By Richard Benson
Sep 24 2008 10:25AM
One of my recent articles explained why the US Treasury
deficit, without financial bailouts or government stimulus, was heading
towards $600 billion a year. Another one forecasted that the bill for the
financial bailouts would also be huge. This week, the cost of the bailout
was confirmed with the nationalization of Fannie, Freddie, and AIG, added
to the failure of Lehman Brothers, and the new massive $700 billion plus
Treasury “Taxpayer Cash for Wall Street Trash” legislation. The
total bill for this legislation plus existing bailouts will cost taxpayers
more than a trillion dollars paid out over the next three years.
It's important to realize that this bailout plan adds
nothing to economic growth and was necessary to prevent a worldwide global
collapse of the financial system. The proposal will shift hundreds of
billions of taxpayer dollars to purchase rotten financial assets from Wall
Street institutions and banks for more than they are worth. This is all
happening as our economy has been weakened by higher unemployment and
non-financial corporate failures, and we’re bracing for a worldwide
recession that is unfolding in never-ending newspaper headlines. Even now,
before America has a newly-elected President and a fresh Congress in
office, legislators in Congress have already started discussions to launch
another stimulus package. My bet is that the stimulus needed will total at
least $500 billion. Trillion dollar federal deficits for the next few years
are now inevitable and as this truth sinks in, the consequences will be
enormous. Here are the reasons (see chart below):
| Reported
Outstanding Treasury Debt |
|
Current
|
Debt held by the Public
|
Intragovernmental Holdings
|
Total Public Debt Outstanding
|
|
09/19/2008
|
$5,552,620,101,517.17
|
$4,174,389,518,377.17
|
$9,727,009,619,894.34
|
The $4.2 Trillion of Intragovernmental Holdings is the
"fictional borrowing" from Social Security and Medicare accounts.
This fictional borrowing consists of social security taxes collected in
excess of benefits paid out since the program began. In the past, the
federal government profited nicely from excess social security taxes, but
now the excess taxes have been spent on government projects like the war in
Iraq, earmarks, etc. In a few short years when the Baby Boomers start to
retire, the Social Security benefits paid out will exceed the taxes
collected. When that happens, this fictional borrowing will flip back into
real borrowing from the public. This means the government borrowing will be
real, not fictional.
Of the $5.5 Trillion to date that has been borrowed from
the public by the Treasury, $3 trillion of it is Treasury debt owned by
foreign central banks. It turns out that the Chinese and other Asian
countries (along with the Gulf Arabs and many other governments) have been
generous and ready lenders to the US Treasury. The question remains whether
they will continue to be. It took our fine republic a few hundred years to
run up $5.2 trillion in debt, but over the next three years Treasury
borrowing could exceed $8 trillion, a staggering 60 percent increase in the
real national debt. Is it rational to believe that foreigners will double
their holdings of US Treasury debt from $3 Trillion to $6 Trillion in the
next three years? Yes, indeed! Where else would they get that amount of
money?
The US Treasury will be facing major funding problems when
they attempt to borrow the next three trillion dollars. The last few
trillion they borrowed was a piece of cake despite the fact that Americans
have no savings and, therefore, bought little of the new Treasury debt.
Borrowing from foreign governments was also easy because of the way it was
done (see below):
First, Americans would borrow dollars using their credit
cards and homes (home equity loans), and then send them to the Asians and
Gulf Arabs in exchange for manufactured goods and oil. That gave the
foreigners lots of dollars to buy Treasury debt and other US financial
assets, such as the debt of Fannie & Freddie. Notice the cause and
effect: First, the foreigners got the dollars then they invested them in US Treasuries.
Americans used a massive dollar-trade deficit to finance the
Treasury’s dollar-budget deficit. This paradigm is now over.
America’s trade deficit is falling and the US is in recession.
Our country’s ability to buy goods and services from
abroad is diminishing and Santa is not coming this Christmas (just look
around and you’ll see Christmas decorations already in some stores
– how desperate is that?) Foreign manufacturers are going to be
scratching their heads over the holidays wondering where the dollars that
used to come from America suddenly went.
The financial markets are going to slowly realize that the
only reason foreign central banks bought Treasuries is because the US
bought their goods first! China, as one example, realizes our money is not
that good and will take an interest in holding dollars only because we are
buying goods and services from them. Foreign countries have no reason to
buy massive amounts of Treasury debt unless we buy something from them
first.
So here we are now with the Treasury deficit that will
quickly zoom past the trade deficit by several hundred billion dollars; the
Treasury debt still can't be sold to American savers because America
doesn't have savers; and, we are no longer buying enough goods from
foreigners and sending them our dollars to finance the Treasury
deficit.
What are the obvious consequences of Trillion dollar
Treasury deficits? One such consequence is called "Crowding Out".
Crowding Out is the phenomenon that occurs when the US Treasury sells debt
in a world where foreigners and Americans are no longer flush with dollars.
That means that the dollars to buy the debt must be squeezed out of the
financial system and interest rates are forced up. Trillion dollar deficits
aren’t chump change! However, squeezing a trillion dollars out of the
money markets of the world is clearly impossible and the only remaining
option to fund the US Treasury’s insatiable appetite is through
"monetization". Monetization means that the Federal Reserve would
step in and print up new money out of thin air and buy the Treasury debt.
If that occurs, monetary growth rates would soar and, in turn, create
very high inflation as too many dollars start chasing too few goods. Rising
inflation forces interest rates up, and rising interest rates always have
devastating consequences for the prices of financial assets such as stocks
and bonds.
So, how will we all be affected? First, start reading about
what life has been like in the Banana Republic and in countries like
Argentina, where the inflation rate in 2002 rose to 20 percent following
the devaluation of the country’s currency, the peso. Brace yourself
for several years of rising inflation and interest rates and, by all means,
protect your portfolio. Remember, cash is king again.
My investment plan remains the same. I expect real assets
will greatly out-perform financial assets. First, I want to buy gold and
silver in physical form whenever I can. In the world of inflation, while
cash is king, gold is the emperor! Second, I look to accumulate real assets
if they are quality assets and the prices have crashed down. So, I do
believe that in a few years even real estate will again be a great
inflation hedge!
Richard Benson
President
****
Specialty Finance
Group LLC Member NASD/SIPC www.sfgroup.org 800-860-2907