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-Caveat Lector-

* * * * * * * * * * * * REMINDER * * * * * * * * * * * * *

On the days that I don't publish, like today, you will
receive Bill Bonner's DAILY RECKONING. This will help you
to keep pace with the changes in the markets.  Bonner and
I agree on most things in the field of economics, so the
two letters will reinforce each other.

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

W's Latest Barney

The Daily Reckoning

Paris, France

Wednesday, 3 September 2003

                 --------------------

*** Bankruptcies, home sales... at new records... muddle,
muddle...

*** Stocks rise 116 points... yields soar... dollar rises;
who ya gonna trust - them or us?

*** Stampeding turtles... $2 wine... manufacturing on the
upswing... and more...

                 --------------------

[Ed note: If you are an AOL reader and have been
experiencing problems receiving your Daily Reckoning -
welcome back! Our friends at AOL assure us that your DR
prescription will be filled each morning without
interruption. Thanks for your understanding.]

The stock market is against us. So are bonds and the
dollar. They're all saying that the U.S. is entering a
cyclical recovery - with rising corporate profits, falling
levels of unemployment, and higher bond yields.

Either they're wrong, or we are.

On the evidence, we might both be; the 'facts' could
convict either one of us. Manufacturing is growing at its
fastest pace in 8 months. Job losses are slowing. Homes are
selling at the highest prices ever... with housing starts at
a 17-year high. Almost all the financial newscasters,
analysts, spin-meisters and economists would testify
against us. Good times lie ahead, they say.

On the other hand, bankruptcy filings are at new records -
up 9.7% in the last 12 months. Household debt ratios are at
all-time highs... and current account and federal deficits
have passed from merely grotesque to completely absurd.

Calling our friend John Mauldin as an expert witness, we
ask him to describe the conflicting testimony. His
assessment? We are in a 'muddle through' economy. John is
much more of a pessimist than we are; despite all the
confusion, he believes, somehow things keep moving forward.

We don't dispute John's point. But we offer a caveat:
Things may muddle along... until, in a moment of clarifying
terror, all of a sudden, they stop muddling.

There must have been such a moment for Hitler's generals.
Out on the steppes of the Ukraine or in the rubble of
Stalingrad... sometime in early 1942... it must have struck
them like a piece of shrapnel: they could not muddle
through the Eastern Front. They were a long way from home.
They lacked troops. They lacked tanks and ammunition. They
lacked supplies and airplanes. And against them was the
abominable weather... Hitler's own incompetence... and the
vast Soviet Union roused from its stupid sleep.

They could not muddle through at all. At some point, the
illusions must have fallen away, like shards of glass from
a broken window. All of a sudden, they must have looked out
and seen clearly: The campaign was hopeless and imbecilic.
They would fall back if they were lucky, or die if they
weren't... and then, what? Even if they got back safely to
the other side of the Oder... how could they hold back the
barbarians?

That clarifying moment is still ahead for investors - the
moment when people realize that the U.S. economy cannot
muddle through the collapse of the Dollar Standard system.
How far ahead, we don't know. But 'not too far' is our
guess.

While stocks, bonds and the dollar tell us we're wrong
about this, gold stands behind us. The yellow metal itself
says nothing, but its price screams; up about 40% since the
beginning of the downturn on Wall Street, it has risen
along with the dollar in recent weeks and now approaches
its February high, closing yesterday at $371 an ounce. Even
at that elevated price, it still takes 26 ounces to buy the
30 Dow stocks. Normally, and - we guess - eventually, it
takes only 5 or 6 ounces.

Gold is in a bull market because a growing number of
investors look out their windows and see disaster coming.
Deflation, unemployment, bear markets in stocks and bonds,
bankruptcies, defaults - it is all out there... and closing
in on them.

But here is Eric with more of the latest news:

                     -------------

Eric Fry in the city of fear and greed...

- History be damned!... The Dow Jones Industrial Average
bounded into September - the cruelest month of the year for
the stock market - with a sprightly 116-point gain. All but
three of the Dow's 30 components traded in the plus column,
as the blue-chip index ended the first trading day of
September at 9,532. The Nasdaq Composite jumped 1.5% to
1,837. The dollar soared in sympathy with the stock market,
gaining 1.3% against the euro to $1.082.

- As we noted yesterday, September is the most treacherous
30-day span on the Gregorian calendar for the stock market.
"That said," Bloomberg News observes, "the new month tends
to begin on a strong note, with the day after Labor Day
tallying gains seven out of the past eight years. And the
market's outstanding performance to date may give stocks a
bit of a cushion to tackle the September blues: the Dow, in
fact, is up about 13 percent year-to-date, the Nasdaq
around 35 percent and the S&P about 15 percent."

- One day into the accursed month of September, investors
refuse to be spooked by any sort of historical voodoo. To
the contrary, most folks have fallen in love anew with
stocks. They want to cozy up to stocks each and every day
of each and every month... and in each and every country.
All 62 major world stock indexes have advanced this year,
according to Bloomberg data.

- Meanwhile, investors are tossing out bonds like so many
month-old bananas. U.S., Japanese and European government
bonds all tumbled yesterday, apparently on signs that the
global economy is rebounding. The U.S. Treasury market
suffered particularly harsh treatment, as the yield on the
10-year Treasury note soared to 4.60% from 4.46% on Friday.

- Soaring interest rates, as we have noted ad nauseum, are
a kind of financial kryptonite to the nation's
'Superlenders,' Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. But don't
bother trying to tell that to Merrill Lynch, or to the
investors who scurried to buy the mortgage lenders' shares
yesterday.

- Merrill Lynch upped its rating on the shares of the
mortgage lending behemoths to 'buy' from 'neutral,' based
on the touchy-feeling hunch "that bottoms have been made."
Incredibly, Merrill's hopeful comments about Fannie Mae
caused its stock to jump nearly 5% yesterday. This, on a
day when interest rates soared to new one-year highs.
Clearly, the exuberant investor is not a discriminating
investor. Then again, during manic market phases, the
exuberant investor gets rich while the discriminating
investor watches.

- The fact that interest rates are soaring is hardly a
surprise. The Iraqi occupation has become a semi-permanent
$100 billion annual tax on our nation, the country's budget
deficit is mushrooming, the Fed is 'succeeding' in
rekindling inflation and the economy is showing some signs
of life.

- Hopeful economic news continued to trickle in yesterday,
as the Institute of Supply Management's manufacturing index
rose to 54.7% in August from July's 51.8%. Additionally,
outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas announced
that planned layoffs dropped 6% in August from July's
levels. Challenger also said that August was the fourth
straight month with fewer than 100,000 announced job cuts,
a trend not seen since 2000.

- So let's offer up a heartfelt "Hip! Hip! Hooray!" for the
economy, as it stampedes ahead like a herd of turtles. But
maybe we should hold our applause for the stock market. At
20 times prospective earnings, the stock market would seem
to be anticipating great things, if not minor miracles,
from the economy.

- But maybe the economy will fail to fulfill the stock
market's elevated expectations. In which case we must ask
ourselves, "What's a turtle stampede worth?"

                     --------------

Bill Bonner, back in Paris...

*** The figures have been revised. Previously, it was
thought that the U.S. accounted for 67% of global GDP
growth from '95 to 2002. Now the number is said to be 96%.
This may mean two things. Either the U.S. really was
responsible for nearly all the world's GDP growth during
that period... or the dollar is so high it distorts the true
meaning of things. A 50 cent dollar, for example, would cut
the value of U.S. GDP in half.

*** The dollar rose again yesterday. $1.08 will now get you
a euro. This seems like a good trade. Later, it will
probably take $1.50 or more to buy a euro.

*** "Claims of recovery very hollow to jobless," says a
Detroit Free Press headline. "Paychecks getting pinched,"
says CNN. Another article explains that unemployment is
growing among college graduates more rapidly than in any
other group. The rate was only 1.6% when G.W. Bush took
office. Now, the college-educated unemployment level is
nearly twice as high.

Who's finding work? The Cleveland paper tells us that
employment is increasing among people 55 and older. Why?
Most likely it is because they're reliable and cheap... and
they can't make ends meet at such low interest rates.

*** "Californian wine makers under a cloud," says a
headline in yesterday's Financial Times.

As you know, dear reader, we dust every headline in the
financial section for Richard Nixon's fingerprints. We
check every hair found at a crime scene against his DNA.
It's surprising how often we get a match.

Even the wine industry is now being rocked by the effects
of Nixon's 1971 decision to cut the dollar loose from gold.
With no further need to settle their accounts in real money
(gold), Americans began a spending spree that continues to
this day. The cash and credit exploded out of the U.S. and
set markets on fire nearly everywhere - but especially in
the Far East. Then, the foreigners - with trillions in
extra dollars on their hands - re-invested the money in the
U.S., causing a blaze in the late '90s which still has not
been brought under control.

Nowhere did the flames shoot higher than in Northern
California.

"In some respects," explains the FT, "California's wine
industry, which accounts for 95% of all U.S. production,
has been a victim of its own success. The sky was the limit
a scant few years ago when residents of San Francisco and
Silicon Valley were flush with cash from the technology
boom.

"Scores of new wineries cropped up in Napa Valley, Sonoma
county and along California's central coast... grape growers
scurried to meet this surging demand by planting tens of
thousands of acres of new vineyards."

Inflation begets deflation, we keep pointing out. So much
new wine came on the market that prices dropped. Now,
Americans can buy a bottle of decent cabernet sauvignon for
only $2. 'Two-buck Chuck,' for example, from Charles Shaw,
is grabbing market share and forcing other winemakers to
cut their prices. Wine growers are responding in the
typical way - they're expected to destroy 6% of
California's total vineyard acreage this year alone.

So you see, dear reader, here is a positive development.

Yes, Nixon's Dollar Standard system has ruined the American
economy. But if you can get a good bottle of wine for $2...
why should you care?

*** Housekeeping note: The Supper Club will be holding its
annual update meeting in mid-November at the stately
Broadmoor hotel in Colorado Springs. At this singular
event, the Club will present and evaluate every venture
capital opportunity it has uncovered over the past year.
Some of them, we hear, have already proved impressively
profitable.

To learn more, contact Supper Club Director Vickie Beard at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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                 ---------------------

The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: As if America hadn't enough
wars - hot or cold - to fight, it is now taking the battle
for re-election right to the Chinese heartland.


W'S LATEST BARNEY
by Sean Corrigan

"One way to make sure that the manufacturing sector does
well is to send a message overseas, [to] say, look, we
expect there to be a fair playing field when it comes to
trade. See, we in America believe we can compete with
anybody, just so long as the rules are fair, and we intend
to keep the rules fair."

- Dubya-Dubya-III in Richfield, Ohio

"Politicians and pressure groups representing the interests
of U.S. workers in some manufacturing industries have been
trying to draw presidential candidates' attention to the
Chinese currency.

"Their argument is - China has been manipulating the yuan
to keep it at a low value. China's aim, they allege, is to
help Chinese-based exporters, whose inexpensive products
have made lots of American workers jobless. The critics
that believe China manipulates the yuan's value assume that
every currency in the world should be floated in the market
– [but] this assumption itself is porous."

- China Daily Editorial


Yesterday, in a shameless piece of propagandist posing, if
not as egregious as his Mav'n'Goose carrier landing,
president Bush, God's Anointed Defender of Civilization,
milked a crowd of Mid-West manufacturing workers, dressed
in union cap and bomber jacket. Meanwhile, Treasury
Secretary John Snow simultaneously raised hirsute eyebrows
at his Oriental hosts over the value of their currencies.
Yawn...

[Ed note: Since we first alerted you to Porter Stansberry's
"China Strategy Report" on June 20th, the three stocks
recommended have gone up 26.5% - on average. And the index
of New York-listed Chinese ADRs is up 14%. If you'd like to
find out more how to play the Chinese unpegging of the
yuan, if and when it should happen, read:

The China Strategy Report
http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/CSR/WCSRD705/ ]

Haven't we seen all this before? It's the same weary old
Protectionism to which politically astute, but economically
illiterate and morally bankrupt office holders, usually
stoop when things get tough at home.

The same whining tone has its counterpart in a bleating
Washington Post story which bemoans the fact that
governments elsewhere in the world are unwilling to fleece
their taxpayers, or dragoon their sons into subsidizing or
otherwise reinforcing the rapidly deteriorating situation
in post-Conquest Iraq.

Well, "Quelle surprise!" as those dastardly French enemies
of freedom might say.

Whether the gesture is a completely empty one remains to be
seen, but Dubya's bright idea of appointing another un-
elected bureaucratic meddler at the Department of Commerce,
with specific responsibility for manufacturing, cannot
otherwise possibly portend anything good. This
unfortunate's sole mandate will be to rustle up votes by
blaming all those shifty foreigners, who have had the
temerity to satisfy American consumers' needs at a lower
price than any one else, for the woes of the U.S. economy.
The same shifty foreigners who then compounded their crimes
by lending the U.S. government the money to fuel its war
fleets and lending its citizens the cash necessary to keep
their house prices on the rise.

The implications of this newly heightened emphasis on
foreigners could be far-reaching.

First, there is nothing more inimical to economic recovery
– as well as to personal liberty – than the doctrine
encapsulated by Bush in the words: "We have a
responsibility that when somebody hurts, government has got
to move."

A fine sentiment, no doubt. But in practice, what it
translates to is a policy of taking from those more
successful in the ongoing struggle to adjust to the new
realities of post-Bubble America and redistributing the
spoils among the losers, with an ear always to where this
commandeered largesse will make the most political noise.
Whatever short-term palliative effects protectionist
measures might bring about, you can be sure that, in the
long run, they will be detrimental both to personal
enterprise and to private capital.

Perhaps more immediately, like the spendthrift Medieval
kings who invariably blamed Venetian bankers or Jewish
money-lenders for woes very much of their own making,
international concerns that America's biggest creditors do
not get a vote in America's elections, which are already
heightened... should heighten further. Cumulative money
flows into the U.S. since the Bubble began in 1995 have
come to close to $4.1 trillion. That's nearly 70% of the $6
trillion remitted to the Imperium in the past 50 years - a
fact that might give pause for thought in finance
ministries and investment committees around the world.

At its simplest, we have the spectacle of a U.S. Treasury
Secretary trooping around the Far East, effectively telling
everyone the U.S. requires their acquiescence in a write-
down of their painstakingly acquired foreign
assets... simply because the Global Hegemon is unable to
compete with them commercially in any other way.

At its most damaging, we face the ongoing prospect of
barriers to trade being erected by the world's biggest
market – but also by the world's biggest debtor.

Given that international trade – not to mention
international money flows – has expanded far beyond any
underlying increase in output over the course of the past
decade, and given further that a fragile global economy
needs less, rather than more protectionist legislation to
motivate investors and businessmen to take on risk anew,
the desire for "government to move" could easily snowball.

With international relations already highly strained –
thanks largely, if not wholly, to the unwontedly
belligerent approach adopted by the current U.S.
Administration – the clear peril here is that a series of
escalating trade disputes could impair the ability of "free
trade" to alleviate existing financial burdens caused by
the collapse of the bubble. In fact, it should be
recognized that exactly this process was a key feature in
the appalling series of policy mistakes which turned the
'29 Crash into the Great Depression.

An America living wildly beyond her means at all levels of
society may well get more of an adjustment in its currency
than it bargained for. In fact, many of us in the West –
not just in the U.S. - have been living too high on the hog
on newly-printed money. We will all either have to perform
heroics of productive endeavor to restore the balance or
face the grim reckoning that we are not as wealthy as we
currently believe. A drastic adjustment in currency
parities may well be a part of that.

However, to the extent a major U.S. dollar correction is
sudden and if, as will sadly be the case, it is not matched
by greater thrift at home, import prices will suffer a
greater share of inflation and the crumbling bond market
will crumble further still. Foreigners repatriating their
capital will simply rub salt in the wounds inflicted by the
Fed's own foolishness.

It is hard to overstate the risks that will accompany a
rise in political xenophobia. That inveterate political
trimmer and wannabe Ben Strong-beater, Alan Greenspan, is
highly unlikely to do what should be done in that
circumstance and administer the necessary purgative to
expunge the poison as rapidly as possible. Rather, he will
run true to form, continuing to fight the market by
expanding credit yet further, and we would thus face the
very real danger of him triggering a devastating
inflationary runaway.


Warm regards,

Sean Corrigan,
for The Daily Reckoning

P.S. We have written recently that it looks as though major
bond markets are only half way through their correction. We
have talked about commodity prices in general and gold in
particular as being in a bull market.

We have noted that this period after the U.S. Labor Day, as
well as the end of the Continental holiday season, is often
a crucial one for markets. And we have argued that there is
a chance, albeit remote, of increased turmoil in fixed
income and forex of precipitating a 1987-style event.

We'd have to say we stand by all of these thoughts.


Editor's note: Sean Corrigan, the Daily Reckoning's "man-
on-the-scene" in London's financial district, is a graduate
of Cambridge University and a veteran bond and derivatives
trader. Corrigan is the founder of Capital Insight, a
London-based consultancy firm which provides key technical
analysis of stock, bond and commodities markets to major
US, UK and European banks. He is also a co-manager of the
Bermuda-based Edelweiss Fund.

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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:

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<A HREF="http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
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