| “Money
transactions related to material goods production,” writes Wang, “counted
80% of the total [global] transactions until 1970. However, only 5 years
after the collapse of the Bretton Woods the ratio turned upside down –
only 20% of money transactions were related material goods production and
circulation. The ratio dropped to .7% in 1997.”
As we note
in our book, since Greenspan assumed the central role at the most powerful
central bank in the world, he has expanded the money supply more than all
other Fed chairmen combined. From 1985-2000, production of material goods
in the U.S. has increased only 50%, while the money supply has grown by
a factor of 3. Money has been growing more than six times as fast as the
rate of goods production. The results? Wang’s research reveals that in
1997 - before the top blew off in the U.S. stock market, mind you - global
“money” transactions totaled $600 trillion. Goods production was
a mere 1% of that.
“People
seem to take it for granted that financial values can be created endlessly
out of nowhere and pile up to the moon,” our friend Robert Prechter
writes in his book, Conquer the Crash. “Turn the direction around and mention
that financial values can disappear in into nowhere and they insist that
it isn’t possible. ‘The money has to go somewhere...It just moves from
stocks to bonds to money funds...it never goes away...For every buyer,
there is a seller, so the money just changes hands.’ That is true of
money, just as it was all the way up, but it’s not true of values, which
changed all the way up.”
In the fictitious
economy, the values for paper assets are only derived from the perceptions
of the buyer and seller. A man may believe he is worth a million dollars,
because he holds stocks or bonds generally agreed in the market to hold
that value. When he presents his net worth to a lender, a mortgage banker
for example, and wishes to use the financial assets as collateral for a
loan, his million dollars is now miraculously worth two. If the market
drops, the lender, now nervous about his own assets, calls in the note...and
the borrower once thought to be worth two million discovers he is broke.
“The dynamics
of value expansion and contraction explain why a bear market can bankrupt
millions of people,” Prechter explains. “When the market turns down,
[value expansion] goes into reverse. Only a very few owners of a collapsing
financial asset trade it for money at 90 percent of peak value. Some others
may get out at 80 percent, 50 percent or 30 percent of peak value. In each
case, sellers are simply transforming the remaining future value losses
to someone else.”
As we saw in
the 2000-2002 bear market, in such situations, most investors act as if
they were deer caught in the headlights of a speeding truck at night. They
do nothing. And get stuck holding financial assets at lower - or worse,
non-existant - values. Anyone suffering glances at their pension statements
over the past few years knows their prior “value” was a figment
of their imagination.
Back to Wang:
“In the era of fictitious capitalism, a fictitious capital transaction
itself can increase the ‘book value’ of monetary capital; therefore monetary
capital no longer has to go through material goods production before it
returns to more monetary capital. Capitalists no longer need to do the
'painful' thing - material goods production.”
Real-life owners
of stocks, bonds, foreign currency and real estate have increasingly taken
advantage of historically low interest rates and applied for mortgages
backed by the value of these financial assets. Especially since the rally
began 8 months ago, they then turn around and trade the new capital on
the markets. “During this process,” writes Wang, “the demand
of money no longer comes from the expansion of material goods production,
instead it comes from the inflation of capital price. The process repeats
itself.”
Derivatives
instruments, themselves a form of fictitious capital, help investors bet
on the direction of capital prices. And central banks, unfettered by the
tedious foundation set by the gold standard, can print as much money as
is required by the demands of the fictitious economy. You can, of course,
trade the marginal values of these fictitious instruments and do quite
well for yourself. [See: 22 Trading Rules For The Fictitious Economy http://www.dailyreckoning.com/body_headline.cfm?id=3589
But Wang sees
a darker side to the equation. “Fictitious capital is no more than a
piece of paper, or an electric signal in a computer disk. Theoretically,
such capital cannot feed anyone no matter how much its value increases
in the marketplace. So why is it so enthusiastically pursued by the major
capitalist countries?”
The reason,
at least until recently, is that the "major capitalist countries"
have been using their fictitious capital to finance consumption of “other
countries'” material goods. Thus far, the most major of the capitalist
countries, the U.S., has been able to profit from the system because since
the establishment of the Bretton Woods system, and increasingly since its
demise, the world has balanced its accounts in dollars.
“Until now,”
writes Wang, “U.S. dollars [have counted] for 60-70% in settlement transactions
and currency reserves. However, before the ‘fictitious capital’
era, more exactly, before the fictitious economy began inflating insanely
in the 1990s, America could not possibly capture surplus products from
other countries on such a large scale simply by taking advantage of the
dollar’s special status in the world...Lured by the concept of the ‘new
economy’, international capital flew into the American securities market
and purchased American capital, thus resulting in the great performance
of U.S. dollar and abnormal exuberance in the American security market.”
And here we
arrive at the crux of Wang’s argument that a war is brewing. “While
[fictitious capital] has been bringing to America economic prosperity and
hegemonic power over money,” he suggests, “it has its own inborn
weakness. In order to sustain such prosperity and hegemonic power, America
has to keep unilateral inflow of international capital to the American
market...If America loses its hegemonic power over money, its domestic
consumption level will plunge 30-40%. Such an outcome would be devastating
for the U.S. economy. It could be more harmful to the economy than the
Great Depression of 1929 to 1933.”
Japan’s example
suggests, as your editors have oft reminded you, that a collapse in asset
values in a fictitious economy can adversely affect the real economy for
a long time.
In the era
of fictitious capital, Wang surmises, America must keep its hegemonic power
over money in order to keep feeding the enormous yaw in its consumerist
belly. Hegemonic power over money requires that international capital keep
flowing into the market from all participating economies. Should the financial
market collapse, the economy would sink into depression.
America’s reigning
financial monopolies, he believes, (whoever they may be), would not stand
for it.
Addison Wiggin,
The Daily
Reckoning
P.S. Wang writes
that he was disturbed to draw these conclusions. And as noted above, he
recommends that the Chinese government plan accordingly.
He could not
be any more disturbed than your editors here in the Paris office. We’ve
grown to like the perspective we’ve developed while enjoying carafes at
the Paradis and watching passersby pass by. Trouble is, if Wang’s conclusions
are correct, then the currency most suited to challenge the hegemony of
the U.S. dollar has just this week closed at a historic high of $1.20. |