probably becoming clear to them that the economy is not going back to
normal any time soon.
Yesterday, the Dow lost another 131 points. Another big day down and it
will be in the 7,000-range. Oil sank too � down to $62. The dollar, bonds,
and gold stayed about where they were.
Economists are still talking about an "exit strategy." But in view of what is
actually going on in the economy, they'll probably want to stay on this
highway a lot longer. This is the long road to ruin, of course. It may be fatal,
but it is not � yet � unpopular.
Broadly, what is happening is exactly what should be   happening.
 
The stock market rally is getting old...and may   have already peaked out. The 
consumer is running out of time, money and   credit. He has no choice but to 
cut back. Savings rates are rising fast �   from zero to about 5% of disposable 
income.
 
Naturally,   businesses are finding it hard to make sales. Earnings are   
collapsing...stock dividends are down sharply...
 
...and of   course, businesses try to cut expenses by lightening up on their   
payroll.
When the correction began, it was led by losses in the financial sector.   
Those losses led to cutbacks throughout the economy. Now, it's the   
cutbacks that are leading to financial losses. The economy followed   the 
markets; now the markets follow the economy. Investors are   realizing 
that their favorite companies will find it hard to prosper in this   new 
economic environment.
 
"US consumers fall behind on loans at   record pace," says a Reuters 
headline. Delinquencies are going up on a wide   range of household debt. 
Debtors have never had such a hard time keeping up   with payments. Credit 
card delinquencies, for example, are running at   6.6%.
 
Well...duh.
 
And no wonder "banks get stingy on   credit," as reported in the USA Today. 
"Despite massive government efforts   to bolster the credit market, banks are 
pulling back severely on card   lending," begins the front-page article. 
 
Once again, we see the   feds' plans failing. They give trillions to the 
bankers; the bankers   cut back on consumer credit. And why shouldn't 
they? They can see   what the rest of us see � the consumer can't keep up 
with the debt he's got   already. 
 
"Consumers aren't going to be able to save the U.S.   economy this time," 
The Richebacher Letter's Rob Parenteau reminds   us.
 
"Total U.S. retail sales have rolled back to levels we haven't   seen since 
2005. Imagine if every single retail shop opened in the last   three years shut 
down overnight. It's already that bad.
 
"A lot   of people, from Wall Street to Washington, have a great deal invested 
in you   believing we can reverse that trend. But, in actuality, the freeze in   
consumer spending and the consumer economy could actually take many 
more   years to thaw."
 
(For more from Rob on the consumer spending debacle   � and to learn about 
the move you can make that can give you back double any   further downturn in 
consumer sales � see .)
 
At least, the   consumer has wised up. He's sick of debt. He's seen where that 
road leads.   What he wants is to get out of debt...to be free...to be safe.
 
It's   the government that remains stuck in deep illusion... The feds know that 
it   was too much credit that got consumers into trouble. Their solution? Give   
them more credit! The banks are issuing fewer credit cards than they did   last year � 38% 
fewer. They're pushing credit limits down too � the average   limit on a new 
card is down 3% so far this year.
 
Instead of   passing money on to customers, the banks are using the feds' free 
cash to   build up their own reserves...raise their salaries...and pass out 
bonuses.   Makes sense. What else could they do with it?
 
More news, from The 5 Min.   Forecast:
 
"Great news," writes Ian Mathias in today's   issue of The 5. 
"The Federal Reserve will retain it's 
right to   operate in secrecy.
 
 
"'Thank God for Rule   16!'"
 
"Late yesterday, the Senate majority put the kibosh on a last   hour provision 
in the 2010 spending bill that would audit the Fed. Not   because it's a bad 
idea to audit the Fed… but because of the arcane Rule 16,   which prohibits 
policy legislation from being added to spending bills. (The   kind of 'rule' 
that's only evoked when the majority gets   uncomfortable.)
 
"'The Federal Reserve will create and disburse   trillions of dollars in 
response to our current financial crisis,' said Sen.   Jim DeMint, who 
spearheaded the failed audit addition. 'Americans across the   nation, 
regardless of their opinion on the bailout, want to know where the   money 
has gone.' Under his proposed plan, the Government Accountability   Office 
would take a look into the Fed's discount window lending, various   funding 
'facilities,' bank bailouts and agreements with foreign players.   
 
"Shame on Mr. DeMint for such an outrageous request.   Down-to-the-wire 
appropriations should be reserved for truly exigent   causes…like protecting 
the makers of wooden arrows designed for use by   children. Why bother 
wasting the time of the GAO with a simple audit of the   most unaccountable 
monetary body in the world? 
 
You can watch   Mr. DeMint get what's coming to him here. 
 
Ron Paul's bill � that   other shameful attempt to audit the Fed � now has 249 
co-sponsors in the   house. Wonder what brand of parliamentary fine print 
Barney Frank or Nancy   Pelosi might summon to quash this one.
Find more details on Ron Paul's   bill � that other shameful attempt to audit 
the Fed � here.   
 
Wanna make sure you get The 5 � in its entirety � sent to your   inbox, every 
Monday through Friday? You can…by becoming a subscriber to one   of 
Agora Financial's paid publications, such as Penny Stock Fortunes. Their   
latest special report details the easiest way to make money in this market �   
by focusing on stocks most investors overlook. Read all about it   here.
 
And back to Bill, with more thoughts:
 
"Uighurs   are beasts" shout crowds of Han Chinese in the remote northwest 
of the   country. Uighurs are the Moslem minority. Han Chinese are the 
majority. And,   judging from the photos, the Han want to kill the   Uighurs.
 
One thing smart people always do is to   underestimate the power of 
foolishness. It is wild and reckless to   stir up a race war. But that doesn't 
stop people from doing it. Any kind of   war is a blow to reason and 
civilization. But that hasn't made war   unpopular, even among the most 
reasonable and civilized people on the   planet.
 
It was within the lifetimes of many people reading this   Daily Reckoning that 
the most advanced countries on earth began a war of   annihilation. At the 
beginning of the 20th century, high culture and science   were dominated by 
Germans. German musicians and composers...German poets and   
writers...German mathematicians, physicists, painters, philosophers � even   
the German economy was a world leader, second in output only to the   
United States of America.
 
Then, the Germans went off their   heads � along with the Italians, the 
Russians, the Japanese...and many   others.
 
But the Han have it right. The Uighurs are beasts from time   to time. So are 
the Han...the Teutons...the Anglo-Saxons...and all the   tribes on earth. 
Occasionally, for no apparent reason, the masks and   restraints of civilization 
give way to mobs...and the old beast starts   howling at the moon.
 
It happens in markets too. What is a   bubble, if not a wild and reckless 
thing? A kind of madness? A mass   illusion...a foolishness, in which people 
leave reason and civilization   behind?
 
What if the United States had to pay its debt in   gold?
 
In the old days, before the monetary reforms of the   20th century...notably, 
Richard Nixon's unilateral decision to renege on   America's promise to pay 
its bills in gold...countries had to settle up with   each other in the yellow 
metal. The system worked well; it was reliable; it   prevented bubbles. 
Edward Chancellor explains:
 
"A country had   to pay for its imports or foreign investments with money 
gained from a   surplus on trade. If more money was sent abroad than had 
been earned through   exports, then gold would be packed onto ships to 
discharge foreign   creditors. A declining stock of bullion would induce the 
central bank to   raise interest rates in order to attract gold from abroad. 
Rising rates   would produce a credit contraction, unemployment and general 
economic   misery. The typical nineteenth century was severe, but   short-
lived."
 
Then came the improvements. And the Great   Depression. And now we are 
faced with another one. 
 
Governments   are fighting this one...just as they did the last one...but with 
much more   money. The cost is in the trillions � most of it in the form of   
public debt. How will these debts be paid? We all expect that they   will 
ultimately be eased by inflation � in full or in part. But suppose the   feds had 
to pay up in real money?
 
Colleague Simone Wapler   compared government debt to government gold. 
The United States has gold   worth about $241 billion, she reports. Its official 
national debt is $11.5   trillion. That gives it a debt/gold ratio of 48 � 
meaning; the feds have 48   times as much debt as gold.
 
Britain is even worse. Prime Minister,   then Chancellor, Gordon Brown sold 
much of England's gold at the worse   possible moment � about 10 years ago. 
This leaves the island with only $9   billion worth of gold compared to $1,274 
billion of government debt � a   ratio of 1 to 139. But Japan is the worst of all. 
It has $23 billion worth   of gold and $7.3 trillion of government debt, for a 
ratio of 1 to 323. (Of   course, Japan has vast holdings of dollars too!)
 
What   nation has the best gold/debt ratio? Switzerland. It has only twice   
as much in government debt as it has in gold. 
 
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