want to get rid of 80% of the shit we have over the next 6 months. If my house, being bigger, seems empty I give zero shits.

The wife buys too much knick knack shit and we have bins of it. I'm designing the garage and basement storage. All the shit is going. She doesn't know it yet. No problem keeping stuff the kids made, but fuck halloween, thanksgiving, easter or xmas. I don't need bins of that shit around. We have 10 fucking roller suitcases in our furnace room currently. 5 carry on backpacks.

And not bitching at the wife. I'm going to empty out 60-70% of my closet. She should do the same. She just pulled out 6 bins of Halloween shit. She's dumping 3. We're hiring movers to go 4 blocks, so the cheaper we can make it the better.
294   GNL   2024 Oct 29, 5:06am  

Back when I was still taking photos, I encountered many people who were moving from their McMansions and couldn't wait till they were moved into their condo. Not that I like condos but, I've been in some pretty nice ones. These buildings have more amenities and conveniences than living in a nice subdivision. My inlaws lived here...https://www.watergateatlandmark.com/about-wal.html
until they retired to a golf course community in SC. That condo had more amenities than any other community I can remember. Indoor and outdoor pools, indoor and outdoor tennis courts, putting green, volleyball, basketball, carwash, racket club, bowling alley, barber and beauty shops, billiard hall, movie theater, gated etc. etc.
296   AD   2024 Oct 29, 10:26pm  

The Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis website shows the Employment-Population Ratio at 60.2%.

It was 61.1% in February 2020, and its all time high is 64.7% in April 2000.

Its lowest since April 2000 was at 58.3% in January 2011.

And now that hiring has slowed down with the lowest job openings since 2021, I don't expect the Employment-Population Ratio to return to 61% by February 2025.
297   RWSGFY   2024 Oct 31, 5:53pm  

Housing prices are CRATERING!


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