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Drinks are on the Fed



By: Bill Bonner & The Daily Reckoning Crew


-- Posted Wednesday, 19 September 2007 | Digg This ArticleDigg It!

London, England
Wednesday, September 19, 2007

---------------------

*** Headlines report on FOMC sanctioned 'Party Time'…bankers fear the 'rich man's spoiled teenager'…

*** Bailout buckets as effective as the pumps on the Titanic…the rich buy watches for charity…

*** 1998's doppelganger…yesterday's rate cut - a desperate act of a desperate man?…the newest innovation in the hybrid electric vehicles…and more!

---------------------

"Fed cuts key rate by half a point, and markets soar," is the top headline in today's International Herald Tribune.

The second headline is like unto it:

"U.K. bank doubles bailouts"

Both headlines tell the same story…

"It's Party Time…!"

At least that is the message that investors took away from the Fed's actions yesterday. They ran up Dow stocks more than 300 points. "Euphoria sweeps Wall Street…" was how the IHT described it.

As anticipated in this space a long, long time ago, the Bank of Ben Bernanke has announced that it is not the Bank of Paul Volcker; it is still the Bank of Alan Greenspan. And, like its illustrious predecessor, this bank's main concern is avoiding a Japan-like slump. That is, of the two forms of 'flation' we talked about yesterday, it prefers the form preceded by 'in' rather than 'de.'

According to press reports, the Fed's Open Market Committee had little doubt that it would cut rates; the big question before it was: how much? And while we guessed that it would cut, we presumed that it would take the more cautious choice - a quarter of a point, rather than a half. That it opted for a full half a point off the fed funds rate merely reinforced the message: "Drinks on the House". Or at least that was the gist of it.

Meanwhile, across the blue Atlantic, the Bank of England had been reluctant to come to the aid of speculators. The bankers feared that offering bailouts to rich punters would give them the wrong idea. They might come away thinking that they could do any damned thing they wanted - like a rich man's spoiled teenager - and the central bank would always bail them out. Heck, they could even buy U.S. subprime mortgage debt!

Northern Rock was the focus of their concerns over the weekend. The company has lent billions to Britain's property speculators. But when Northern Rock itself needed a loan, all of a sudden the credit markets turned their backs. The mortgage lender then found itself short of cash. Then, to make matters worse, depositors turned their backs too. Middle-aged housewives and retired plumbers stood in line to get their money out, fearing that the firm might collapse.

"It is just like '29," said an attractive French woman at last night's dinner. "I don't know anything about finance, but I don't like the looks of it."

Here at The Daily Reckoning, we don't know anything about finance either. But we also don't like the looks of it.

As of two days ago, private lenders were a bit on edge. There is a kind of 'de' flation on the loose, they noticed. It is taking down U.S. house prices…and, cometh the news last week…U.K. house prices, too. It was causing a general "re-pricing" of risk…and risky assets. Stocks were up…and down - as if investors couldn't decide which direction the re-pricing should go. But a lot of debt-based assets - such as the infamous mortgaged-backed securities - are clearly being re-priced downward.

Among themselves, that is, as calibrated by the London Inter-Bank Lending Rate, the big banks figured they would lend each other money, overnight, at 6.47%. But along comes Ben and Mervyn, and the lending rates are dropped - to 6% overnight in London…to 4.75% in the United States.

We have to ask; what air do these central bankers breathe? What meat do they eat? What theories of economics do they believe…and what gods do they worship? How is it that they can believe, that of all the possible interest rates…from zero to the stars…they will find the very right one? How can they imagine that their judgment is better than the open market - in which they claim such confidence?

Oh, forget it…

But that doesn't mean there are no open questions. "What next?" is the big one. Bailouts…bailouts…and more bailouts. "The crisis is behind us," said one expert interviewed in the English press. But the pumps were working on the Titanic too. The engineers must have been proud of them.

How do you make a lot of money in this kind of finance-driven economy? Simple. You sell things to rich people. Those who make the most are the financial hustlers - who have figured out that rich people are no smarter than poor people. The poor sign up for teaser-rate ARMs…the rich sign up for 2 & 20 hedge funds.

Short of going into finance, there are other ways of separating the rich from their money. Among the most profitable is the luxury goods market. Swatch - owner of luxury watch brands Breguet and Blancpain - is up 38% this year. Lamborghini has a new limited-edition sports car that sells for $1.4 million, the most expensive car ever manufactured. All 20 of its first run sold out.

Today's International Herald Tribune brings a two-page spread on the Monaco Yacht Show. "More billionaires, more Russians, bigger yachts and the same Mediterranean," is how it sums up the situation. Articles feature private jets, watches…and of course, huge "mega-yachts." An ad shows a beautiful young woman wearing a diamond pendant so large she has to peak around it.

But don't get the idea that the rich, in their desire for very-conspicuous consumption, don't care about the poor. There is an auction of watches later this week in Monaco, for the benefit of a local charity. The show's director explains why:

"People living at the high end of society may seem detached and remote from the real world, but they are connected. They have visibility through their wealth and they are using it in socially responsible ways."

Bill Bonner
The Daily Reckoning

P.S. We figure, if you can't beat 'em, join 'em…in honor of the Fed's rate cut, we are going to cut some prices just for you, dear reader. If you subscribe to Kevin Kerr's Resource Trader Alert today, we'll give you three months free. 

No matter what the Fed does next…or how far the dollar falls…we're confident in Kevin's ability to grow your capital. In fact, if he doesn't double your money in six months, we'll refund 100% of your subscription fee.

Now over to today's guest essay…

--------------

The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS:

Many analysts and market experts (Greenspan included) have compared the recent turmoil in the credit markets to the problems seen in 1998. However, there are a few basic differences between today's market climate and that of ten years ago. Marc Faber explains in today's guest essay - which was, incidentally, written in late August, weeks before yesterday's aggressive rate cut…

"Pundits who are likening today's market rout to that of 1998, and who expect the market to rally strongly towards the end of this year and to close at a new all-time high, are failing to consider the very different economic and financial circumstances of today, compared to those of 1998," writes Dr. Faber.

"In the years leading up to the 1998 crisis, the US dollar was in a bull market, and interest rates, which had peaked in September 1981, were in the middle of a secular decline. At the same time, gold and other commodities were still deflating. Also, in the 1990s, the US stock market had significantly outperformed the emerging markets, most of which had peaked out between 1990 and 1994 and had crashed during the Asian crisis of 1997-98."

Keep reading here:

The Alter-Ego of 1998

And more news from Short Fuse in Los Angeles…

---------------

Views from the Fuse:

Yesterday, Lehman Brothers (NYSE:LEH) reported that it lost $700 million in the third quarter. Guess what it lost the money on? Mortgage backed securities…

And today, the news coming from Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) has a familiar ring to it. The world's second biggest securities firm announced that earnings were lower than estimated, due to a decline in fixed income trading revenue and losses on loans for leveraged buyouts.

But yesterday's big, big news came from the Fed. Instead of cutting rates a quarter-percentage point, as most expected, they cut the federal funds rate by a half-point, from 5.25% to 4.75%.

Of course, stocks rallied on this news…the Dow climbed over 330 points, giving it its biggest one-day point gain in five years. However, don't get used to these kinds of daily highs, as Eric Fry puts it in today's Rude Awakening, "Surprisingly aggressive interest rate cuts are usually acts of desperation. They are ideal for triggering spectacular 300-point stock market rallies, but not so god for restoring genuine economic stability…especially not when the currency of the land is tumbling to all-time lows against most major foreign currencies."

After the Fed announcement, oil shot up over $82 a barrel. The euro (EUR) crept precariously close to $1.40. "Oh yes…" quips Bill, "there's the 'in' side of 'flation.'"

We were surprised they didn't go up more… In the aftermarket, gold shot up over $730. We're thinking gold still has farther to go…in fact, Byron King, over at Outstanding Investments thinks the yellow metal has nowhere to go but up. Find out how you can own gold with 'zero-downside' risk. But act fast - if you don't jump on this offer by October 23, the doors could slam shut forever.

One day last week, when Addison was out here on the Left Coast to work on the documentary, we found ourselves without a car. Luckily, one of the film's producers has one to spare…she recently purchased (on e-Bay) an eco-friendly vehicle to balance out the Range Rover she also drives around Los Angeles.

The car that Sarah was kind enough to loan us, however, is a late 1970's Mercedes station wagon - which sounds like a gas-guzzling nightmare…except this car runs on vegetable oil.

Sarah says that it could run solely on veggie oil, but the biofuel is very hard to come by in L.A., so she fills the tank with a 50/50 mix of vegetable oil and diesel.

While Sarah's biodiesel car runs well (although it is super loud - and there's the tendency to exit smelling like fried chicken), Gunner, over at Bulletin Board Elite, has alerted us to a new innovation in the world of hybrid-electric vehicles…with room for investors in-the-know to make some real profits…

"The next generation of hybrid electric vehicle batteries is coming - and a multinational conglomerate won't be manufacturing them," he tells us. "Instead, a virtually unknown bulletin board company will take the helm and deliver lithium ion batteries that will outperform the industry standard nickel-metal hydride batteries, helping hybrid vehicles operate more efficiently with more power and less extra weight.

"These new lithium ion batteries will be lighter, smaller, more powerful and longer lasting than the old ones. On top of this, this one obscure company is developing an automated manufacturing process at its Indiana facility that it hopes will help it become the first manufacturer to offer a cheap, mass-produced lithium ion battery in the United States. The transportation applications for this kind of groundbreaking technology are virtually endless…"

Find out how this small company is setting itself up to become a major player in a virtually untapped market that could grow to more than $4 billion annually over the next decade. Click here.


-- Posted Wednesday, 19 September 2007 | Digg This Article



We'd like to offer you The Daily Reckoning, a FREE daily e-mail service written by entrepreneur and master financial newsletter publisher Bill Bonner. It offers a 'refreshingly witty, erudite... sensible' look at the day's stock news. One reader says The Daily Reckoning offers 'more sense in one e-mail than a month of CNBC.'

You can begin your free subscription by clicking here, entering your email into the box, and clicking 'Subscribe'.



 



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