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Obama's Stock Market Mini-Bubble(printing money is NOT growth)
Mises Daily ^ | 5/12/2009 | Frank Shostak

Posted on 05/12/2009 6:51:32 PM PDT by sickoflibs

Since the end of February when the S&P 500 closed at 735.09, the index has been pushing strongly ahead, closing on Friday, May 8, at 929.23 — an increase of 26.4%. We suggest that the key driving force behind this strong bounce is a massive increase in liquidity. What is it all about, and how do changes in liquidity drive the stock market?

In a market economy, a major service that money provides is that of the medium of exchange. Producers exchange their goods for money and then exchange money for other goods.

The increase of production of goods and services results in a greater demand for the services of the medium of exchange (the service that money provides). Conversely, as economic activity slows down, the demand for the services of money follows suit.

The demand for the services of the medium of exchange is also affected by changes in prices. An increase in the prices of goods and services leads to an increase in the demand for the medium of exchange. People now demand more money to facilitate more expensive goods and services.

A fall in the prices of goods and services results in a decline in the demand for the medium of exchange.

Now, take the example where an increase in the supply of money for a given state of economic activity has taken place. Since there wasn't any change in the demand for the services of the medium of exchange, this means that people now have a surplus of money or an increase in monetary liquidity.

Obviously, no individual wants to hold more money than is required. An individual can get rid of surplus cash by exchanging the money for goods.

All the individuals as a group, however, cannot get rid of the surplus of money just like that. They can only shift money from one individual to another individual.

The mechanism that generates the elimination of the surplus of cash is the increase in the prices of goods. Once individuals start to employ the surplus cash in acquiring goods, this pushes prices higher.

As a result, the demand for the services of money increases. All this in turn works towards the elimination of the monetary surplus.

Once money enters a particular market, more money is now paid for a product in that market. Or we can say that the price of a good in this market has now gone up. (Remember a price is the number of dollars per unit of something.)

Note that what has triggered increases in the prices of goods in various markets is the increase in the monetary surplus or monetary liquidity in response to the increase in the money supply.

While increases in the money supply result in a monetary surplus, a fall in the money supply for a given level of economic activity leads to a monetary deficit. Individuals still demand the same amount of the services of the medium of exchange. To accommodate this, they will start selling goods, thus pushing their prices down.

At the lower prices the demand for the services of the medium of exchange declines and this in turn works toward the elimination of the monetary deficit.

A change in liquidity or the monetary surplus can also take place in response to changes in economic activity and changes in prices. For instance, an increase in liquidity can emerge for a given stock of money and a decline in economic activity.

A fall in economic activity means that fewer goods are now produced. This means that fewer goods are going to be exchanged, implying a decline in the demand for the services of money — the services of the medium of exchange.

Once, however, a surplus of money emerges, it produces exactly the same outcome with respect to the prices of goods and services as the increase in money supply does, i.e., it pushes prices higher. An increase in prices in turn works towards the elimination of the surplus of money — the elimination of monetary liquidity.

Conversely an increase in economic activity while the stock of money stays unchanged produces a monetary deficit. This in turn sets in motion the selling of goods thereby depressing their prices. The fall in prices in turn works towards the elimination of the monetary deficit.

There is a time lag between changes in liquidity, i.e., a monetary surplus and changes in asset prices, such as the prices of stocks.

For instance, there could be a long time lag between the peak in liquidity and the peak in the stock market. The effect of previously rising liquidity could continue to dominate the effect of currently falling liquidity for some period of time. Hence the peak in the stock market emerges once the declining liquidity is starting to dominate the scene.

(The reason for the lag is because when money is injected it doesn't affect all the individuals and hence all the markets instantly. There are earlier and later recipients of money.)

Exploring how changes in liquidity had historically been driving the stock market. For instance, the yearly rate of growth of our monetary measure AMS stood at 4.1% in March 1974 and 4.5% in May the following year. Despite the relative stable money-supply rate of growth, the yearly rate of growth of monetary surplus had a large increase from negative 7.7% in March 1974 to a positive figure of 7.6% in May 1975.

(Note that the yearly rate of growth of the consumer price index (CPI) eased from 10.1% in March 1974 to 9.3% in May 1975. The yearly rate of growth of industrial production fell from 1.7% in March 1974 to negative 12.4% in May 1975.)

In response to the increase in the monetary surplus, the S&P 500 shot up from 68.6 in December 1974 to 95.2 by June 1975 — an increase of 38.8%.

Now, the yearly rate of growth of liquidity topped in November 1927 at 10.2%. After a time lag of 22 months, the S&P 500 responded by peaking in August 1929 at 31.71.

In 1987 the time lag between a peak in liquidity and a peak in the stock market was much shorter. The yearly rate of growth of liquidity topped in January 1987 at 15.1%. The S&P responded to this by peaking eight months later at 329.9 in September of that year.

According to the historical data, the yearly rate of growth of liquidity bottomed at negative 16.6% in May 1929. Yet it took a long time before the S&P 500 responded to this. It took over three years after the bottom in liquidity was reached before the S&P started to recover. The stock-price index bottomed in June 1932 at 4.43.

The time lag between the bottom in liquidity and the bottom in the stock market has been shorter in more recent history. Thus the yearly rate of growth of liquidity had bottomed at negative 5.7% in September 2000. It took twenty-five months before the S&P 500 bottomed at 815.28 by September 2002.

What is the current state of US liquidity, and where is the S&P 500 heading? The current bear market that started in October 2007 was preceded by a peak in the liquidity rate of growth in June 2003 — a time lag of over four years. The yearly rate of growth of liquidity stood at 7% in June 2003. The S&P 500 climbed to 1,549.38 by the end of October 2007.

Observe that at the end of February 2009, the S&P 500 closed at 735.1 — a fall of 52.6% from the peak in October 2007. The yearly rate of growth of monetary liquidity hit bottom in January 2008 at negative 6.1%. By the end of April, the yearly rate of growth of liquidity stood at positive figure of 24.9%.

On the face of this, and on account of aggressive monetary pumping by the Fed, one is tempted to argue that the time lag from the bottom of liquidity to the bottom of the stock market may have significantly shortened and is about one year. In short, the stock market is already in the bull phase. We suggest that a shaky state of the pool of real savings might pose a threat to the stock market notwithstanding the massive monetary pumping by the Fed. Here is why.

We have seen that in some cases, such as the Great Depression of the 1930s, the time lag between the bottom in the growth momentum of liquidity and the beginning of a new bull market can be extremely long. An important factor that prolongs the lag is that an increase in liquidity on account of a collapse in the economy is not a great incentive to put money into stocks.

Despite massive increases in liquidity, as we had during the 1930s, the risk-adjusted return for being in stocks wasn't that attractive relative to some other asset classes, such as treasuries or just keeping money in cash or in short-term money-market instruments.

An increase in liquidity rather than entering the stock market in this case supports other markets. Note that by June 1931 the S&P 500 stood at 14.8, against 21.45 in December 1929 — a fall of 31%. This fall took place despite an increase in the rate of growth of liquidity from 4.7% in December 1929 to 21% by June 1931.

In contrast, the increase in liquidity was supporting Treasuries. The yield on the 10-year Treasury bond was in a gentle downtrend. The yield eased from 3.4% in December 1929 to around 3% by June 1931.

We suggest that, at present, if the pool of real savings is still in trouble, then we are unlikely to have a sustained economic revival. If anything, all the rescue packages and all the massive pumping by the Fed has made things much worse as far as the underlying economic bottom line is concerned.

This in turn means that, despite lofty liquidity, bad economic fundamentals might force investors to direct their money towards other assets, such as Treasuries — and gold. If our assessment regarding economic fundamentals is correct, then the underlying downtrend in long-term Treasuries is likely to stay in force while the price of gold is likely to easily surpass the $1,000 mark.

Conclusion

At the end of February 2009, the S&P 500 closed at 735.09 — a fall of 52.6% from the end of October 2007. Since the end of February, the stock-price index has been gaining strength closing on Friday, May 8, at 929.23 — an increase of 26.4%. It is tempting to suggest that perhaps this visible rebound since February could be the beginning of a new bull market. An important factor behind this strong bounce is massive monetary pumping by the Fed that has contributed to a large increase in monetary liquidity. We suggest that, while the Fed can create plenty of monetary liquidity, it cannot make the underlying real fundamentals better. If anything, the Fed's policies can only make the fundamentals much worse. Hence, if fundamentals were to continue to deteriorate, further investors are unlikely to provide support to the stock market, notwithstanding a strong liquidity buildup. The increase in liquidity is likely to be placed in various other asset classes, such as Treasuries and gold. For this reason we maintain that, for the time being, the underlying downtrend in long-term Treasury yields is likely to stay intact, while the price of gold is expected to easily surpass the $1,000/oz mark in a few months' time.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bho44; bhodjia; bhoeconomy; schifflist; second100days
The Peter Schiff/Redistribution Watch Ping. (Washington Bankrupting our Nation by Spending your past, present and future money!)

If you realize both parties in Washington think our money is theirs and you trust them to do the wrong thing, this list is for you.

If you think there is a Santa Claus who is going to get elected in Washington and cut a few taxes and spend a few trillion and jump start the economy, and get our lost money back, this list is not for you.

You can read past posts by clicking on : schifflist , I try to tag all relevant threads with the keyword : schifflist.

Ping list pinged by sickoflibs.

To join the ping list: FReepmail sickoflibs with the subject line add Schifflist.

(Stop getting pings by sending the subject line drop Schifflist.)

1 posted on 05/12/2009 6:51:33 PM PDT by sickoflibs
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To: Harrius Magnus; mojitojoe; Pelham; mom2twinsn2; LongLiveTheRepublic; ConservativeOrBust; ...
The Peter Schiff/Redistribution Watch Ping. (Washington Bankrupting our Nation by Spending your past, present and future money!)
2 posted on 05/12/2009 6:53:29 PM PDT by sickoflibs (Obama /Pelosi/Bush Theme : "A dollar borrowed or printed is a dollar earned!")
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To: sickoflibs
Does Obama know the difference?? Stupid Rookie.....
3 posted on 05/12/2009 7:00:57 PM PDT by jakerobins
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To: sickoflibs
Obama's Bubble = Government Spending

It is unsustainable and will crash. There is no way you can grow government like this and not hit the wall. Even some Democrats know this. Just not the Marxist wing of the party which is running the show.

4 posted on 05/12/2009 7:02:52 PM PDT by Always Right (Obama: more arrogant than Bill Clinton, more naive than Jimmy Carter, and more liberal than LBJ.)
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To: Always Right

I agree. We are in a long term bear market. And this was a short term bear market rally. I think this current stock market rally is a sucker’s rally, and that it will soon come crashing down.


5 posted on 05/12/2009 7:05:32 PM PDT by webschooner
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To: webschooner

Amazing how everything is built on credit. Stocks are all credit, although the market itself is now educated gambling.


6 posted on 05/12/2009 7:10:23 PM PDT by aimhigh
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To: Always Right

That’s what happens when you give some people blank checks.


7 posted on 05/12/2009 7:11:18 PM PDT by TribalPrincess2U (The plan... 0 in power for life. At least that's what they told him.)
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To: webschooner

It is amazing there aren’t thousands of articles on this subject. The media is completely silence on this issue because they all believe that big government can somehow support itself. Government can only thrive on the back of a strong productive economy.


8 posted on 05/12/2009 7:11:41 PM PDT by Always Right (Obama: more arrogant than Bill Clinton, more naive than Jimmy Carter, and more liberal than LBJ.)
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To: Always Right

All the investment newsletters my husband subscribes to have been talking about this for months. It’s just not in the MSM (surprise, surprise). When do they ever tell the truth about anything?

My husband jokingly says, whatever the MSM business pundits say investors should be doing, he’ll do the opposite. :-)


9 posted on 05/12/2009 7:23:23 PM PDT by boxlunch
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To: Always Right

It seems to me that eventually, all this printing of money they don’t have by the goobermint, mathematically almost has to lead to hyper inflation, which ... could at some point push stocks up, just because the currency is being devalued. When I feel that period has started, I may plunge back into stocks to some extent and purchase more gold, to protect purchasing power.


10 posted on 05/12/2009 7:24:31 PM PDT by webschooner
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To: sickoflibs
>"(printing money is NOT growth)

But it's his secret plan to cut the deficit in half!!!!!

Viola.... instant permanent regressive inflation tax!

At least the poor people will appreciate how hard 10$ big macs stick it to da man!

Did you get the pie with the 100 lb steak?

11 posted on 05/12/2009 7:39:25 PM PDT by rawcatslyentist (<P><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajsov1M4h50"> Thank You Satan 1:50</a>)
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To: Always Right

Inflation is inevitable when policies such as this government under Obama propose are adopted. Of course the stock market will go up, and of course wages will go up, and so will taxes and prices and pot and heroin. We’ve got an inordinate number of stupid fools who are allowed to vote in this country and they are going to get what fools get when they value feelings over facts, irrationality over reason, and illusion over reality.
Glad I’m old!


12 posted on 05/12/2009 7:54:02 PM PDT by mathurine
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To: sickoflibs

The only reason I’m in the market now is becasue when the big inflation comes, everything will get creamed, but stocks will have a tendency to adjust, at least somewhat, for inflation. God help the people in Treasuries.


13 posted on 05/12/2009 8:09:30 PM PDT by cookcounty (He who controls the Language controls the Debate.)
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To: cookcounty
RE :”The only reason I’m in the market now is because when the big inflation comes, everything will get creamed, but stocks will have a tendency to adjust, at least somewhat, for inflation.

I know how you feel, the newly made cash forces people into the market. I think energy and farming/foods especially outside of Obama’s reach are going to boom just like 2008.

14 posted on 05/12/2009 8:18:06 PM PDT by sickoflibs (Obama /Pelosi/Bush Theme : "A dollar borrowed or printed is a dollar earned!")
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To: NeoCaveman

Peter Schiff Ping


15 posted on 05/12/2009 8:43:21 PM PDT by TenthAmendmentChampion (Be prepared for tough times. FReepmail me to learn about our survival thread!)
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To: sickoflibs

Thanks for the ping.


16 posted on 05/12/2009 8:56:31 PM PDT by GOPJ
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To: cookcounty; sickoflibs
The only reason I’m in the market now is becasue when the big inflation comes, everything will get creamed,...

I don't see it coming. There will be inflation, but not the hyper inflation that everyone is worried about. Credit has been decreasing about as rapidly as they've been printing money.

People are now saving like never before and paying down debt as quick as possible. Also, demographics are working against a real recovery because the "echo boom" is half the size as the baby boomers who are now starting to retire. Which leads me to believe we are headed into a long period of stagflation just like Japan.

17 posted on 05/12/2009 9:03:20 PM PDT by wmfights (If you want change support SenateConservatives.com)
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To: wmfights; cookcounty
RE :” a long period of stagflation

Inflationary recession or depression. So many democrats told me ‘we need some inflation’ and I replied “Great, losing jobs plus inflation”. That CNN liberal Cafferty was complaining about oil prices rising again not admitting it's his Messiah doing it.

18 posted on 05/13/2009 4:40:12 AM PDT by sickoflibs (Obama /Pelosi/Bush Theme : "A dollar borrowed or printed is a dollar earned!")
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To: webschooner

“I think this current stock market rally is a sucker’s rally, and that it will soon come crashing down.”

Agreed. But gold is at $927.50 today. Mama like! :)


19 posted on 05/13/2009 9:02:14 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin ("Just give it to me straight; I'll make up my own mind." - Dana Perino's Dad)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
Agreed. But gold is at $927.50 today. Mama like! :)

Dittos to that. I'm going to invest in more gold, but kind of waiting to see what happens this month and next. As you prolly know, May and June are traditionally weak months for gold.

20 posted on 05/13/2009 9:11:27 AM PDT by webschooner
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To: webschooner

If $927.50 turns out to be WEAK, I’ll be very happy. ;)


21 posted on 05/13/2009 9:47:20 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin ("Just give it to me straight; I'll make up my own mind." - Dana Perino's Dad)
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