Elliott Wave International | World's Largest Market Forecasting Firm Since 1979
Please Login
 
 | What's My Password?
EWI

Home > Economy
U.S. Economy: Back on Track? What Track?
The U.S. has borrowed and leveraged itself into a deep, deep hole.

By Bill Fox, Senior Bonds Analyst
Mon, 13 Oct 2008 11:45:00 ET
Email |  Print  |  RSS Feeds Generated by Elliott Wave International RSS |  My Updates
Bookmark and share It!

I did not mean to watch the presidential debate Wednesday evening last week. It came on as I was about to watch the Monday Night Football game I had recorded. But there they were, two candidates for President telling us that the Wall Street bailout plan was a necessary step to get our country "back on track," and that they had the plan to "rebuild consumer confidence" and "get the banking system fluid again."
 
"Back on track," I thought. "What track would that be?"

What ails Wall Street is the poison flowing from the over-leveraged Main Street – and not the other way around, as many would suggest. Cheap money, like a phoenix wrought from the ashes of the dot.com bubble, is at the heart of this crisis. There would be no "toxic Wall Street assets" if Main Street were making their payments.


Deflation: How will YOUR markets fare? Find our with EWI's Specialty Services. Full menu.

True, Wall Street leveraged those mortgage-backed securities (or "insecurities," as EWI's CEO Bob Prechter recently called them) many times over. But the fact remains that an average American homebuyer, sold on the government's idea that home ownership is his inalienable right and the fulfillment of the American dream, simply bought more home than he could ever hope to afford.  

Here is a documented, and likely typical, case: Take a wage earner at $65,000 annual income, sell him a $500,000, 100% financed, interest-only mortgage loan, collect the loan origination fee, split the real estate sales commission – and you have just created your own toxic asset. Now sell that loan to Wall Street, which is then repackaged into a mortgage-backed insecurity – and so on. 
 
So where, exactly, are the rails of the "track" headed that we need to "get back on"? Nowhere, it would seem. The U.S. has borrowed and leveraged itself into a deep, deep hole. We do not need a plan to get us back on that track. What we need is straight talk about cutting back on expenditures, changing the way we finance ourselves, and how our economy works.
 
We already have enough cars and TVs to give the U.S. the highest tangible standard of living in the world. But we are hollow as the world’s largest debtor nation, with a less than zero savings rate and an appetite for consumption so large that we need to finance it with foreign investment. 
 
The Fed's has been aggressively pursuing monetary solutions to this crisis. But that cannot solve fundamental flaws in our economic model. America needs to produce for itself with American jobs. Our tax base is being eroded even as we outsource our service-based economy.  

We have $56 trillion in unfunded liabilities, more than $9 trillion in outstanding debt, a more than $400 billion annual account deficit, and a massive annual trade deficit. And lately, the Fed’s balance sheet has ballooned to more than $1.7 trillion with assets of questionable credit quality. Once this deflationary crisis has passed, the debt will remain – unless we change our "track."


This story originally appeared on the October 8 Daily Forecast page for the U.S. 30-year Treasury Bonds in Bill Fox's Interest Rates Specialty Service. (See full menu for EWI's Specialty Services here.) 

Bill Fox is EWI's Senior Bonds Analyst. He has been involved in the markets since graduating in 1988 from Vanderbilt University. He joined EWI in 1994; most of his subscribers are professional bond traders spread around the globe.

Tags: Mortgage backed securities, main street, Wall Street, presidential debate

Rating: - based on [47 rating(s)]
Rate this content:
  

People who read this also read:
S&P: Much Ado About... 5.5 Percent
Commodities Feast of Opportunities: Dig In
Why Your FDIC-Backed Bank Could Fail
Gold and the Dow: The exceptions, or the rule?
China's Bull: Don't Rest On Its Economic Laurels
Categories
Most Recent Articles
- 11/20/2009 5:15:00 PM
S&P: Much Ado About... 5.5 Percent
- 11/20/2009 4:30:00 PM
Commodities Feast of Opportunities: Dig In
- 11/20/2009 3:45:00 PM
Bonds: How Will They Do in a Deflation?
- 11/20/2009 2:15:00 PM
Why Your FDIC-Backed Bank Could Fail
- 11/19/2009 5:15:00 PM
Gold and the Dow: The exceptions, or the rule?

Announcing EWI's New eBook ...

EWI's New Trading eBook: How to Trade the Highest Probability Opportunities: Price Bars and Chart PatternsIn this exciting new 45-page eBook, Jeffrey Kennedy shows you – using fresh, real-life market examples – how you can use simple, yet powerful, chart reading techniques to improve your trading.

Download your copy today!



To access EWI's valuable Q&A message board, all you need is a free Club EWI profile. Create Yours Now >>
> Wars: Do they affect the stock market's Elliott wave patterns? 
> Market manipulation: Can wave patterns detect it?  
> Warren Bufett: Doesn't his latest major purchase boost market mood? 
> George Soros' Reflexivity Theory: Similar to Prechter's socionomics? 
> College tuition: Will it cost more or less in a deflation? 
> Currencies: How do I count Elliott waves between cash and futures? 
> Weekends and trading halts: How do they factor into Elliott wave count? 
> Crisis Part II: Who will people blame if stocks crash again? 
> Socionomics and 'The Wisdom of Crowds': Any connection? 
> Do you know of any mutual funds that use Elliott wave analysis? 

Club EWI Members: Click Here

 
Press Room
IN THE MEDIA
Browse Recent Media Articles that Mention EWI or Feature EWI Analysts

As the markets enter what Bob Prechter calls "the point of recognition," we notice that mainstream media pundits who get it start to notice us, our analysts and our forecasts. You can browse dozens of recent media articles about EWI in the EWI Press Room.
 
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Elliott Wave Principle is a detailed description of how financial markets behave. The description reveals that mass psychology swings from pessimism to optimism and back in a natural sequence, creating specific Elliott wave patterns in price movements. Each pattern has implications regarding the position of the market within its overall progression, past, present and future. The purpose of Elliott Wave International’s market-oriented publications is to outline the progress of markets in terms of the Wave Principle and to educate interested parties in the successful application of the Wave Principle. While a course of conduct regarding investments can be formulated from such application of the Wave Principle, at no time will Elliott Wave International make specific recommendations for any specific person, and at no time may a reader, caller or viewer be justified in inferring that any such advice is intended. Investing carries risk of losses, and trading futures or options is especially risky because these instruments are highly leveraged, and traders can lose more than their initial margin funds. Information provided by Elliott Wave International is expressed in good faith, but it is not guaranteed. The market service that never makes mistakes does not exist. Long-term success trading or investing in the markets demands recognition of the fact that error and uncertainty are part of any effort to assess future probabilities. Please ask your broker or your advisor to explain all risks to you before making any trading and investing decisions.