First there were seventeen. At length, there was one.
Donald
Trump’s wildly improbable capture of the GOP nomination, therefore, is
the most significant upheaval in American politics since Ronald Reagan.
And the proximate cause is essentially the same. Like back then, an era
of drastic bipartisan mis-governance has finally generated an electoral
impulse to sweep out the stables.
Accordingly,
the Donald’s patented phrase that “we aren’t winning anymore” is
striking a deep nerve on main street. But that is not on account of
giant trade deficits or a faltering foreign policy and failed military
adventures per se.
Indeed, it
has very little to do with any patriotic impulse with respect
to America’s collective polity, and everything to do with voter
perceptions that they personally are not winning economically anymore,
either.
What is winning is
Washington, Wall Street and the bicoastal elites. The latter prosper off
finance, the LA branch of entertainment (movies and TV), the
SF/technology branch of entertainment (social media) and the great
rackets of the Imperial City—including the
military/industrial/surveillance complex, the health and education
cartels, the plaintiffs and patent bar, the tax loophole farmers and the
endless lesser K-Street racketeers.
Consequently,
most of America’s vast flyover zone has been left behind. Thus,
the bottom 90% of families have no more real net worth than they had 30
years ago. By contrast, the real net worth of the top 9% stands at 150% its 1985 level, and the very top 1% is at 300% of its level three decades ago.
Moreover,
the wealth round trip of the bottom 90% depicted in the chart below was
hardly real in the first place. Main Street net worth temporarily
soared owing to Greenspan’s 15-year housing bubble which culminated in
the great financial crisis. What is left is mainly the mortgage debt.
The
same pattern is evident in real household incomes and average real
earnings of full time workers. In this case, the metric displayed in the
chart encompasses men over 16 to control for changes in the work force
mix, but the result is unmistakable. To wit, real median household
incomes in 2014 were no higher than the level first reached in 1989,and real weekly full-time wages were actually 4% lower.
In
a similar vein, Indiana was supposed to be Senator Cruz’ last stand,
but according to the pundits he ended up getting blown away by the
“Carrier” vote. United Technology’s plan to move its air conditioner
factory to Mexico became Donald Trumps whipping boy, but the metaphor
had deep resonance.
Since the year 2000, the US has lost 20%
of its highest paying full-time jobs in the goods producing
economy—–that is, energy and mining, construction and manufacturing.
Even
when you allow for the supposed shift to white collar jobs in finance,
technology, entertainment and other domestic services, the story is
pretty much the same. There are still nearly 2 million fewer
full-time, full pay “breadwinner jobs” in the US today than when Bill
Clinton was packing his bags to leave the White House in January 2001.
These
jobs currently pay an equivalent annual wage of $50,000 on average,
which isn’t affluence by any means. But the point is, these jobs are the
best of what we have and the total has been going nowhere for the last
decade and one-half, even as the adult population (over 16 years) has
risen from 212 million to 250 million.
Stated
differently, the Trump voters don’t watch CNBC. Or if they do, they are
savvy enough to dismiss it’s specious celebration of America’s phony
bicoastal prosperity, and especially the monotonously stupid and
profoundly misleading ritual of Jobs Friday. The voters know from
experience that those millions of “new jobs” are mainly part-time gigs
that come and go between the financial crashes that arise every seven
years or so out of Wall Street and Washington.
Indeed,
these bread and circuses jobs may all be part of the “print” according
to Keynesian windbags like Mark Zandi, but the flyover zone voters know
the real truth. They pay cash wages of less than $20,000 per year on a
full-time equivalent basis, offer virtually no benefits and are
scheduled by the day and hour.
In fact, nearly 40%
of all the net payroll jobs created since the year 2000 are in what we
have called the Part Time Economy. Trump voters have gotten stuck in
them, fear they will end up there or have friends and family who have no
other opportunities.
Needless to day, they know they are not winning.
Meanwhile,
the bicoastal elites tend to their increasingly fanciful projects and
provocations. That is to say, Imperial Washington’s completely trumped
up campaign against Russia and Putin is cut from the same cloth as
Silicon Valley’s pretension that there are ( or were until February) 147
“unicorn” start-ups that are each worth a billion dollars or
more—notwithstanding that few of them have meaningful revenues,
cognizable business models or any prospect of earning a profit.
Everywhere
the governing institutions are whistling past the graveyard, yet have
become so insular and removed from accountability that they are clueless
about their own impending doom. The Federal Reserve, for example, has
now fueled the mother of all financial bubbles after seven years of
non-stop money printing and radical interest rate repression, but
nevertheless believes that the nirvana of full employment prosperity is
just around the corner.
Likewise,
US military intervention has failed in every Muslim land it has bombed,
droned or occupied. Yet the White House is still sending more bootless
boots to these decimated lands, thereby insuring even more blowback
and gifting jihadist recruiters with endless fodder for outrage and
revenge.
So too, a seven year
“recovery” cycle has been squandered on the fiscal front. While Obama
was taking bows for cutting the deficit in half and Republicans were
joining in to gut the discretionary spending sequester, the fiscal time
bomb of entitlements continued to tick unattended.
The
fact is, nominal GDP is now growing at only 3% per year, and in a world
of relentless deflation owing to the end of the great central bank
credit bubble, there is no prospect that it will accelerate.
Accordingly, by 2026 GDP will be $24 trillion under the best of
circumstances, while the national debt will rise by $9 trillion
per CBO’s Keynesian reckoning or upwards of $15 trillion if you believe
the Fed has not abolished the business cycle.
That’s
right. The virtually guaranteed national debt of $30-$35 trillion will
reach an Italian style 140% of GDP just as the baby boom retirement wave
hits full stride.
So when Trump says that Uncle Sucker is broke, the public believes him. It happens to be true.
Finally,
the greatest bicoastal scam is the rampant Bubble Finance prosperity of
Wall Street and Silicon Valley. Let’s face it. Facebook——along with
Instagram, Whatsapp, Oculus VR and the 45 other testaments to social
media drivel that Mark Zuckerberg has acquired with insanely inflated
Wall Street play money during the last few years——-is not simply a
sinkhole of lost productivity and low-grade self-indulgent
entertainment. “Faceplant” is also a colossal valuation hoax.
Why? Because at bottom, Facebook (FB )is just an Internet billboard.
It’s a place where mostly millennials idle their time in or out of
their parents’ basement. Whether they grow tired of Facebook or not
remains to be seen, but one thing is certain.
To
wit, FB has invented nothing, has no significant patents, delivers no
products and generates no customer subscriptions or service contracts.
Its purported 1.8 billion “MAUs” (monthly average users) are fiercely
devoted to “free stuff” in their use of social media.
Therefore, virtually all of its revenue comes from advertising.
But ads are nothing like a revolutionary new product such as Apple’s
iPhone, which can generate tens of billions of sales out of nowhere.
The pool of advertising dollars, by
contrast, is relatively fixed at about $175 billion in the U.S. and
$575 billion worldwide. And it is subject to severe cyclical
fluctuations. For instance, during the Great Recession, the U.S.
advertising spend declined by 15% and the worldwide spend dropped by 11%.
And therein lies the skunk in the woodpile. Due to its sharp cyclicality, the trend growth in U.S. ad spending has been about 0.5% per annum. Likewise, the global ad spend increased from about $490 billion in 2008 to $575 billion in 2015, reflecting a growth rate of 2.3% annually.
Yes,
there has been a rapid migration of dollars from TV, newspapers and
other traditional media to the digital space in recent years. But the big shift there is already over.
Besides that, you can’t capitalize a one-time gain in sales of this sort with even an average market multiple. And that’s saying nothing about the fact that FB’s current $340 billion market cap represents a preposterous multiple of 211 times its $1.6 billionof LTM free cash flow.
In
any event, the digital share of the U.S. ad pool rose from 13.5% in
2008 to an estimated 32.5% last year. But even industry optimists do not
expect the digital share to gain more than a point or so per year going
forward. After all, television, newspapers, magazines and radio and
highway billboards are not going to disappear entirely.
Consequently,
there are not remotely enough advertising dollars in the world to
permit the endless gaggle of social media space entrants to earn revenue
and profits commensurate with their towering valuations and the sell
side’s hockey stick growth projections. In social media alone,
therefore, there is more than $1 trillion of bottled air.
But
the social media billionaire brats are not the half of it. The central
bank money printers have transformed Wall Street into a nonstop casino
that has showered a tiny slice of hedge funds and speculators with
unspeakable windfalls from the likes of monstrosities such as Valeant
and hundreds of similar momentum bubbles.
Just
consider the shameless mountebank who has conjured the insane valuation
of Tesla from the gambling pits of Goldman Sachs and Wall Street. The
company has never made a profit, never hit a production or sales
target and has no chance whatsoever of becoming a volume auto producer.
Yet
after posting another wider than expected $283 million loss in the
first quarter, which was nearly twice last year’s red ink, Elon Musk
doubled-down on his snake oil offering. His promise that Tesla would
finally become cash flow positive in 2016, after burning through $4
billion in cash since 2008, was abruptly declared inoperative.
Instead, Tesla will do another giant dilutive capital raise in order to
fund an acceleration of the Model 3 so that it can deliver 500,000
vehicles in 2018.
That’s a con job worthy of the seediest used car lot in America.
In auto production land, today is already 2018 in the case of a mass
production vehicle that has barely been designed, and which has not yet
been production engineered, tooled, tested or sourced for components and
materials.
Indeed, the idea that a company which produced only 50,000 vehicles in the last 12 months can scale up to 10Xthat
volume virtually over night on a production line and supply system that
does not even exist is a laughable fiction. But what isn’t laughable is
that the Wall Street casino is so blinded by speculation, greed and Fed
puts and liquidity pumping that it is enabling dozens of circus barkers
like Elon Musk to inflate spectacular bubbles—–financial
deformations which will end up destroying the main street homegamers who
fall for them, and dissipating loads of scarce capital in the process.
The
fact is, the bicoastal elites have been showered with stupendous
windfalls since the March 2009 bottom because the Fed has engineered
through ZIRP, QEs and open mouth cheerleading a systematic falsification
of financial prices and the diversion of massive amounts of new debt
and other capital into rank financial speculation.
On
a net basis, for example, virtually the entirety of the $2 trillion in
incremental business debt raised since 2007 (from $11 trillion to $13
trillion) has been cycled into stock buybacks, wildly over-priced
M&A deals and other forms of financial engineering—–all of which
result in the bidding up of existing equities, not the investment of new
funds into productive assets. Indeed, the C-Suites of corporate America
have been transformed into stock trading rooms.
So it is no wonder that main street believes it is not winning anymore.
Unfortunately,
it is too late to reverse the tidal wave of system failure that has
been brewing for two decades now and which is likely to end in a
speculator implosion before election day on November 8th.
To
wit, the stock market is valued at a nosebleed 24X actual GAAP
earnings—-earnings which have declined by 18% from their September 2014
peak and which are heading lower—— and is therefore a crash waiting to
happen. Likewise, there is a $3 trillion bubble of junk bonds and loans
that are heading for a day of reckoning soon.
Finally, after
84 months of the weakest recovery in history, the signs of recession
are emerging everywhere. By November it will be either declared or
impossible to deny. The updated budget projections, therefore, will show
a swift return to trillion dollar annual deficits.
So
there is a perfect storm of calamity brewing, and the rumbling sounds
of its arrival are being heard by the plain people of America, even if
the bicoastal elites remain clueless in their temporary world of bubble
finance prosperity.
Indeed,
busily and self-righteously remonstrating against Trump’s bombastic and
politically incorrect style, they are not likely to see his potential
landslide victory coming, either.
If
it happens, the nation is likely to become engulfed in a shitstorm of
political conflagration, financial crashes and recessionary relapse. The
Donald could easily turn into every bit of the scorched earth loose
cannon that Hillary is now shrieking about.
But there is a sliver of hope.
If Donald Trump does not capitulate to the mainstream policies of the
Wall Street/Washington/Bicoastal establishment now that he has won the
nomination, there is a way forward for the great deal maker to move the
whole mess out of the hopeless box that now afflicts the nation.
A President Trump would need to make Six Great Deals.
A Peace Dealwith
Putin for cooperation in the middle east, defeat of ISIS, withdrawal
from NATO and a comprehensive worldwide disarmament agreement.
A Jobs Dealbased on slashing taxes on business and workers and replacing them with taxes on consumption and imports.
A Federalist Dealto
turn back much of Washington’s domestic programs and meddling to the
states and localities in return for a 4-year freeze on every single
pending regulation and statue.
A Health Care Dealbased
on the repeal of Obamacare and tax preferences for employer insurance
plans and their replacement with wide-open provider competition,
consumer choice and individual health tax credits.
A Fiscal Deal
to slash post disarmament defense spending, devolve education and other
domestic programs to the states and cities and to clawback unearned
social security/medicare entitlements benefits from the affluent
elderly.
And a Sound Money Deal
to end the Fed’s war on savers and retires, repeal Humphrey-Hawkins and
limit the Fed’s remit to a providing liquidity at a penalty spread over
market interest rates, while limiting this constricted backstop
to “narrow banks” which only take deposits and make loans, and have
nothing to do with Wall Street trading, derivatives and other forms of
financial gambling.
(to be continued in Part 2, Trumped! What Comes Next)
Regards,
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