Thoughts from the Frontline

An Economy at Stall Speed

July 29, 2011

Choose your language

The GDP numbers for the second quarter came in, and there is no way to spin them as anything but ugly. And the revisions were worse. We simply have to take a few pages to look at them. And, as I noted last Monday in the Outside the Box, I met with some ten Senators Monday afternoon (as well as Congressmen in the morning), plus a lot of staff. Getting ten Senators in a room for 90-plus minutes is not so often done. I will report in this week’s letter about our conversation and my impressions.

But first, I was in Vancouver for a few days this week at the Agora conference. I had dinner with old friends Bill Bonner, Barry Ritholtz, David Tice, Frank Holmes, and Keith Fitzgerald. I had spoken that morning and my speech was well-received, getting a fair complement of laughs. I was somewhat on a roll. I mentioned that I think a lot of the better financial speakers are actually frustrated stand-up comics, and there was general agreement on that.

I say that to set up the next item. This past April I spoke at my own investment conference in La Jolla (co-sponsored with Altegris Investments). It was a brand new speech, and I did something I have not done in years: I actually practiced it several times, as I did not want to embarrass myself, given the quality of the other speakers. I came off the stage feeling that I had given the worst speech of my career. The room was absolutely silent. I normally get a lot of laughs. I was getting no reaction at all. As I made my way to the rear of the room I was actually quite depressed.

Then several people (people who cut me no slack) told me that it was the best speech they had ever heard me give. I was surprised and said, “But the audience was so quiet. How come?”

“John, you just walked them through a scenario that was so compelling and so fraught with regard to our problematic future that it was very sobering. There really was nothing to laugh at.” This from a man who has been very blunt with me and has heard me speak many times and tells me if I am off my game. I got the same comment a lot.

I am now using a different speech, so we are going to make the one from our conference available online to all those who have signed up for my accredited investor letter. It is the last speech of the conference to be posted, so now every one is online – speeches by David Rosenberg, Martin Barnes, Neil Howe, Gary Shilling, and more, plus the panel sessions. A very powerful lineup it was.

If you are an accredited investor (net worth of over $1.5 million), you can go to www.johnmauldin.com and click on The Mauldin Circle and fill out the form, and one of my worldwide partners will get in contact with you and give you access to the speech. And if you have not yet reached that status, you can still sign up, and my partner CMG, based in Philadelphia, will make sure you get access. These all are management firms that, like Altegris, have access to some of the best alternative investments and commodity funds I am aware of. Let them show you what adding some of the managers they represent can do for your portfolio. (In this regard, I am president and a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, member FINRA.) Please read the risk disclosures on the form and at the end of the letter carefully when you are thinking about alternative investments. And now to this week’s letter.

An Economy at Stall Speed

There is no way to spin the GDP report that came out this morning as anything but very bad. It was just last May that the consensus was that second-quarter GDP would be 3.3%. That had been revised down to 2.7%, but the number came in at 1.3%. Normally, at this time in a recovery we are growing at close to 3 times that number, or 3.6%. (You…

Discuss This

23 comments

We welcome your comments. Please comply with our Community Rules.

Comments

Page 3 of 3  < 1 2 3

Steve Figliozzi

July 30, 2011, 11:17 a.m.

John,

As usual, your newsletter is full of insight that one rarely finds elsewhere. Thanks for your service, its priceless!

Best regards,

Steve

Robert Monical

July 30, 2011, 10 a.m.

Hello John -I have been a great fan of your work for several years. Given the nature of this slowdown and the dynamics of the economy over the last couple of decades, I have a number of questions about the “conventional wisdom”.

In a deleveraging driven economy, how important is capital formation? Is there a shortage of capital today? 
With an unprecedented concentration of income and wealth at the top 10% of the population, what is the right taxation level for that group? Same question when we further realize that government policy is so heavily biased against entrepreneurship among the poor? To the extent that capital formation is hard for the poor, should the Fed more aggressively provide low cost money - disintermediating the stranglehold that the too big to fail institutions have on access to the lowest cost money.

In a deleveraging driven economy with trillions in short term saving earning no return - what is the right short term interest rate? With the explosion in irresponsible lending after the 2005 bankruptcy reform bill - what have we learned about bankruptcy policy?

With student loan debt exploding and a new generation of debt serfs in the pipeline - what is the right policy for discharging student loans in bankruptcy? I should note that by creating a special class of debtor (students) we see irresponsible lending to that class exploding. This is yet another example of the pernicious bias against people of moderate means and in favor of the financial sector. If we did not have this special status for student loans, lending to that class would be much more prudent and education costs would inevitably decrease. What would the impact on the country be if we were creating these new debt serfs and billions in new debt every month? The growing student loan debt serfdom problem is an echo of that caused caused by special rules pertaining to housing in bankruptcy.

I would be interested in comparing the income and wealth distribution profile we are approaching to that under a third world or feudal economy. Is there anything that will stop the current trend of concentrating more and more wealth in a fraction of the population?

I suspect that long before Medicare becomes completely unaffordable, the pernicious bias of governments at all levels in favor of concentrating wealth may make that and most other issues discussed herein moot.

Robert

David Champeau

July 30, 2011, 9:06 a.m.

Hi John,

I hope that you warned the Senators that social unrest and dictatorship are a very real possibility if this situation is allowed to continue on its natural course. This is what Depression 2.0 would look like. I hope that they also understand the importance of demographics in this situation. They need to explain to their Medicare constituents that they are destroying their children’s and grandchildren’s future.

This was one of your best TFTF and it too is sobering.

Respectfully,

David

Page 3 of 3  < 1 2 3