|
I
admit that of late my writings have had a rather dark tone. There are certainly
a number of severe long-term problems that we must deal with, and they're going
to serve up a lot of economic pain. But the Thanksgiving weekend with the kids
has me in a reflective mood, and one that has only served to underscore my long-term
optimism. This week we look at why 2007 will not be the good old days we will
yearn for in 20 years, after we briefly visit Dubai and the latest unemployment
numbers. Subprime Dubai While
we in the US spent our Thursday eating turkey and watching football, the rest
of the world's markets went into a downward spiral as Dubai announced it wanted
its lenders to give the country a six-month moratorium on some $80-90 billion
in debt. This has the potential to be the largest sovereign debt default since
Argentina. Somehow this was a shocking development. (How can too much debt and
real estate be a problem?) And by markets I mean gold, commodities, oil, stocks,
and risk assets everywhere. They all went down. Today the US markets
experienced their own sell-off, though not as deeply as the rest of the world. As I wrote last Friday, the world
is now negatively correlated with the dollar, and as money went into the dollar
and US treasuries, everything else went down. Vietnam devalues, Greece is
looking increasingly risky, Russia wants to devalue some more, the world is
still deleveraging, etc. Is this another repeat of 1998, when Russia and the
Asian debt crisis tanked the markets? To get an answer, let's look at
some facts about Dubai. It is one of the Arab Emirates; but unlike its neighbor
Abu Dhabi, oil is only about 6% of the economy. While the foundations of the
country were built with oil, the country has diversified into finance, real
estate, tourism, trading, and manufacturing. It is a small country, with a
little under 1.5 million residents, but with less than 20% being natural
citizens - the rest are expatriates. The gross domestic
product is around US $50 billion. (Note: http://www.ameinfo.com/67802.html
and then converting the currency. I found the numbers on various websites and
services strangely at wide discrepancies. This seems close to a median number.
I think the discrepancy is mostly people confusing the GDP for the United Arab
Emirates as a whole, which includes Abu Dhabi, rather than just Dubai.) Dubai has become a byword for
thinking large. The world's tallest building, underwater hotels, the largest
manmade islands (plural), indoor snow skiing in the desert... For links to more
information try this from Wikipedia: "The large-scale real estate development
projects have led to the construction of some of the tallest skyscrapers
and largest projects in the world, such as the Emirates
Towers, the Burj Dubai, the Palm
Islands and the world's second tallest, and most expensive hotel, the Burj Al
Arab." The list goes on and on. UBS suggests that the $80-90
billion in debt may not include rather large off-balance-sheet debt (where have
we seen that one?). So, a country with a GDP of $50 billion borrows $100
billion. They build massive projects, which are now among the most expensive
real estate in the world. The latest manmade island plans for one million
people to buy property there. Seriously. Talk about Field of Dreams. Then came the credit crunch.
Property values dropped by as much as 50%. Sales, say the developers in understatements,
have slowed. Seems there was a lot of debt used to speculate on real estate,
not to mention buying Barney's, Las Vegas casinos, banks, etc. And while US
banks have little exposure, it seems England has about 50% or so of the debt,
with the rest of Europe having the lion's share of the remainder. Admittedly,
the estimates seem to confuse the debt of Dubai with that of Abu Dhabi, so it
is hard to know a reliable number, other than that European banks are the most
exposed. Now, here's the deal. Abu Dhabi has
the world's largest sovereign wealth fund, at over $650 billion. Dubai has a
"mere" $15 billion. If they cared to, Abu Dhabi could write a small check and
make all the problems disappear. It just seems that they are not ready to do
that, at least not yet. Abu Dhabi already got the world's tallest building on
past debt problems. Construction and real estate were
as much as 25% of the economy. Let's see. Large leverage with maybe $5 billion
in interest in a $50 billion economy that is 25% construction? A construction
and real estate-driven economy. A real estate bubble. Sound like California,
Florida, Spain? How can this be a surprise, except that everyone expected big
brother Abu Dhabi to pick up the check? While Abu Dhabi did advance $5
billion earlier, Dubai is not letting that money out of the country. There are
projects to be finished, you understand. From where I sit, this is just rather
hard-headed negotiations, a restructuring of who owns what and who will get
what assets. It will all settle out. Given the massive losses that world banks
have already taken, this is rather small potatoes. So why the reaction by the markets?
Because I think many participants know that the potential for there to be a
serious correction is quite real. When anything as relatively small as Dubai
spooks the market, it should serve as a warning sign. The world has priced in 5%
GDP growth for the US and much of the developed world in the equity and
commodity markets. Either we have to get that or the markets are going to have
to come back to the reality of what I think is going to be a much lower growth
figure. But in any event, one of the
lessons to be learned is that investors should pay attention to where the
leverage is. Unsustainable debt trends end in tears. They always do. Spain,
Greece, Italy, the UK, and Japan will all have to face major restructuring in
the next decade due to leverage. And we in the US will also find that we cannot
grow debt at our current levels. Will we pare our debt willingly or be forced
to by the market? Either way, it will make for a less than optimal economy over
the coming years. Muddle Through, indeed. More Government Data Fun:
Unemployment Claims Were Not Down The headlines said that initial
claims dropped to 466,000 here in the US, finally falling below 500,000. This was
greeted with proclamations of recovery. First, let me say that 466,000 people
filing for unemployment is still way too high. That is a lot of people losing
their jobs, and when we first crossed over 450,000 a few years ago that level
was seen as a sign of recession. Second, the headline number was a
seasonally adjusted number. The actual number was 543,926. What is happening is
that we are coming off of wickedly high numbers in 2008 and a seasonal number
that was much lower in the preceding years. It is another part of the
Statistical Recovery. And this trend is likely to keep on for the rest of the
quarter. My friend John Vogel, who analyzes the unemployment numbers for me
each week, shows pretty convincingly that the average for this current quarter
will be over 500,000 per week on a non-seasonally adjusted basis. This is less
than a 10% drop from last year for the same quarter. Job losses are continuing
to mount, and we are on our way to an 11%-plus unemployment number by next
summer. Statistical Recovery, indeed. Why I Am Optimistic About the Future
I am optimistic by nature. An entrepreneur friend of mine gave me a term that I
have grown to love. She calls it "psychic income." It's that bit of hoped-for
future income that is in our minds, that drives some of us, inflicted with the
entrepreneurial gene, to do the next deal, make the next big plan, scheme yet
another scheme to finally hit whatever counts as the big one for each of us.
How much better would our life be, how our problems would go away, if only this
one thing would come about! It has not yet become real income, yet we live and
act as if it is almost real. We can feel it getting ready to happen. It is
still in our heads, this psychic income. Yet it is in some ways real for us. I get my propensity for psychic
income naturally. My Less-Than-Sainted Dad lived on psychic income. He was
always trying to invent something or launch a new business. He had large ups
and downs, and at times we would be now classified as below the poverty line.
Not that I knew that as a kid. Mostly, Dad lived in his dreams, though often
alcoholic ones, of a better future, but he never gave up. In his mid-70s he was
re-inventing the small printing press in his garage, with plans for national
production. It was only after we had to take his car from him in his mid-80s
that he quit. It was a very sad day. I now know we had not just taken his car,
but far more than that: his dreams, his psychic income. For some, I should note, psychic
income is not just about money. It may be about the next promotion or the next
big discovery. For some of us, it is just having our ideas accepted and
validated in the court of human opinion. It is simply what drives us. I graduated from seminary in the
winter of 1974, entering the workforce in the hard year of 1975. We were coming
off a recession, about which I technically knew little. I did know jobs were
tight. I was unknowingly faceing another eight years of high unemployment, a
tumultuous stock market, rising commodity prices, high inflation, and rising
interest rates. Japan was just beginning to be a real force in the world.
People were still buying bomb shelters, as Russia was a feared and powerful
enemy. As the price of gold rose, there were those who told us the dollar would
soon be worthless (the Fed was a problem and the deficit was out of control),
and so we needed to buy yet more gold and also a year's worth of dried food. Not the best time to start a
business; yet within a year or so, I ended up starting my own print brokering
business, as jobs were scarce and that is what I knew. I often get letters from
readers giving me grief about my rich hedge-fund friends and our fabulous
wealth, and how little we relate to the real world. And for some of my rich
hedge-fund friends, that may be true (although for most of my friends that is not
true). And I am sadly far from rich, although I have dreams. I remember waking up in the late
70s at 2 AM with a knot in my stomach, because a small bank was in trouble and had
called my loan (an amount which now seems so small, but at the time it was all
the money in the world). How would I make payroll? Gas and food? I know what it
is like to work long hours and live on a very tight budget, with some months
being behind on everything, while all the while your family is growing. But I got lucky, and through a
series of events got into the investment publishing field in the early '80s,
then partnered in an investment firm, and then went on my own in 1999. I stuck
this letter on the internet in August of 2000, and things just took off. But how many setbacks, bumpy rides,
and false starts have I gone through over the decades? Frankly, I try to
forget. But the point is that each of those episodes was another learning
opportunity. And I woke up the next morning and started trying to figure it all
out. But it's not just me, it' is tens
of millions of entrepreneurs and businessmen and women in the US, and hundreds
of millions worldwide, that have the same ambitions and drive. Every night we
go to sleep on our psychic income, and every day we get up and try to figure
out how to turn it into real income. And some of us are talented or lucky (that
would be me) enough to make it happen. Long-time readers know that I think
we are in the midst of a secular bear cycle, much like 1966-82. The next decade
is likely to produce less than average growth, due to structural problems and
the bad choices we have made with personal and government debt. I am perfectly
cognizant that unemployment will be over 10% for a protracted time. That is
tragic for those unemployed and underemployed. I realize the entire developed
world has huge and seemingly insurmountable pension and medical obligations
over the next few decades, which we cannot possibly hope to meet. The level of
angst that we will live through as we adjust will not be fun. But
the point is, that is just what we do - we live through it. In spite of
the problems, we get up every day and figure out how to make it. Would it be
better if we could get our act together in (pick a country) and not be forced
to adjust because we have come to the end of the line? Yes, I know we will
likely have some very tumultuous times ahead of us, making business and
investment decisions more than a little difficult. So
what? The future is never easy for all but a few of us, at least not for long.
But we figure it out. And that is why in 20 years we will be better off than we
are today. Each of us, all over the world, by working out our own visions of
psychic income, will make the real world a better place. The Millennium Wave Let's
look at some changes we are likely to see over the next few decades. My view is
that we have a number of waves of change getting ready to erupt on the world
stage. The combination of them is what I call the Millennium Wave, the most
significant period of change in human history. And one for which most of us are
not yet ready. Some
time next year, we are going to see the three-billionth person get access to
the telecosm (phones and internet, etc.). By 2015 it will be five billion
people. Within ten years, most of the world will be able to access cheap (I
mean really cheap) high-speed wireless broadband at connection rates that dwarf
what we now have. That
is going to unleash a wave of creativity and new business that will be
staggering. That heretofore hidden genius in Mumbai or Vladivostok or Kisangani
will now have the ability to bring his ideas, talent, and energy to change the
world in ways we can hardly imagine. When Isaac Watts was inventing the steam
engine, there were a handful of engineers who could work with him. Now we throw
a staggering number of scientists and engineers at trivial problems, let alone
the really big ones. And because of the internet, the
advances of one person soon become known and built upon in a giant dance of
collaboration. It is because of this giant dance, this unplanned group effort,
that we will all figure out how to make advances in so many ways. (Of course,
that is hugely disruptive to businesses that don't adapt.) Ever-faster change is what is
happening in medicine. None of us in 2030 will want to go back to 2010, which
will then seem as barbaric and antiquated as, say, 1975. Within a few years, it
will be hard to keep up with the number of human trials of gene therapy and
stem cell research. Sadly for the US, most of the tests will be done outside of
our borders, but we will still benefit from the results. I spend some spare study time on
stem cell research. It fascinates me. We are now very close to being able to
start with your skin cells and grow you a new liver (or whatever). Muscular
dystrophy? There are reasons to be very encouraged. Alzheimer's disease requires somewhere
between 5-7% of total US health-care costs. Defeat that and a large part of our
health-care budget is fixed. And it will be first stopped and then cured. Same
thing with cancers and all sorts of inflammatory diseases. There is reason to
think a company may have found a generic cure for the common flu virus. A whole new industry is getting
ready to be born. And with it new jobs and investment opportunities. Energy problems? Are we running out
of oil? My bet is that in less than 20 years we won't care. We will be driving
electric cars that are far superior to what we have today in every way, from
power sources that are not oil-based. For whatever reason, I seem to run
into people who are working on new forms of energy. They are literally working
in their garages on novel new ways to produce electric power; and my venture-capital
MIT PhD friend says they are for real when I introduce them. And if I know of a
handful, there are undoubtably thousands of such people. Not to mention well-funded
corporations and startups looking to be the next new thing. Will one or more
make it? My bet is that more than one will. We will find ourselves with whole
new industries as we rebuild our power grids, not to mention what this will
mean for the emerging markets. What about nanotech? Robotics?
Artificial intelligence? Virtual reality? There are whole new industries that
are waiting to be born. In 1980 there were few who saw the rise of personal
computers, and even fewer who envisioned the internet. Mapping the human
genome? Which we can now do for an individual for a few thousand dollars? There
are hundreds of new businesses that couldn't even exist just 20 years ago. I am not sure where the new jobs
will come from, but they will. Just as they did in 1975. There is, however, one more reason I
am optimistic. Sitting around the dinner table, I looked at my kids. I have seven
kids, five of whom are adopted. I have two Korean twins, two black kids, a
blond, a (sometimes) brunette, and a redhead. They range in age from 15 to 32.
It is a rather unique family. My oldest black son is married to a white girl
and my middle white son is with a black girl. They both have given me grandsons
this year (shades of Obama!). One of my Korean daughters is married to a white
young man, and the other is dating an Hispanic. And the oldest (Tiffani) is due
with my first granddaughter in less than a month. And the interesting thing? None of
them think any of that is unusual. They accept it as normal. And when I am with
their friends, they also see the world in a far different manner than my
generation. (That is not to say the trash talk cannot get rather rough at the
Mauldin household at times.) I find great cause for optimism in
that. I am not saying we are in a post-racial world. We are not. Every white
man in America should have a black son. It would open your eyes to a world we
do not normally see. But it is better, far better, than the world I grew up in.
And it is getting still better. My boys play online video games
with kids from all over the world. And the kids from around the world get on
the internet and see a much wider world than just their local neighborhoods. Twenty years ago China was seen as
a huge military threat. Now we are worried about them not buying our bonds and
becoming an economic power. Niall Ferguson writes about "Chimerica" as two
countries joined together in an increasingly tight bond. In 20 years, will Iran
be our new best friend? I think it might be, and in much less time than that,
as an increasingly young and frustrated population demands change, just as they
did 30 years ago. Will it be a smooth transition? Highly unlikely. But it will
happen, I think. I look at my kids and their
friends. Are they struggling? Sure. They can't get enough hours, enough
salaries, the jobs they want. They now have kids and mortgages. And dreams.
Lots of dreams. That is cause for great optimism. It is when the dreams die
that it is time to turn pessimistic. I believe the world of my kids is
going to be a far better world in 20 years. Will China and the emerging world
be relatively better off? Probably, but who cares? Do I really begrudge the
fact that someone is making their part of the world better? In absolute terms,
none of my kids will want to come back to 2009, and neither will I. Most of the
doom and gloom types (and they seem to be legion) project a straight-line
linear future. They see no progress beyond that in their own small worlds. If
you go back to 1975 and assume a linear future, the projections were not all
that good. Today you can easily come up with a less-than-rosy future if you
make the assumption that things in 20 years will roughly look the same as now.
But that also assumes there will not be even more billions of people who now
have the opportunity to dream up their own psychic income and work to make it
happen. We live in a world of accelerating
change. Things are changing at an ever-increasing pace. The world is not linear,
it is curved. And we may be at the beginning of the elbow of that curve. If you
assume a linear world, you are going to make less-than-optimal choices about
your future, whether it is in your job or investments or life in general. In the end, life is what you make
of it. With all our struggles, as we sat around the table, our family was
content, just like 100 million families around the country. Are there those who
are in dire distress? Homeless? Sick? Of course, and that is tragic for each of
them. And those of us who are fortunate need to help those who are not. We live in the most exciting times
in human history. We are on the verge of remarkable changes in so many areas of
our world. Yes, some of them are not going to be fun. I see the problems
probably more clearly than most. But am I going to just stop and
say, "What's the use? The Fed is going to make a mess of things. The government
is going to run us into debts to big too deal with? We are all getting older,
and the stock market is going to crash?" Even the most diehard bear among us
is thinking of ways to improve his personal lot, even if it is only to buy more
gold and guns. We all think we can figure it out or at least try to do so. Some
of us will get it right and others sadly will not. But it is the collective
individual struggles for our own versions of psychic income, the dance of
massive collaboration on a scale the world has never witnessed, that will make
our world a better place in the next 20 years. All
that being said, while I am an optimist, I am a cautious and hopefully
realistic optimist. I do not think the stock market compounds at 10% a year
from today's valuations. I rather doubt the Fed will figure the exact and
perfect path in removing its quantitative easing. I doubt we will pursue a path
of rational fiscal discipline in 2010 or sadly even by 2012, although I pray we
do. I expect my taxes to be much higher in a few years. But
thankfully, I am not limited to only investing in the broad stock market. I have
choices. I can be patient and wait for valuations to come my way. I can look
for new opportunities. I can plan to make the tax burden as efficient as
possible, and try and insulate myself from the volatility that is almost surely
in our future - and maybe even figure out a way to prosper from it.
A pessimist never gets in the game. A wild-eyed optimist will suffer the slings
and arrows of boom and inevitable bust. Cautious optimism is the correct and
most rewarding path. And that, I hope, is what you see when you read my weekly
thoughts. New York and My Own Psychic Income This
week I go to New York to be with Todd Harrison and so many friends at the
annual Festivus, put on by the folks from Minyanville. Then the theater on
Saturday with Barry and Toni Habib to see Gods
of Carnage. Then back home for the rest of the month, turning to book
writing and waiting for my granddaughter to appear. And speaking of psychic income, I
remarked to some of the kids the other day that for the first time in my life I
have no psychic income. There is no scheme I am working on that will change the
world, no dramatic visions of grandeur. Just working on improving what we do in
the best ways we can, which should be enough; but for me it is a different
feeling. I worried that I was losing my edge, my drive. "Dad," said Tiffani, hopefully
prophetically, "that just means the best and most exciting thing of all is
actually going to happen. Finally." I love the future. It is going top
be the best thing ever. Have a great week. Your going to have fun on the ride analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
If you would like to reproduce any of John Mauldin's E-Letters you must include the source of your quote and an email address (John@FrontlineThoughts.com) Please write to info@FrontlineThoughts.com and inform us of any reproductions. Please include where and when the copy will be reproduced.
John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA) which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS) an NASD registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.
Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the staffs at Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC may or may not have investments in any funds cited above.
Note: The generic Accredited Investor E-letters are not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and Millennium Wave Investments. It is intended solely for accredited investors who have registered with Millennium Wave Investments and Altegris Investments at www.accreditedinvestor.ws or directly related websites and have been so registered for no less than 30 days. The Accredited Investor E-Letter is provided on a confidential basis, and subscribers to the Accredited Investor E-Letter are not to send this letter to anyone other than their professional investment counselors. Investors should discuss any investment with their personal investment counsel. John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA), which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS), an FINRA
registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a
Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered
with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave
Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments
cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings
with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return
Partners, LLP; Fynn Capital; Nicola Wealth Management; and Plexus Asset Management. Funds recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. Before seeking any advisor's services or making an investment in a fund, investors must read and examine thoroughly the respective disclosure document or offering memorandum. Since these firms and Mauldin receive fees from the funds they recommend/market, they only recommend/market products with which they have been able to negotiate fee arrangements.
PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.
|