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From ghoulies and ghosties And long-leggedy beasties And things that go bump in the
night,
Good Lord, deliver us! --Old Scottish
Prayer There
is something that is bumping around in my worry closet. The bond market is not
behaving as if there is deflation in our future, and the dollar is getting
weaker. Unemployment keeps rising, but most of all, the US government deficit
looks to be spinning out of control. This week we look at all of this and take
a tour around the world to see what is happening. There is a lot of interesting
material to cover. But
first, I am proud to announce that thanks to your donations the net proceeds
from the Richard Russell Tribute Dinner totaled $17,000! A donation was
made in that amount to the Autism Society of America, San Diego County Chapter,
in Richard Russell's name. The evening was captured in both
video and photographs, and we would like to share those with you. We have put together a DVD that captures all the
wonderful moments, including tributes from Richard's longtime friends and
family, an entertaining skit by Richard's daughter Daria, and another touching
tribute by Richard's daughter Betsy. Perhaps the best speech, however, came
from Richard himself -- which is of course
included on the video. For those who could not attend in person, we have
already made copies of the video and will mail it to you as soon as you order
it. The cost is $29.95, and that includes shipping. You may order as many
copies as you like. To order the video, please visit:
http://www.johnmauldin.com/russell-tribute-dvd.html The photographs were placed on
Shutterfly, an online gallery where you may view them and choose the ones you
would like to order. We have created a web page specifically for these photos.
To access that page, please use this link:
http://richardrusselltributedinner.shutterfly.com
or you can link from the page above. Now, let's jump right into the letter. A Trillion Dollars
as Far as the Eye Can See As
of this week, total US debt is $11.3 trillion and rising rapidly. The Obama
Administration projects that to rise another $1.85 trillion in 2009 (13% of
GDP) and yet another $1.4 trillion in 2010. The Congressional Budget Office
projects almost $10 trillion in additional debt from 2010 through 2019. Just
last January the 2009 deficit was estimated at "only" $1.2 trillion. Things
have gone downhill fast. But
there is reason to be concerned about those estimates, too. The CBO assumes a
rather robust recovery in 2010, with growth springing back to 3.8% and then up
to 4.5% in 2011. Interestingly, they project unemployment of 8.8% for this year
(we are already at 8.9% and rising every month) and that it will rise to 9%
next year. It will be a strange recovery indeed where the economy is roaring along
at 4% and unemployment isn't falling. (You can see their spreadsheets and all
the details if you take your blood pressure medicine first, at
www.cbo.gov.) Just
a few quick thoughts. This year the proposed administration plan is to borrow
50% of every dollar spent. The CBO projects than nominal GDP will grow by about
50% over the next 10 years (which is historically reasonable), but also that
revenues will double, which suggests massive tax increases in relation to GDP.
Interestingly, the International Monetary Fund says growth next year will be
tepid at best (more below). The deficit in 2010 is almost 10% of GDP. The
average proposed deficit is almost a $1 trillion average for the next ten
years. Ten years from now, the deficit is projected to be $1.2 trillion. And
that is if government costs do not go up and inflation only averages 1.1% for
the next six years. The Global Recession Gets Worse Let's take a quick trip around the
world. In the first quarter, the German economy fell by 14%, Japan by 15%,
Mexico by 21%, and England was down almost 8%. Global trade is simply collapsing.
The chart below is the ugliest it has ever been. Chinese exports are down 41%,
Japanese exports down 38%, Germany's down by 32%, and so on. (chart courtesy of
www.variantperception.com ) 
Let me quote from the very
interesting study the team at Variant Perception did. "As we have repeatedly said, Spain
is set for a long, painful deflation that will manifest itself via a spectacularly
high unemployment level, a real estate collapse and general banking
insolvencies. Consider this: the value of outstanding loans to Spanish
developers has gone from just e33.5 billion in 2000 to e318 billion in 2008, a
rise of 850% in 8 years. If you add in construction sector debts, the overall
value of outstanding loans to developers and construction companies rises to
e470 billion. That's almost 50% of Spanish GDP. Most of these loans will go
bad. "Spanish banks are now facing a
very bleak outlook. Spain's unemployment rate reached over 17% last month;
there are now four million unemployed Spaniards and over one million families
with not a single person employed in the family. Spain and Ireland had the
worst housing bubbles in the world and now Spain has as many unsold homes as
the US, even though the US is about six times bigger. "Why are Spanish banks not
insolvent? Spanish banks are not marking their real estate loans to market.
We've often wondered how it is that our thesis for Spanish real estate and
industrial collapse has not created more victims. The answer is simple
according to an article in Expansion, the Spanish equivalent of the Financial
Times, from the 19th of April titled 'Spanish banks control half of all real
estate appraisals.' You can't make this stuff up. We haven't even begun to see
the worst in Spain yet." European banks are in far worse
shape than their US counterparts. That is because they utilize far more
leverage, on an average about 30 times leverage. How can that be, in what is
supposed to be a conservative industry? "European banks were only
restricted on the basis of risk-weighted assets, unlike the US where it is the
total leverage ratio that matters, so most European banks bought assets that
were rated by Moody's and S&P, who couldn't rate their way out of a paper
bag, and for anything that wasn't highly rated, they bought credit default
swaps or guarantees from AIG and MBIA. Because of that European banks were able
to lever up a lot more than their US counterparties. Given the much higher
leverage levels and general worsening of collateral values, we think that all
the shoes in Europe have not dropped." European banks have assets of about
330% of their GDP, compared to US banking assets, which are about 50%. They
have over $700 billion in loans to Asian businesses (which are watching their
exports collapse) and $1.3 trillion in loans to Eastern Europe, which is in a
very serious recession, and so many of those loans are simply not going to be
worth anything. Simply put, there is going to be a need for massive amounts of
money to bail out European banks, or we'll watch their economies simply
implode. Where is the money for the bailouts
going to come from? Germany? That will be a tough sell politically in a country
that is in a much worse recession than the US. How do you tell your citizens
you need to bail out banks in other countries with their tax dollars? Italian
and Austrian banks are going to need a lot of capital, more than their
governments can pay. It is going to be a very tough problem. Governments around the world are
responding to the global recession by running massive deficits. In addition to
the US, the UK, Japan, Russia, Spain, and Ireland are all running deficits of
over 10%. And, as in the case of the US,
these are not going to be one-time deficits. The IMF predicts that England will
shrink again next year and the recovery in the US will be modest at best. The
US economy is expected to grow by 0.2% (far from the optimistic projections of
various US government agencies), the 16-nation eurozone will eke out a modest
gain of 0.1%, and the Group of Seven (G7) leading industrial economies will, as
a whole, only grow by 0.2 percent. They project that Japan's economy will
stagnate next year. Where Will the Money Come From? And now let's look at what is
bumping in my worry closet. The world is going to have to fund multiple
trillions in debt over the next several years. Pick a number. I think $5
trillion sounds about right. $3 trillion is in the cards for the US alone, if
current projections are right. Just exactly where is that money
going to come from? The US trade deficit is now down to under $350 billion a
year. The Fed can monetize a trillion. Maybe. Look at the yield curve on US
government debt below (Bloomberg). US savings are going to go up, but where is
the incentive to buy ten-year debt at 3.5%? Four-year debt under 2% doesn't do
much for your savings growth. Even with monetization and the Chinese buying our
debt with the dollars we send them, that still leaves the bond market about
$1.5 trillion short, give or take $100 billion. 
The world is deleveraging. Debt is
being drawn down. Securitization of various types of debt has seriously slowed.
Banks are cutting back on lending. Home prices are dropping all over the world.
Commercial real estate is rolling over, and banks all over the world are
exposed. "Recession turns malls into ghost towns" is the headline in today's Wall
Street Journal. Personal savings are rising and retail sales are flat to
down. Unemployment is rising. All this should be massively deflationary. Interest
rates should be falling or at least not rising. But a funny thing is happening.
In the past two months, the yield on the ten-year bond has risen by 1%. It has
moved 0.38% or almost "4 big handles" in just two weeks. Look at the chart
below. What is happening? 
According
to Merrill Lynch, the size of the world bond market is estimated to be
approximately $67 trillion, with the shares of US, Euroland, and Japanese
securities each representing less than 50 percent of this total. (PIMCO) England has been put on negative
watch for its debt rating. Bill Gross said yesterday that it is not unthinkable
that the US could lose its AAA rating. I think the bond market is looking at
the mountain of debt that will have to be somehow sold and wondering where such
a colossal sum will come from. Where do you find $10 trillion in the next ten
years for US debt? And
that is just for US government debt. $5 trillion for new global debt in the
next two years? In a deleveraged world? How much will the other countries need?
What about money needed for businesses and mortgages and credit cards and so
on? If
you add $10 trillion to the current $11.3 trillion (including Social Security
trust funds, etc.), that totals $21 trillion in 2019. Let's be generous and
suggest that interest rates will only be an average of 5%. That would be an
interest-rate expense of over $1 trillion. That is 25% of projected revenues
and 20% of expected expenses. And that assumes you have nominal growth of over
4% for the next ten years. If growth is less, tax revenues will be less. It
also assumes massive tax increases from carbon credits. The Paradox of Deficits I
think the bond market is looking a few years down the road and saying that $1-trillion
deficits are simply not capable of being financed. And if the debt is
monetized, then inflation is going to become a very serious issue. When you run deficits that are
4-6-8% or more than nominal GDP, at some point things simply back up. Can we ride
along for a few years? Certainly. Japan is getting ready to see its debt-to-GDP
ratio rise to almost 200%. But everybody can't do it all at once. Call it the Paradox of Deficits. We
have been running a large trade deficit in the US for years, because the people
(China, Japan, and the Middle East) who wanted to sell us "stuff" were kind
enough to turn around and invest the money in our bonds. This in turn created
Greenspan's conundrum, as it helped keep down US (and global) interest rates.
Combine that with a massive increase in leverage, a few bubbles, and we now
arrive at a true crisis. Deficits are not necessarily a bad
thing if kept in check and restraint is shown. But everyone cannot run deficits
at the same time. If we don't buy $700 billion in goods, then that money cannot
be recycled back to our debt. It is that simple. (Sidebar: And now, China and Brazil
are moving to do their trades in their own currencies rather than dollars. Very
smart on their part.) Europe, Japan, and the US cannot
try to borrow $5 trillion in the next two years without a serious distortion of
the bond market, not to mention the entire economic landscape. I have long thought that "crunch
time," the end game, would show up around 2013-14. But I never in my wildest
imaginings thought we could run an almost $2 trillion deficit. That crazy guy
on the corner telling us "The end is nigh"? He may be right. Long before we get to 2015, let
alone 2019, I think the bond markets will have called a halt to $1 trillion
deficits. There will be a real crisis. The deficits will not be funded at
anywhere close to an interest rate that will not break the budget. Taxes will
get raised beyond what they were in the Clinton years. And Obama's budget
makes some very optimistic judgments about how much will be saved in medical
costs, as if no one has tried to rein in medical costs before. The crisis may
come much sooner if his universal health-care bill is passed as proposed
without offsetting cuts somewhere else. Watch the bond market. Rates should
be going down, not up. The bond market is telling us the deficit simply can't
be financed down the road. Now, maybe a few cool heads in the Democratic Party
will prevail in the US Senate and the deficits will be brought under control.
(The Republicans have so far seemed as clueless as they are impotent.) We could
(theoretically) run $400 billion deficits for a very long time, as GDP would be
growing somewhat faster. It would be best to run budget
surpluses, but the game does not end if there are reasonable deficits. It ends
with deficits that cannot be funded except by monetization. And that will tank
the dollar, except against all the other countries that are monetizing their
debt. I am increasingly inclined to think
that as the world comes out of its current malaise – and it will – US
investors should think more globally with their investment portfolios. That is
something we will explore over the coming year. But that's enough for today. Naples, London, and Eastern Europe Next
Friday I go to London to speak at a conference for my friends at Jyske Bank.
International investing expert Gary Scott will be there, as well as my friend
and business associate Steve Blumenthal. It should still be possible to attend,
if you would like. You can see more at
www.jgam.com.
And then, in theory, I will be home all of June. The
plan now is for me to return to London on July 15th. I will co-host
CNBC London Squawk Box on July 17th, see clients, and then be with
London business partner Niels Jensen for his 50th birthday party on
the 18th. (And here's wishing him a speedy recovery from his back
surgery last week!) And
then I am actually going to take a vacation. I am slowly trying to expand the
list of countries I have been to. This year I am thinking of venturing further
into Eastern Europe. Romania and Bulgaria are on the top of the list, and
perhaps Slovenia? I would love to hear from readers in those countries, or from
others who have visited them. I will have about 12 days and want to be able to
see the sights and relax as well. Then I come back, go to Maine with
young son Trey for our annual get together with all the guys at the Shadow Fed fishing
trip run by David Kotok, and get back in time for daughter Amanda's wedding on
the 22nd. It is going to be a full, fun summer. And speaking of Trey, he turns 15
on Wednesday. He is the last of my seven in the house. The rest are all out and
(more or less) on their own. But then I get three new grandkids between now and
the end of the year, so the next generation is starting. These are interesting and serious
times we find ourselves in, but we should all try and remember to enjoy life as
much as possible. I am grateful that I am so busy, and count it as a blessing
when so many are not. Have a great Memorial Day, and take a few moments to
remember those who have sacrificed so that we can be free. Your looking forward to summer analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
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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.
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