Commentary
The
New Normalcy
By
Gary Tanashian
Biiwii.com
Biiwii.blogspot.com September
21, 2008 Preamble This
article is intended as a primer for the
many people who were either too busy or too well-adjusted :-) to be
watching the ongoing macro-financial mess unfold over the last several
years. It is the first of several articles that will
attempt to deal in reality amid the hyperbole and mania of the major
media that has an interest in scaring the bejeezus out of
people. It is an attempt to help people deal with the new
normalcy that will follow the now obvious financial meltdown in the
United States and the panicked policies
just rammed home by our political and economic leaders. There
are plenty of other people out there who can give and have given sane and
straight information all along. I personally recommend the
diverse views of Robert
Prechter and EWI, Bob
Hoye, Inca
Kola News and Steven
Saville along with the Ludwig von Mises
Institute for the final word on Austrian economics. Then,
from a more socio-economic standpoint comes James
Howard Kunstler with biting commentary on the state of our
'happy motoring' culture. Finally, check out my friend Chris
Martenson and his amazing Crash
Course. Take it! There are many more folks out there who
will give the straight scoop with honesty, intelligence and
integrity; areas where the major financial media always seem to
arrive a day late and a Dollar (or a few $100 Trillion) short. Going
forward I will give my 2 cents as I have been doing for four plus years
now. You can check Biiwii.com archives
here, where you will see many early articles that clearly
described what would eventually happen, years before the
actual acute phase of the fact. But for now here is one of those articles, the title of which clearly illustrates
what went wrong for America in a macro sense: Hubris
(2005).
My personal view is not born of grand intellect or guru-like
vision. It comes from an interest in psychology (Jungian
Shadow applied to the collective) and an ability to know what I see
and not bullshit myself. That's it in a nutshell. That
and a now well honed ability to interpret charts in all time frames. 
So
the public has finally fallen down the rabbit hole, welcome. I,
and many writers/analysts outside the mainstream media have been
waiting for you. So has Ron Paul. He is the man you may have
dismissed as a crank or a kook during the Republican primary.
He clearly explained the dynamics of what went wrong in the
financial system recently on
Glenn Beck's show; see
parts 1 and
2. More importantly, he was describing the root of the
problems many years BEFORE the outwardly obvious fact. Aside from allowing
Dr.
Paul, David
Walker and a few reputable others to present rational views on
all too infrequent occasion,
the major media have done a disservice to the American people by
continually highlighting the economic views of cartoon characters on
CNBC and a certain book salesman former 'Maestro', who it can be
strongly argued carries major responsibility for the current crisis. Regardless,
here we are down in the rabbit hole. You should not panic as hysterical media serve up legions of so-called experts who in
hindsight will dissect the minutia of what went wrong but were
conspicuously absent when clear, brave and out of the box thinking
was needed. In earlier efforts to communicate financial
troubles, I have had people laugh in my face, yawn and avert
their eyes, wishing to be anywhere but in a conversation with me or
worst of all, dismiss me with a well chosen one-liner steeped in
financial convention. That has now changed. Regular, well adjusted, but
blessedly ignorant people are having their 'come to Jesus' moment
amid the alarming news that even money market funds may not be
safe. It is important that they gain access to credible
information and analysis as something old dies and something new -
the new normalcy we'll call it - rises in its place. Anyone reading Robert Prechter's
Conquer the Crash knew
as early as 2002 how to prepare. At least where cash liquidity
is concerned. Most everything laid out in the book still
applies. Readers of Biiwii.com
and the blog have heard
about "Short term US Treasuries, T-Bills or Treasury only
money markets" over and over again even as a casino mentality
in hot commodities and markets reigned from 2003 to 2007. The
T-Bills and Treasury funds are straight from Prechter. His
book did me a great service in 2002. This past week the T-Bill
became the star of the show where cash equivalents are
concerned. An important distinction however is that these
Treasuries are for liquidity needs, not long term investment.
You don't invest in a chronic inflator but you realize that
said chronic inflator will not go out of business any time soon,
unlike many corporations. By the way, EWI also has a free
report on the 100
safest banks in the country (2 from each state). Get it. Unbelievably,
people are actually afraid of losing funds previously thought to be
stored safely in regular money markets. Down the rabbit hole
indeed. A new normalcy. It is amazing how quickly the
public has whipsawed from a content slumber to hypersensitive
financial survival mode. All with the able assistance of the
major media. All
Or Nothing It
is obvious that the week of September 15, 2008 will be remembered as
the week America as we knew it ceased to exist. At least it was
the week that the exclamation point was tacked on to the notion that
should have been obvious from the onset of the credit crisis in the
summer of 2007 if not much earlier, in 2003 when Alan Greenspan's
inflation driven bull market was first stoked and ready to run; the
notion that an economy based on consumption by credit (debt) and a
global labor and currency arbitrage without commensurate
productivity can only last so long before implosion. We
just imploded. Now how to deal with it? First of all,
the United States thinks it is a free capitalist nation, but it has
just instituted obviously socialist policies. What will be the
social and geopolitical implications of these measures? Due to Biiwii.com's
financial orientation we will leave that for others to
chronicle. Financially, I am sure the majority will support
Secretary Paulson's extreme bailout measures because the majority
lived by the code of the previous Ponzinomic cycle. They did
not sacrifice a bit of extra return for the safety of UST money
market funds. They did not resist using home equity for that
60" Plasma to watch Sunday's Pats game. They were not
questioning policy makers and they certainly were not paying serious
attention to the oddball congressman from Texas in the Republican
primaries. Instead, the majority were buying what a cartoon
named Sean Hannity was selling
on Fox 'News'. Around the time of the Democrat
convention this used car salesman in TV news drag was trumpeting how sound the
economy is and implying that Democrats were trumping up the
negatives. I saw it with my own eyes and I thought to myself
"we are so screwed". A few weeks later that became
obvious. I am no Democrat but I am also no Republican given
what Republicans have come to represent. It
is all done now. Implosion... and reaction. We have
imploded. It is the reaction to what was a panicky meltdown
that is of interest going forward. Like it or not, your
children and mine have just signed on to bail out this sorry system
for decades to come. I am not saying Paulson had any
choice. He didn't. This mess was a falling soufflé in
progress and may still be. But in the event there is not
outright panic in the streets or an 'off with their heads' backlash
by the public, it would do one well to think about the implications
of getting 'all' (inflationary bailout / boom) vs. 'nothing'
(deflationary depression). We'll start with nothing first... Deflation Readers
of the website and blog know that I have written about an impending
'deflation scare' and that a fright fest was needed if we were ever
to get another round of inflation, which of course has actually been
the life blood of so called modern economics. $150 oil was a
manifestation of the previous inflation boom. Alan Greenspan's
panicked policy was the product of the previous Armageddon, the
dot.com / tech bubble bust that by today's standards seems like
child's play. 
So
the question therefore is this; is this a deflation scare or is this
a genuine deflation? If it is a scare and the Paulson/Bernanke
panic policy takes root, get ready for a whopper of an inflation
problem down the road. If it is genuine deflation, where the
money supply shrinks relentlessly in the mad dash for cash, then the
last one out can turn out the lights because the current system ends
right here and right now. If
this is genuine deflation, then cash is king. Cash and its
reliable equivalent, T-Bills. Gold will decline, although less
so than other assets, which might still bode well for my speculation
of choice, the gold miners. But if this is merely a whopper of
a deflation scare, which I think it is given the all or nothing
desperation now evident, then get ready for ramping money supplies,
likely globally. Inflation is after all... Bueller? Inflation Get
ready to pick up bargains. Hopefully you left your casino
gambling mentality (that was so 2007) beside the graves of all those
imploded hedge funds and supposedly sound American financial
institutions and you are prepared to exercise patience and a
rational approach to investing - my tact for handling the new
normalcy is currently that of an investor - you will want to be
prepared to pick up bargains of the century when no one wants
them. Because it looks to me like da boyz are inflating to
beat the band. I am not an economist and I cannot tell you the
mechanics of how they are going to blow out the money supply, but
they are going to do it and they will be allowed, even encouraged
to do it because the alternative is simply not an option
anymore. Not when we have so little actual productive
infrastructure in place to fall back on. 
Again,
patience is the key word because we are not going to just pass
through this deflationary impulse without some additional
dislocations and panics. But I expect a revaluation of
productive enterprise in the United States and I am not just talking
about companies that dig stuff out of the ground. The next
cycle will not be accompanied so easily by the financial chicanery
that Wall Street was allowed to pull on a gullible and unsuspecting
public. This time I expect we will revalue productivity that
will be sought after on the world stage. The world will have
had enough of our paper. But that is getting ahead of
ourselves. First we have to go through the process of... The
New New Deal We
come to terms with the bailouts of multi-billion dollar
corporations, the bailouts of consumers who should have known better
than to use their homes as piggy banks, the bailout of our primary vendor-financier
China (holding all that Fannie, Freddie and US Treasury
paper). We come to terms with the uncomfortable notion that we
have socialized these debits on a black hole and something has ended
and something is beginning. The Republicans claim to be for
free enterprise and letting markets decide but I think that last
week's events put the kybosh on that fairy tale. 
I
look forward now more than ever to following global financial and
economic events and personally refuse to go completely
negative. The major media have that covered. I have done
everything I could to prepare readers thanks to some amazing
teachers I had, both public and private and to my own b/s
detector. I did my panicking in the 2002-2004 timeframe which
began with my running around Massachusetts seeking safe banks and
researching US Treasury money market funds and culminated with
significantly paying down personal and business debt, an investment
philosophy in alignment with ongoing inflation cycles and finally
in the formation of Biiwii.com. Going
forward a cool, engaged and rational approach is needed. We'll
let the major media panic the public as we try to interpret the new
normalcy. I think that a core holding in a sensible portfolio
is as it has been for centuries; the relic, gold.
Readers know I speculate in the gold stocks but physical metal is
not a speculation. It is core. It is value.
Individuals can buy their own coins or bars, the GLD, IAU etf's,
gold and silver with Central Fund of Canada or my recommendation, BullionVault
with its options to store your metal in New York or importantly,
London and Zurich. I receive a commission (which I would
promptly cycle into Zurich bullion) if you use BullionVault
through this link. I believe strongly in the service and its
options, however. But you should independently research all
your alternatives in the gold market. The
panic of the New New Deal will also usher in a time to
reinvest in the general 'inflation trade'. Oil, base metals,
natural gas, coal, uranium, food, etc. The resources trade,
when it kicks back in is going to be a whopper given the stimulus
that current events are creating. But again, the most
important commodities at the moment are patience, clarity and an
open-mindedness as we enter the new normalcy. Good
luck.
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