I’ve been thinking about trends. Actually I’ve been thinking about 2008, the first two weeks, stock indexes, a look back to 1968, recessions, Wal-Mart, historical inevitability, and my parents. Things don’t just happen in isolation. There is the tendency for events to occur in cycles and in inter-related groups. For each effect, there are multiple causes which have evolved over time. While there is the tendency to explain away any negative (or non- positive) occurrence as some isolated incident and not some systemic problem (particularly in an election year), THAT is proven generally not the case.
You see 2008 is shaping up to be a real year for the record books. I don’t mean that in a positive sense. The first weeks of a given year seem to set the pace for the full twelve months. This is particularly true in “years of correction” – the politically correct way of describing a redress of excesses and/ or just plain bad decisions. The 18th Century economist Adam Smith described this invisible hand of underlying market forces as the swinging of a pendulum. Under the laws of physics chronicled by Sir Isaac Newton, it reads that: “for every action, there is (eventually) an equal and opposite re-action.” In 2008, we shall see the developments, excesses, and mistakes of the past to try to correct themselves. This is the natural order of things be they financial, economic, political, social, and/ or military.
Thus far in 2008, we have seen declines in the US stock market
indexes erase (as in wipe out) all the gains from all of 2007. This is
pretty much true across the board, whether one is describing indexes
segmented/ specialized as industrial, technological, utility focused,
transportation, or service industries. The same is the case for the
broader indexes - be they the NYSE, the Wilshire, or the Standard &
Poors’. Traditionally what happens to the equity markets in the first
weeks sets the pace for the entire year. Market analysts define a
“correction” as a 10% decline. We’ve just had that. Are the downs
behind us?
While there have been such corrections before in my
adult lifetime, the swings of the pendulum have been very lopsided
mostly in the wrong directions. I graduated from RTHS in 1968. I will
use that as a benchmark. A year’s tuition AND fees at the U of I was
just over $250. Gasoline was $ .25 a gallon. An “equipped” new car
could be had for $ 2,500. The median priced home sold for $17,000. Gold
was officially priced at $ 35 an ounce and silver was around $ 1.40. A
full fast-food meal was a buck or less!
The US Dollar was king!
The United States was the largest creditor nation on the planet. We
invented and manufactured the goods that the world wanted to have. This
was reflected in a huge global trade imbalance which was in our favor.
“If” a family had ONE credit card, it was probably for some oil company
and the entire balance was paid-in-full each month. Our TOTAL National
Debt stood at $345 BILLION. Just TH*NK about where we are now some 40
years (or roughly two generations) later.
A recession is defined
as two consecutive quarters with negative growth - which is the nice
way of saying “a decline.” The dreaded “R” word has been surfacing a
lot lately. But… all the trends and indicators suggest an “R” is now
not a matter of if, but when? And… how bad? We have NEVER… not
experienced a recession shortly after unemployment jumped by .5% in a
given month. Unemployment jumped .6% in December of 2007. Last week saw
10,000 applicants line up for 350 jobs at a new Wal-Mart in Georgia. No
incumbent (nor majority-controlling political party) wants to seek
election/ re-election in a recession year. 2008 is no different.
Change/ fixes thus become the focus of all campaigns.
I just
looked back on what I have just written, and Oh, my God… I’ve finally
morphed into my parents describing to me the 1920’s, the 1930’s, the
Great Depression, FDR’s New Deal, and the need for another
“therapeutic” World War. Brace yourself folks, we are in for quite a
year! I’m Fred Cederholm and I’ve been thinking. You should be
thinking, too.