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Phil De Carolis
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| Phil De Carolis' Weekly Update: February 16, 2008 |
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Stimulus Package: "The Government Is Printing Money Up And Giving It Directly To The Public To Go Out And Spend It Which Will Result In Immediate Uncontrollable Increases In Consumer Prices"
Click On The Image Above To Watch A FOX Panel That Included Peter Schiff
Peter Schiff On FOX Business News Wednesday Feb 13, 2008 (7:38 mins)
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Peter Schiffs' Economic Commentary
"Upping the Inflation Dosage"
Friday February 15, 2008
By Economist Peter Schiff

In perhaps one of biggest ironies to ever to come out of Washington, this week Congress simultaneously pilloried major league baseball players for using artificial stimulants to pump up their performance while passing legislation to do just that to the national economy. Am I the only one laughing?
In reality, the current slump in the U.S. economy is simply the come down from years of financial doping in the form of skyrocketing home values and easy credit. Rather than reaching for yet another syringe, Congress should ask Americans to do what it demands of ballplayers: play within their natural means. Unfortunately in the case of the economy, the patient is already so juiced up that further doses may not only fail to stimulate but may result in a trip to the emergency room.
As the widely praised "economic stimulus" bill was signed into law, the only dissent heard was from those saying the plan did not go far enough. Speaking for those unheard voices who disagree with the strategy entirely, I believe the most significant aspect of the plan is that it creates a new and improved method for delivering inflation.
Previously, the government has largely relied on interest rate stimulus to keep the economy humming. In this method, money supply growth, also known as inflation, is channeled through the banking system. The Fed makes cheap credit available to banks, which then lend out the new funds or use them to acquire higher yielding assets. As a result, asset prices, such as stocks, bonds and real estate, have been bid up to bubble levels. However, the inflationary impact on consumer prices occurs with a considerable lag.
Now that rate cuts alone are proving insufficient, mainly because banks are now so over-loaded with questionable collateral and shaky loans that few can consider acquiring more assets or extending additional credit (no matter how cheap such activities can be funded), the Government is opting for a more direct approach. By printing money and mailing it directly to the citizenry, the "stimulus plan" cuts out all of the financial middle men and administers the inflation drug directly to consumers.
If simply printing money could solve financial problems, the Fed could send $10 million to every citizen and we could all retire en masse to Barbados. However, more money chasing a given supply of goods simply pushes up prices and does nothing to improve underlying economics. Since this new money will go directly into consumer spending, without first being filtered thought asset markets, the effects on consumer prices will be far more immediate.
This politically inspired placebo will do nothing to cure what ails our economy. The additional consumer spending will merely exacerbate our imbalances, allow the underlying problems to worsen, and put additional upward pressure on both consumer prices and eventually long-term interest rates as well. The failure of the stimulus plan to cure the economy will cause the Government, and the Wall Street brain trust, to conclude that it was simply too small. Their next solution will be to administer an even stronger dose.
My prediction is that over the course of the next few years, successive doses of even larger stimulus packages will fail to revive the economy. As the recession worsens and the dollar drops through the floor and consumer prices and long-term interest rates shoot thought the roof, politicians and economists will look for scapegoats. Few, if any, will properly attribute the problems to the toxic effects of the stimulus itself.
However, like all drugs, the biggest danger is an overdose. In monetary terms an overdose is hyperinflation, which will surely kill our economy. It is my sincere hope that before we reach that "point of no return," a correct diagnosis is finally made. When that occurs, the stimulants will be cut off, and the free market will finally be allowed to administer the only cure that works: recession. If that means we lose some speed on our fastball, so be it. Maybe we could use a few months in the minor leagues to get back to basics. While we may not like the economic side effects of stopping cold turkey, it sure beats carrying our money around in wheelbarrows!
For a more in depth analysis of the tenuous position of the Americana economy and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse."
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Click The Icon To Listen To The February 13th Installment Of Wall Street Unspun With Host Peter Schiff
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The Norris Group Real Estate Radio Show
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Southern California Real Estate Expert Bruce Norris is joined this week by builder consultant and founder of John Burns Real Estate Consulting, John Burns. Bruce and John discuss how busy John has been consulting investors and builders who have never experienced a downturn, what industries these new investors are coming from and if it's cyclical, if builders had a chance to do it over what they might choose to do differently, land shortages, debt strategies of builders, options versus cash, land value decrease in California, portfolio deals, supply of homes the builders are currently holding, construction starts, how lending has changed the game, who the typical buyer is in 2008, the possibility of builders constructing smaller homes, if the cities like that idea, why do builders repeat the same mistakes, are those in trouble the old or new companies, Northern versus Southern California market, affordability changes in the coming years, if affordability will help the housing market, if any of the FED actions will come to the rescue, how the freezing of foreclosure won't change anything, how interest rates might help, the California employment picture for 2008 and its effect on housing demand, recession in California, migration, presidential elections and possible tax law changes, the state of the commercial industry, commercial foreclosures in 2008, and the new loan limits proposed by the FED.
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Interest Rate Cuts
(Sep 18, 2007)- "A Fed bailout in the form of rate cuts will neither prevent the recession nor keep house prices from collapsing. It may slow the process down a few quarters, but it will cost us dearly" -Peter Schiff
"Bernanke Warns Of Worsening Outlook For U.S. Economy"- Herald Tribune
Feb 14 -- The U.S. Federal Reserve chairman, Ben Bernanke, told the Congress on Thursday that the country's economic outlook had deteriorated and signaled that the central bank was ready to keep on lowering its benchmark interest rate - as needed - to shore things up. In remarks to the Senate Banking Committee, Bernanke said the combination of housing and credit crises had greatly strained the U.S. economy. Hiring has slowed and consumers are likely to tighten their belts further as they are pinched by high energy prices and watch the value of their single biggest asset - their homes - weaken, he warned.................
Click Here To See The Entire Article
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Recession
(Sep 19,2007)- "We borrowed trillions of dollars to remodel our kitchens, buy SUVs and plasma TVs, and there are consequences. We are in serious trouble. The piper has to be paid" -Peter Schiff
"US Job Cuts Mount As Slowdown Erodes Corporate Profits" -AFP
Feb 13 -- Brand-name American companies, spanning manufacturing, retailing and banking among other industries, are making sizeable job cuts as an economic slowdown bites corporate profits. A monthly US government survey showed earlier this month that the world's largest economy shed jobs unexpectedly in January for the first time since 2003 as employers cut 17,000 positions. Several big corporations have announced significant workforce reductions since January's job snapshot was released, raising the odds that employment growth will remain sluggish in the near term.....................
Click On This Link To View The Entire Article |
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Dollar
(Sep 18, 2007)- "If the dollar loses value too quickly, it could wreak havoc on the economy and financial markets - driving up interest rates and inflation and slashing Americans' purchasing power" -Peter Schiff
"Dollar Has Biggest Weekly Loss in 2008 on Signs Growth Slowing " -Bloomberg
Feb. 16 -- The dollar had its biggest weekly loss this year against the euro after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled he may cut interest rates further amid mounting concern that the economy is headed for a recession. The U.S. currency fell yesterday to the lowest level in more than a week against the euro after reports showed U.S. consumer confidence tumbled this month and New York manufacturing contracted. The Swedish krona gained against 15 of the 16 most- active currencies this week after the central bank unexpectedly raised interest rates. ``The market is reacting to bad data from the U.S. and pessimism'' from policy makers, said Geoffrey Yu, a currency strategist in Zurich at UBS AG. ``The dollar will struggle.'' The U.S. currency fell 1.2 percent this week to $1.4686 per euro, from $1.4504 on Feb. 8. It touched $1.4709 yesterday, the weakest level since Feb. 5. The euro gained 1.6 percent to 158.25 yen, from 155.71 a week earlier, its biggest gain since September....................
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Inflation
(Sep 19, 2007)- "People keep talking about Fed bailouts as if there is no cost. All the Fed can do is create new dollars. What that does is diminish the value of all the dollars everybody already has. They try to socialize the losses among all the holders of dollars" -Peter Schiff
"Buy Less but Pay Lots More, and Get a Misleading Rise in Sales" - New York Times
Feb. 16 - FACED with tightening credit and a slowing economy, America's consumers are being forced to scale back their purchases, but high prices of necessities are keeping their overall purchases rising at a reasonably strong rate. The retail sales report for January showed overall retail sales that were stronger than many economists had expected, and was well received by the stock market on Wednesday, the day it was released. In total, retail sales are running more than 4 percent over the level of a year ago, an increase that is above the overall inflation rate and much stronger than the sales were when the last recession began in early 2001. But the overall change is misleading. One reason for its strength is that prices of necessities are up sharply over the past year, meaning that those items consume more and more of the household budget, leaving less for other things. Over all, Americans are spending about 13 percent more on food and energy now than a year ago. The figures, as are all the figures shown in the charts accompanying this article, are based on three-month moving averages of seasonally adjusted figures, and compare this year with last year..............
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Real Estate
(Aug 16, 2007)- "The housing bubble has burst. Prices are going to collapse and sales are going to fall through the floor." -Peter Schiff
"Home Prices In Steepest Quarterly Drop"- CNN Money
Feb. 14 -- Home prices continued their plunge during the last three months of 2007, setting a real estate trade group's record for the biggest-ever quarterly drop. The national median price drop of 5.8%, to $206,200 from $219,300, was the steepest ever recorded by the National Association of Realtors (NAR), which has been compiling the report since 1979. NAR officials blamed the liquidity squeeze that began last summer for much of the drop. Home buyers had trouble obtaining mortgage financing, especially for more expensive properties....................
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Gold
(Sep 21, 2007)- "With the Federal Funds Rate cut, the Fed revealed that it has no interest in defending the dollar or containing inflation. This kind of irresponsibility is all gold needs to move higher from its current levels unless the Fed somehow finds its backbone within a year or two, then gold has a good chance to take out its inflation-adjusted high of nearly $2,000 per ounce within this decade." -Peter Schiff
"Gold Gains As Inflation Spurs Demand; Platinum Rises To Record" - Bloomberg
Feb. 11 -- Gold rose in London as interest-rate cuts feed through to higher commodity prices, increasing demand for precious metals as a hedge against inflation. Platinum advanced to a record, silver climbed to a 27-year high and palladium reached the highest since September 2001. Group of Seven officials at a meeting in Tokyo at the weekend indicated they will lower rates further to spur economic growth. Gold has climbed 11 percent this year as the Federal Reserve reduced benchmark borrowing costs 1.25 percentage points, saying ``risks to growth remain.'' The UBS Bloomberg Constant Maturity Commodity Index has gained 8.6 percent. ``High commodity prices are just a reflection of monetary inflation,'' said Mario Innecco, a futures broker at MF Global Ltd. in London. There is ``too much money chasing a limited supply of real goods'' as central banks cut rates, he said. Gold for immediate delivery rose $2.56 to $925.55 an ounce as of 1:09 p.m. in London, adding to a 1.9 percent rally last week. Prices rose to a record $936.92 on Feb. 1.................
Click On This Link To View The Entire Article
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Oil
(July 31, 2007)- "It's going to soon hit $90 and go north of $100 next year. We should see $150 to $200 oil in the next two to three years because of the drop in the dollar.'' -Peter Schiff
"Exxon gives Chávez his biggest fight over nationalization"- International Herald Tribune
Feb. 13 -- Exxon Mobil, one of the world's largest oil companies, is giving President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela the toughest fight yet in his widening efforts to expand state control over his country's vast oil resources. Exxon and the state oil company, Petróleos de Venezuela, known as PDVSA, were to face off in a New York courtroom Wednesday over a $315 million freeze of PDVSA assets that Exxon won last month as part of a worldwide effort to tie up the company's funds. The freeze, the first Chávez has faced since he began his nationalization drive in 2003, led him to stop selling crude and refined oil products to Exxon on Tuesday. The U.S. oil company won a ruling blocking transactions in Britain, the Netherlands and the Netherlands Antilles, affecting as much as $12 billion in assets, pending the resolution of a dispute over the seizure by the Venezuelan government last year of a heavy oil project. The freezes keep PDVSA from moving assets while allowing it to do business, according to court papers................
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Futures Prices
Todays Prices (February 16, 2008)
*Gold Futures $906.1/Ounce (Down)
Last Weeks Prices (February 9, 2008)
*Dollar Index 76.82/Basket Of Currencies
*Gold Futures $922.3/Ounce
* Crude Oil $91.77/Barrel
Federal Funds Rate 3.0%
Federal Discount Rate 3.5%
30yr Fixed Mortgage 5.49%
Thank you for taking the time to read this e-mail and don't hesitate to contact me at (909) 910-9618 or by e-mail at Info@PhilDeCarolis.com if you have any questions or concerns. Feel free to forward this e-mail to anyone that will find this information useful.
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| Feel free to utilize my website as your online resource since it is a central location to access some of the most important information that you need to know http://www.PhilDeCarolis.com |
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| Prudential California Realty
Phil De Carolis
Realtor/Investor
Cell (909) 910-9618
Fax (909) 752-5353
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