Why The Rich Are Getting
Poorer
By John Browne
As
our consumer dominated economy faces the threat of imminent stagflation
(economic recession and financial inflation at the same time), losses will not
be limited to the poor. Many
get-rich-quick investors also will become poorer!
The
effects of recession, falling asset prices, insolvency, inflation and a falling
dollar are set to have a sometimes devastating effect on the real value of many
investment portfolios, including those of the wealthy.
Why
are the rich going to lose money when many have had
expert professional advice? The answer
is in varying and individual combinations of greed, arrogance, ignorance and a
naive belief in government propaganda, both by investors and their professional
advisors. Ignorance led them to believe
government figures. Arrogantly, they
assumed they had discovered a new world in which asset prices would continue to
boom. They were tempted by the greed
that held that the higher the leverage, the greater the returns. Naively, they appeared to buy into the belief
that America could go on consuming more than it produced, financed by
foreigners that had an endless appetite for American government debt.
There
is little doubt that the vast amounts of cheap, U.S. dollar liquidity pumped into
both American and international economies by the U.S. Federal Reserve Board
(particularly under former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan) averted some naturally
occurring and corrective recessions and led to a series of unprecedented asset
booms. The mistake was in thinking that
this virtual world of financial make-believe would go on forever.
Added
to the vast new Fed-inspired liquidity boom was a new type of leverage created
by means of derivatives, particularly the Collateralized Debt Obligations
(CDO’s) used to ‘securitize’ real estate mortgages. In 2006, The Economist reported that a hedge
fund, investing in CDO’s through property vehicles, could leverage its capital
by some 52 times. In other words, a fund
with paid-up capital of $100 million could command property investments of a
staggering $5.2 billion.
Of
course, leverage of 52 times yields massive returns, provided that the prices
of the underlying assets continue to climb, as they did under Greenspan. To give some idea of the size of increases in
asset values, The Economist further reported that the value of residential
property in just the developed world rose by an unprecedented $25 trillion
between 2001 and 2006!
Vast
fortunes were made, as CDO’s with a rating of ‘triple A’ were sold to wealthy
investors throughout the world, greedy for unusually high dollar returns.
It
was not only real estate that benefited from the largesse of the American Fed
Reserve Board. Auto and credit card
lending boomed, adding greatly to the funds of the wealthy. Indeed, things became so good for borrowers
that what became known as ‘covenant-lite’ loans were made by lenders who were
both greedy and foolhardy.
The
abundance of liquidity boosted consumer demand and corporate profits. Increased earnings were reflected in stock
market prices that climbed to new nominal record levels.
However,
the real financial implications of imprudent lending and borrowing and the
rising level of U.S. government debt did not go unnoticed by the foreign
exchange markets. The U.S. dollar began
a dramatic decline, depreciating by more than 20% percent against the Euro in
the past two years.
Now,
the whole vast economic model of abundant liquidity and excessive leverage is
moving in reverse. The liquidity boom
has morphed into an insolvency crisis, aggravated by a fall in asset values. American consumer demand is falling
dramatically. In a consumer economy,
where 72 percent of GDP is comprised of consumption, American domestic
corporate profits and stock markets look set for dramatic falls, leading to
margin calls and yet more forced asset sales.
In
short, a great ‘de-leveraging’ has embraced the American economy. The massive
and excessive liquidity is now being squeezed out of the price of most assets. Investors, who remain owners of leveraged
American domestic assets, stand to be hit hard--very hard. This financial suffering will be made worse as
investors realize the effects of taxation, inflation and the debasement of
their dollar currency upon any positive nominal returns they salvage.
The
astute investor can insulate himself from this mounting financial dilemma. He should diversify immediately out of U.S.
dollar-based assets into high (total return) yielding assets denominated in
strengthening currencies of ‘producer’ nations such as those of Switzerland,
Australia and Canada. In light of
current conditions, it is then and only then that the astute investor is likely
to become richer, not poorer.
For
a more in depth analysis of our financial problems and the inherent dangers
they pose for the U.S. economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read
Peter Schiff’s book “Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic
Collapse.” Click here to order a
copy today.
More
importantly, don’t wait for reality to set in.
Protect your wealth and preserve your purchasing power before it’s too
late. Discover the best way to buy gold
at www.goldyoucanfold.com , download our free research report on the
powerful case for investing in foreign equities available at www.researchreportone.com
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