The San Francisco Federal Reserve bank came out with a gloomy forecast last month. Its analysts said that stocks were likely to earn paltry returns over the next 10 years. The reason cited was simple enough; stockholders don't live forever.
'Demography is destiny,' said Auguste Comte. 'It works the other way around too,' he might have added. If they thought they were going to live longer, America's most ubiquitous age cohort -- the baby boomers -- might continue to buy stocks. Instead, the cold hand of the grave is on their shoulders and on the whole economy. The boomers are retiring at the rate of 10,000 per day over the next 18 years. They will sell stocks to finance their remaining years.
Old people have always been a drag on an economy. Migrating tribes left them behind. Eskimos put them out on the ice. Old people generally bowed to their fate with good grace. In times of famine, for example, they stopped eating so the young might live.
Mortality has doomed the stock market, says the S.F. Fed. P/E ratios will likely be cut in half. Investors are unlikely to see their stocks return to 2010 levels, says the report, until 2027. And this assumes that US companies will continue to grow profits as they did since 1954. Not very likely. Because democracy, energy, and financial quackery are destiny too. Jointly and severally, they are responsible for the biggest financial debacle in history.
This week, Deutsche Bank came out with a report of its own. It, too, is confident that the "Golden Age" -- 1982-2007 -- is over. In its place is a "Grey Age." Instead of the nominal 12.8% gains of the Golden Age, investors have gotten returns of -- 2.8% per annum for the last 4 years. Deutsche Bank expects stock market investors to lose about 10% of their money -- in real terms -- over the next 10 years, while the economy goes through 3 recessions!
But what would you expect? Everything droops. For the last 3 or 4 centuries the winning formula for developed economies and their governments has been simple: More energy. More output. More people. More credit. More promises. This formula has been so effective for so long people began to think it was destiny itself. It's not. Instead, it is slave to destiny not its master.
By 2007, the slave was put in his place. The business cycle turned sour. Native populations in Europe and Japan are falling. Energy use per person in the developed world has leveled off. Private sector credit is shrinking. So is real private sector output.
The feds responded to this challenge as they had to every post-WWII slowdown. They added more -- more money, more credit. The government itself spent more money and used more energy. But the economy did not react in the old manner.
An obvious reason: people are no longer as young and sans-soucis as they used to be. A young man's eye may be drawn to fast German cars or slick Italian suits. But an old man can barely see at all. The baby boomers no longer roll their joints; they rub them. And they are no longer the source of an economic boom; now, they are the proximate cause of the bust.
But there's more to this new Grey Age than demography. People too are subject to the law of declining marginal utility. They wear out. But so do even the most enduring and impressive economic trends. There were only 450 million people on the planet in 1500. It took 99,000 years to reach that level. Then, over the next 5 centuries -- the population soared 10 times. Today, it is hard to find a parking place in any major city. How was such a big jump in population possible? Destiny was demography. With ready, cheap energy at hand, man could grow more food. And then he could ship it all around the world. And he could put his talents to work making more and better machines...which would vastly increase his output and his standard of living.
But the Machine Age ages too. The first tractors appeared more than 100 years ago. They may have increased production 10...20...100 times. Since then, improvements have been incremental, not revolutionary. We have bigger, faster, better tractors -- that use more energy than ever.
Meanwhile, energy itself came to be more expensive. When the price of energy rose in the '70s, the "30 glorious years" that followed WWII were soon over. Hourly wage rates stopped increasing and have not gone up since.
Yes, there is plenty of energy around. But it is net output that you get from energy that counts, not the raw output. If a gallon of gasoline costs $5...it must produce more than $5 in additional output or the economy gets poorer. As the price rises fewer and fewer new energy apps pay off.
Likewise, credit is subject to the law of declining marginal utility too. In 1950, an additional dollar of credit added about 70 cents to GDP. By 2007, the US economy was adding more than $5 of debt to produce a single new dollar's worth of GDP. Now, the feds' new credit inputs produce negative real returns.
The jig is up. More no longer works.
Regards,
Bill Bonner,
for The Daily Reckoning
Joel's Note: The "hard math of demography," as they called it, is a subject Bill and co-author, Addison Wiggin, addressed at some length in their groundbreaking book, Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st Century. In it, the intrepid pair foretold much of the turmoil that would later come to pass, both in the financial markets and in the Middle East.
Interestingly enough, the "hard math" is coming home to roost in the United States too. Look, for example, at the inter-generational friction lighting up the Social Security debate. Retiring baby boomers want back what they paid (by governmental force) into the scheme. Meanwhile, younger generations, themselves struggling with soaring unemployment and diminished job opportunities, are loath to pay into something they've already written off as an economically unsustainable scam. Needless to say, something's gonna give.
"It's one of the major themes we'll be exploring in Apogee going forward," explained Addison in a conference call yesterday. Addison's Apogee Advisory seeks to cover the nexus between money and politics, between Wall Street and Washington. How will these trends impact you? How can you prepare yourself? And what, exactly, should you even be looking out for? Check out Addison's latest presentation here for a sneak peak at one particularly unsettling theme already well underway...and what you can do about it.
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