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Vicious Circles

For the week, the Dow was down 2.1%; the S&P and NASDAQ were off about 2.5%. The new news was inflation. The Producer Price Index increased by 3.2%, in November and 7.2% for past twelve months. The Consumer Price Index was up 4.2% for the same twelve month period. The primary culprit was energy. Gasoline prices increased 35% last month. The only reason the CPI wasn’t up as much as the PPI is that energy companies have been reluctant to pass along price increases for fear of government backlash. Energy prices have been rising, in part, due to a declining dollar. With a $60 billion monthly trade deficit, the world is awash in dollars. This puts further pressure on the dollar, driving up the cost of imports, particularly energy. This is a vicious circle.
 
The old news last week was the housing and financial issues. The financial crisis has tightened credit standards for all potential mortgagees. (These tough new lending standards are spreading to auto loans and card cards.) Tight credit slows down the demand for homes, both new and used. The result is more homes on the market and for a longer time. This puts pressure on housing prices which reduces, or wipes out the homeowners equity, making refinancing or moving more difficult. This is another vicious circle.
 
The international central bank coordination announced by the Fed last week doesn’t address any of the above problems nor does the cut in the Fed Funds rate. The Fed can’t force financial institutions to lend and lending won’t return to normal levels until banks balance sheet problems are cleaned up. And, in view of the recent inflation numbers, the Fed finds itself in a difficult situation because further lowering interest rates to stimulate the economy will also stimulate inflation.
 
Investors were talking about subprime mortgage problems back in April, yet it took until August for the market to react. The same may be true for energy prices and inflation. We’ve been watching $90 per barrel oil for months but it appeared to have no effect on the economy. Now we may be in for a six to twelve month period of high inflation as we experience the downside of a weak dollar and our dependence upon foreign oil.
 
The economy is operating at close to stall speed but the outlook isn’t entirely bleak. Retail sales were up 1.2% in November and the employment market is strong. The U.S. economy is resilient, witness its ability to absorb the financial meltdown of the late 1980s. Remember the RTC? However, the odds of a recession are somewhere between likely and probable. The prudent investor should prepare for a recession and a period of higher inflation (bad news for bonds). Conservative stocks, mutual funds and ETFs are in order, along with short term bonds.
Posted 12/17/07 by Bill Byrnes