Conditions show weakness,
not improvement. Soft-land enthusiasts face rude awakening challenges.
Later in 2012 and especially 2013, expect tougher times to reshape their
outlook. They're always notoriously behind the curve.
Bad policy begets bad results. Force-fed austerity promises hard times
getting nasty. In fall 2007, residential housing's reversal shaped events
going forward.
Real estate kept overvalued markets safe. For most US households, it's
their main discretionary income source. Its trajectory went straight
up for years. Doing so formed a classic bubble. Eventually they all
burst.
Real estate crashed and went straight down. Recovery is nowhere in sight.
Hard times remain protracted. Main Street's been in Depression since
2008. Stability and economic growth are distant. Household and small
business balance sheets contracted noticeably for over four years.
Belt-tightening reduced overall household debt to disposable income
modestly from 135% in 2007 to 120% now. What happens going forward as
economic weakness increases? Bipartisan support for $4 trillion in largely
domestic cuts kicks in post-November when conditions can least tolerate
them.
Obama administration policies have been spectacularly wrongheaded. Planned
late year austerity when stimulus is needed will be disastrous. Inflation
is much higher than reported. So is unemployment, growing poverty, and
public pain.
At the same time, high food, energy, medical, transportation and other
costs grow more unaffordable. Households with limited resources feel
it most.
Home prices haven't stabilized. Meaningful job creation is moribund.
Solutions for issues this important aren't addressed. Rhetoric substitutes
for sound policy.
Expect more wars instead of ending current ones. At the same time, homeland
needs go begging. Europe's sovereign debt and banking crisis looms ominous.
Standards of living in Western countries keep declining. No end of hardships
continue.
China's property market began deflating. It's got a long way down to
go. Its economy may prove much weaker than predicted. It has major unresolved
problems.
Economic softness spread from Europe and America to Asia and Latin America.
Chinese manufacturing is contracting. So is Brazil's.
Despite healthy corporate balance sheets, median OECD country public
and private sector debt exceeds 400% of GDP. The OECD government debt
to GDP ratio exceeds 100% for the first time post-WW II.
Unwinding excess will take years. Consumer spending will suffer. So
will economic growth. Bad policies exacerbate hard times. Public pain
generates instability. Strikes and angry protests continue. They'll
grow and spread.
Boil over threatens. People take so much, then react disruptively. It's
been ongoing for years but will intensify. Historically, political turmoil
follows secular economic peaks. The harder and more protracted the fall,
the more disorderly the reaction.
Ahead expect the greatest in decades. Perhaps the most disruptive in
modern times.
Protracted reversals follow extreme excess. This one has a long way
to go. Bad policy extends the timeframe. Imperial plans increase disruptiveness.
Resources go for warmaking, not domestic needs. Greater suffering follows.
The wild card is how much will people take before exploding.
Day of reckoning time may be 2013. European governments toppled like
tenpins. Obama or Romney in America hardly matters. Their agendas are
similar on issues mattering most.
Both support militarism, permanent wars, imperial dominance, corporate
needs above public ones, painful austerity, and stiff crackdowns on
resisters. Going forward, things look grim. Households least able to
cope suffer most.
Key indicators point south. The Baltic Dry index historically indicates
global economic activity. In May, it slumped about 10%. Future prospects
look uncertain or troubled. Only about 20% of companies ventured outlooks.
Of those, over half turned negative.
Headwinds overall are stiff. Durable goods orders show weakness. So
does contracting production. New orders are down three consecutive months.
Unfilled ones plunged. So did delivery time. Inventories hit a two month
low. Prices paid collapsed to 5 from 22.5. It reflected the lowest read
since July 2009.
Prices received also swung from 9.4 to -4.5, the lowest since last summer.
Employment posted the largest monthly decline since May 2006. The workweek
declined. Capex spending expectations hit their lowest level since September
2009.
Hiring shows no signs of recovering. Leading indicators sagged. The
coincident to lagging ratio declined. It was down three of the past
four months. The ratio is known for "leading the leader." It confirms
likely downward GDP revisions. Going forward things look grim.
In Europe they look worse. Greece is virtually bankrupt. Spain's economy
is imploding. Retail sales plunged 9.8% year-over-year. They declined
22 consecutive months. The past year's result is the sharpest drop on
record.
What's implied going forward looks ominous. Spain's central bank governor
Miguel Ordonez resigned. Word is he was forced out after serving six
years. Eurozone economic confidence overall is down.
So is US consumer confidence. During expansions, the historical average
is 102. In recessions, it's 78. The latest read was 64.9, way below
the norm. Employment was its grimmest part. It reflects people saying
jobs are hard to get.
Financial advisor Martin Weiss believes "a new financial megashock"
could happen any time. Potentially it looms greater than 2008 troubles.
Market paralysis could follow. Trading could be frozen in "critical
debt instruments such as bank CDs, commercial paper and even" sovereign
debt.
Failures like Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG, Lehman Bros., Bear Stearns,
and others could repeat. Potentially they could be worse. Radical government
measures could be imposed. If similar to earlier ones, they won't work.
"The next big megashock is both quite predictable and virtually unstoppable!"
Analysts paying attention understand. Others suspect the worst. Europe
is cratering in crisis. Media reports understate the severity. Sovereign
debt is dangerously high. The world is awash in debt. Major banks are
insolvent. Bailouts follow earlier ones.
Instead of confronting problems responsibly, policy makers keep repeating
past mistakes.
An "explosive combination of extreme danger (and) complacency" exists.
Current risks exceed 2008. Then, finance capital was troubled. "Today,
entire nations are on the brink." Weakness shows up in New York, London,
across Europe, and spreads globally.
In 2007, America's federal deficit was $161 billion. Currently, it exceeds
$1.3 trillion.
In 2008, most troubled banking giants were American ones. Some still
are like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America.
Today, European megabanks face serious problems. They include Banco
Santander, Barclays, Crédit Agricole, Lloyds Bank, Royal Bank
of Scotland, Société Générale, UniCredit
SpA, and others.
Assets of European banking giants exceed those of all US commercial
banks combined.
In 2008, governments had considerable firepower to confront crisis conditions.
Today, everything tried brings "diminishing returns."
In 2008, governments met little public resistance. Currently, angry
protests continue across Europe and America.
Before 2008, central banks "largely restrict(ed) their role to traditional"
practices. Radical departure followed to no avail. Massive money creation
brought no relief. Printing more won't help unless directed for economic
growth, not banker balance sheets.
Political rhetoric signals growth. Policies suggest otherwise.
Greece is most troubled of all. Sovereign debt costs above 7% signal
danger. Athens pays four times that much. The more it borrows, the worse
off it gets. Its debt is virtually worthless. Default is almost certain.
Mass withdrawals intensify current problems.
Spain is nearly as troubled. Its economy exceeds Greece's fivefold.
Greece is a side-show by comparison. Spain's Prime Minister Mariano
Rajoy said "there will be no Spanish banking rescue." With over $1 trillion
in deposits, enough resources don't exist to cover runs if they spread
and grow.
At 510 basis points, Spanish/German 10-year yield spreads reached the
highest level since the euro's inception.
At the same time, unemployment approaches 25%. For youths, it's 50%
and worsening. Confidence in its banks cratered. Earlier in May, Bankia,
Spain's fourth largest bank, was nationalized. Credit downgrades hit
the entire sector. Expect other bank rescues to follow.
Austerity across Europe is still policy. Based on election results,
support for it collapsed. Massive money printing won't help.
Progressive Radio News Hour regular Bob Chapman predicts it. G8 summit
leaders discussed it. Fed QE III looks likely. Continued propping up
of troubled banks is planned. At issue is for how long. It solved nothing
earlier and won't now.
"ECB will take junk bonds and other vastly over-priced assets as collateral
for loans to the Spanish, Greek and other European banks. This will
offset an additional estimated $500 billion in new write-offs by bondholders
of Greek debt."
If Greece leaves the euro, "contagion will spread overnight to Spain,
Portugal, Ireland, and perhaps Italy."
Inflationary countermeasures are planned. Obama hopes to hold on through
election. Fed and ECB assets "fall far short" of an estimated $4 trillion
or more euro liability private banks face.
Four and a half years into crisis conditions, they're worse off than
ever. Recapitalizations solved nothing. They bought time for a greater
day of reckoning.
At the same time, bank runs are hitting troubled EU economies. Greece
noticeably is affected. Euro exit fears motivate people to transfer
funds elsewhere. Spanish depositors are scared. They're doing the same
thing.
Portugal, Ireland and Italy are vulnerable. Once outflows start, stopping
them isn't easy. Potential runs in other countries could follow. It's
similar to selling weak sovereign debt for safe havens.
Bank runs are especially pernicious. They can happen quickly and spread.
The potential for financial crisis grows. Is it happening again? Only
the fullness of time will tell.
In America, insider selling surged. Corporate stock buybacks fell to
a three year low. None of this signals confidence.
In early May, JP Morgan's trading loss sent shock waves across Wall
Street. The $2 billion announced reflects the tip of the iceberg. Expect
much more to come. Other banks face similar risks.
JP Morgan was considered Wall Street's most stable bank. Now it's troubled.
At issue is speculative excess. It's done because banking giants are
considered too big to fail. The Bernanke put assures taxpayer bailouts
if needed.
At the same time, lending across Europe contracted sharply. Doing so
exacerbates recession conditions. Eurozone banks are deeply troubled.
So are Britain's.
America's economy has a 90% correlation with Europe. What affects the
continent spreads contagion to US banks. Bank of America and Wells Fargo
have serious problems. JP Morgan's losses show none of the giants are
immune, and what hits them also harms smaller banks. They're more on
their own. Many fail.
Troubled conditions now replicate 2008. Speculative excess continues
unabated. Big bets gone bad trigger crises. JP Morgan sent a shock waves
across Wall Street and Europe. Free money bailouts solved nothing. European
banks are especially weak.
Responsible solutions aren't taken. Huge bad asset amounts infest bank
balance sheets. Fiscal austerity combined with monetary madness makes
economic conditions worse.
Europe and America exacerbate each other's problems. Policy measures
followed are similar. So are hard times getting harder.
Instead of nationalizing insolvent banks worth saving, letting others
fail, and restructuring responsibly, past errors repeat with predictable
results. At best they buy time. Eventually it runs out.
The moment of truth may hit harder than anything felt so far. Ordinary
people suffer most. What happened earlier may be prelude to grimmer
than ever times ahead.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
His new book is titled "How Wall Street Fleeces America: Privatized
Banking, Government Collusion and Class War"
http://www.claritypress.com/Lendman.html
Visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge
discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News
Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time
and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy
listening.
http://www.progressiveradionetwork.com/the-progressive-news-hour
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