Fear
Of Impending Economic Collapse Or Just Manipulation?
17
October, 2012
Two
thermometers into the brains of corporate America plunged to depth
not seen since the trough of the Great Recession when the US was
losing hundreds of thousands of jobs a month. One was based on
responses from CEOs of America’s largest corporations; the other
was based on responses from analysts who’d listened to their
industry contacts. But given the mixed, rather than catastrophic,
economic data, could these people have ulterior motives?
In
late September, it was the Business Roundtable (BRT)—an association
of CEOs from the largest US corporations. Its Economic
Outlook Index,
after a bumpy slide from 113 in Q1 2011 to 89 in Q2 2012, lost its
grip and plunged to 66. The worst level since Q3 2009, when the
economy was mired in the Great Recession. And the third
largest drop
in the survey’s history.
Its
largest drop? From Q3 to Q4 2008, when it collapsed from 78.8 to
16.5. In this diffusion index, above 50 means growth. So, within a
quarter, these CEOs transitioned from decent growth to utter fiasco.
Nestled in their own world, they’d been caught flat-footed by the
financial crisis. Incredibly, the index had actually edged
up in
the prior quarter though the housing bubble was blowing up, financial
institutions were cratering, and Bear Stearns was gone. These CEOs
should have seen that something big was on the way. But blinded by
optimism and intoxicated by confidence in the system that had served
them so well, they didn’t. Which left them with
exactly zeropredictive
capabilities.
Now, suddenly,
these CEOs have become morose. 58% expected sales to increase over
the next six months, down from 75% in the prior quarter. By
comparison, on the eve of Lehman and AIG, 78.8% of these prescient
CEOs had expected sales togrow—and
watched with astonishment the nosedive weeks later. Only 30% of the
CEOs said they would increase capital expenditures, the lowest score
since Q3 2009. And only 29% expected to create jobs, while 34%
expected to cut jobs. For a direr picture, you have to go back to Q4
2009—when the unemployment rate perforated 10%!
While
BRT Chairman and Boeing CEO Jim McNerney also blamed “global
demand” that was “flattening out,” he emphatically pointed at
the “fiscal cliff” of tax increases and spending cuts.
Now
Morgan Stanley’s proprietary Business
Conditions Index also
evoked the dark days of the Great Recession. The diffusion index is
calculated from responses by industry analysts—normally not a
pessimistic crowd—whose opinions are based on their contacts. And
that index dropped like a rock from 55% in September to 41% in
October, its “hiring index” from 54% to 44%—the worst level
since December 2009—and its “hiring plans index” from 57% to
44%, the worst since August 2009, before unemployment had even
peaked.
Who
got blamed? The now usual suspect, the “fiscal cliff.” But Morgan
Stanley economist Dane Vrabac added a new wrinkle, “election
uncertainty”—as if election outcomes were certain in normal
times, but this year somehow they were not.
Much
like the CEOs of the BRT, these analysts didn’t see the financial
crisis coming. And when jobs evaporated to the tune of 400,000 to
800,000 a month, the hiring index at best tracked those job losses,
and often lagged them. And the “hiring plans index” lagged those
job losses by six months. It’s as if these analysts had been
reading old papers to figure out what would happen next.
Yet
the CEOs of the BRT and the analysts and their industry contacts of
the Morgan Stanley index have enormous resources at their fingertips,
and an army of experts just an email or a phone call away. They’re
smart people, they’ve been around the block a few times, and they
have insights through their connections that outsiders can only dream
about. Still, they were wrong about the financial crisis. But now
they’re predicting an economy that’s going to be nearly as
tough—and mostly because of the impending “fiscal cliff.” Are
they wrong again? This time in the opposite direction? Or are
they finally correct
in their predictions, and economic fiasco is on the way?
Or
perhaps they have another agenda altogether. Namely a form of
extortion directed at Congress: give us our goodies, or else an
economic nightmare will befall the nation, and you’ll get kicked
out in the next election. Thus they added their seemingly rational
voices to the already phenomenal circus about the “fiscal cliff,”
a misnomer given to a reasonable (though not perfect) effort by
Congress to whittle the insane deficit down a bit. Watch for these
indices to climb back next year, even if the fiscal cliff stays in
place [ Fear
Mongering And Hysteria About The Fiscal Cliff ].
Here
I am on Max Keiser’s show, “On the Edge,” for a tongue-in-cheek
discussion of our surreal times. Note how he corrects me when I call
the political system in Greece a “democracy.” No way. Not on his
show! It’s a “kleptocracy,” he said, and calling it a democracy
is just.... Priceless! Pauperization
of America - Wolf Richter On Max Keiser’s “On The Edge”

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