Saturday, September 6, 2008

Fw: Thoughts on the Continuing Crisis - John Mauldin's Weekly E-Letter

 

Sent: Saturday, September 06, 2008 1:33 AM
Subject: Thoughts on the Continuing Crisis - John Mauldin's Weekly E-Letter

This message was sent to jmiller2000@verizon.net.

Send to a Friend | Print Article | View as PDF | Permissions/Reprints
Thoughts from the Frontline Weekly Newsletter
Thoughts on the Continuing Crisis
by John Mauldin
September 5, 2008
Visit John's MySpace Page

In this issue:
Thoughts on the Continuing Crisis
Fool Me Once, Shame on You
Delinquencies and Foreclosures Spike UP
Unemployment Rises to 6.1%
Action Is Needed Now
Annapolis, La Jolla and Wedding Videos

We are entering the next stage of the credit crisis, and one which is potentially more troubling than what we have seen over the past year, absent some policy reactions by the central banks and governments world wide. The crisis was started by an intense run-up in leverage by financial institutions and investors world wide, investing in increasingly risky assets such as subprime mortgages and then the realization that leverage could hurt. The deleveraging process started to intensify last year about this time. The easy part of that process has been just about done. Now is the time for the really hard work. It will not be pretty. In this week's letter, we look at the process and think about its implications for the markets and the economy, and visit some data on the housing market and unemployment.

And just for the record, the problems I am describing in this letter are very real. But we will get through them, as we have always done. This is not the end of the world. There are a lot of very good things happening here and there. As we will see, for most smaller banks, it is business as usual. In general, in most places and for most people, life is going on just fine. There are opportunities being created. The markets will find new solutions. But there is some more short-term pain for many market participants, and we need to be aware of the problems and see if we can avoid them for ourselves.

But first, let me ask you for some help. I get to travel a lot with my daughter and business partner Tiffani (actually she runs the business) and meet new people. Over the years, she has become as fascinated as I have with their individual stories. Everyone has a story to tell or a lesson to teach. As I announced a few months ago, we have decided to write a book (or series of books) about those stories, looking at the differences in perspective between old and young, retired and working, those who are wealthy and those who aspire to wealth. What are the differences in attitudes, in work habits, in how you manage money, in how you look at the future, and a score of other items? How do all of these things correlate?

We have created a totally anonymous online survey seeking answers to these questions and more. We have had more than 12,000 of my readers fill out the survey (thank you!!!) and we are learning a lot. We are eager to see what we find as we pore over the resulting data and engage in a lot of in-depth analysis. Are the rich really different? Is there a difference in people from Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa, and the US? I think we will find some very interesting information.

Please note: this is not just a survey for millionaires. We want everyone, of all income levels and ages, to take the survey, so we can get a true representative sample. We would especially like more ladies and international individuals to take the survey.

You can get to the survey page by clicking here. It will take about 10-15 minutes to complete, and I think that going through the questions will make you think about your own situation. Some have told us the survey is quite thought-provoking. If you have attempted to take the survey and had problems, we think we have worked out the bugs.

Thanks in advance. And now on to the letter.

Thoughts on the Continuing Crisis

Let's start by explaining the process of de-leveraging in what I know are VERY simplistic terms. On average today, FDIC insured banks have about 7.89% of capital for their outstanding assets (loans are generally about 60% of assets), so they are roughly levered up by about 12.5 times. Some investment banks are leveraged up to 30 times. Fannie and Freddie are leveraged 50 times their capital. But to make matters simple, let's assume leverage of 10 times.

(For the record, to be considered "well capitalized" you have to have at least 5% of capital in Tier One assets, and 10% of what is considered risk based assets, with anecdotal evidence that the regulators want to see 12%.)

That means for every $1 million in capital you have, you can lend out $10 million. The profit you make is the difference in the cost of your capital and money your borrow to lend and the interest rate you charge. If your are paying 4% for your money and charging 8%, you would make 4% times $10 million, or gross profits of $400,000. That is a return of 40% on invested capital, which is why so many small banks are being started all over the country every year. Nice business if you can get it.

Of course, you have to be able to take some losses. If you had a $500,000 loan go bad, you would have eaten up all your profits and dipped into your capital. Now you would only have $900,000 in capital. That means you could only make $9 million in loans. Either you will have to raise more capital from investors or reduce your loan portfolio, in addition to writing off the bad loan.

Now, what constitutes capital at real world banks is a very complex thing. How much it costs to find money to lend can vary wildly. Many of us "lend" money to our banks at zero cost to the bank in our checking accounts. They pay more for savings accounts, borrowing from other banks, etc. They charge different rates for different types of loans. It is a very complicated business, and we will not go into any details. The basics of my simple illustration will get us to where we need to go.

When I want to find out something about US banks, I turn to my friends at PL Capital. They run a fund which invests in smaller banks, and have been consulting with banks for many, many years. They really know the business. I caught up with Rich Lashley and asked him to give me his thoughts. I am going to pass them on to you, as they are not as bad as one would think.

In the US, and in much of the developed world, there are two tiers of banking. There are about 8500 banks. The top 50 banks have more than 80% of the assets. The rest of the banks are generally much smaller. Outside of five states hit particularly hard by the housing crisis (see more below), for most of the under top 50 banks, it is business as usual.

There is money for most smaller businesses and projects at the smaller banks except for residential development. The true credit crunch is at the top for larger projects. Want to do a $3 million deal? If you have a reasonable project, it can get financed. Want to do a $300 million deal? Lot's of luck, for reasons we note below.

Most of the smaller banks have plenty of capital and are looking to put it too work. Rich guesses there are about 4-500 banks (5% of the total, with concentrations in states with bad housing markets) which are in some level of financial stress, meaning they need to raise capital or reduce lending. His guess is that we will see about 100-150 banks fail over this cycle. He would be surprised if we saw more than 3 top 50 banks fail. Most of the larger banks, if they get into trouble, would be absorbed by better capitalized banks in search of market share.

In fact, Rich is quite bullish on selected bank shares. 86% of the banks/thrifts in the U.S. made money in Q1 2008 and almost 50% earned more in Q1 2008 than they made in Q1 2007 (i.e. they made more money after the credit crunch than before.) But nearly all banks stocks have declined in sympathy with the problems brought on by the credit crunch. Over times, growing earnings will make for a rebound.

So, middle America and middle American business, except for construction, are not by and large experiencing a credit crunch. The smaller banks are not cutting home equity lines and Rich says they are not experiencing abnormal losses. That is because they are local bankers who know their customers. It is the banks which offer home equity loans and have brokers do the lending without really having any incentive to make sure the loan will be good which are the ones in trouble. Securitized home equity loans and second mortgages are showing significant losses.

Fool Me Once, Shame on You

It is a different story at many of the larger banks. Let's look at two tables from my friend Gary Shilling's latest letter. (www.agaryshilling.com) It is well worth the $275 a year (the investment professional version is $1,000).

To set up the tables, there have been writedowns and losses of about $501 billion in both investment and commercial banks. They have raised $353 billion in capital. As I have written repeatedly, it is likely that we will see another $500 billion in losses. The IMF estimates total losses of $1 trillion. Private estimates from credible sources can run as high as $2 trillion.

As you would expect, the largest losses are typically in the larger banks, with some exceptions. Goldman has only written off $3.8 billion. Citigroup has written off $55 billion. The table, if I am adding correctly, sums up the losses from 64 banks, and adds in "other" banks losses from European, US, Asian and Canadian banks. Outside of the top 64, there have only been writedowns of $16 billion. Again, that speaks to the phenomenon Rich alluded to earlier. It seems that the bigger banks took the riskier bets, getting stuck with the "Old Maid" of subprime and other mortgages and loans. Banks that could not afford to get into the game did not have the losses. In this case, being small was an advantage.

Writedowns and Losses and Capital Raised

So, how did the investors who gave the various banks capital do on their investment. Shilling shows us 9 deals done by sovereign wealth funds. The best return was down a mere 26.6%. The worst was Singapore in UBS for down 56% in less than nine months.

Soverign Wealth Fund Investment in Wall Street

The old line is "Fool me once, shame on you! Fool me twice, shame on me!" How difficult do you think it is for any major bank to go back to sovereign wealth funds and ask for more? If they got it, you can bet the terms will not be favorable to current shareholders.

Last week I talked about how much it costs for many banks to raise money today. For weaker banks, the cost of new capital is prohibitive.

But going back to my simplistic illustration, regulatory requirements mean that if you are deemed not to have adequate capital, you have to raise money or reduce your loan portfolio. Raising money in today's environment is going to be difficult for many banks. Lehman has been shopping for capital for months. Merrill has had to sell some key assets. It is a strange philosophy of selling the best and keeping the rest, but that is what regulations require you to do. Merrill, for instance, recently sold $30.6 billion of poorly performing mortgage related assets for (which they valued at $11.1 billion) to a private equity firm called Lone Star for $6.7 billion, which is a 78% discount to the original face value. But Merrill had to finance 75% of the deal, which means they may only get 5 cents on the dollar.

And while I am picking on Merrill, let me quote this paragraph from Shilling's latest letter to illustrate the problems the large banks have.

"To add insult to injury, Merrill Lynch recently announced plans to sell $8.5 billion in new common stock, which will dilute shareholders by 38%. Previously, in response to writedowns, which totaled $46 billion since June 2007, Merrill has raised $15 billion in common and preferred stock. And this new common stock sale will be even more costly to Merrill since earlier sales of $5 billion in stock at $48 per share to Temasek, a Singapore state owned investment company, required compensation for the difference if Merrill sold stock at a lower price within 12 months. The stock is now $27 per share, which will cost Merrill over $2 billion."

If there are in fact more large losses coming in the next year, what will the banks do? Raising capital is going to be tough and come at serious costs to current shareholders. We will see some of that, and that is a reason I would be very cautious about the stocks of large financial companies. The bulls would say that the problems are already in the price. Of course, that is that they said six months ago as well. Caution is to be taken.

The second thing they can do to repair their balance sheet is reduce their loan books or sell off assets or loans. And that is happening. And it is going to happen more and more. It is going to be increasingly difficult to get large new loan deals done and that is going to put a damper on the economy. 60% of banks report they are tightening their lending standards. In the recent Beige Book, the Fed reported that all districts have seen tightening standards, something that is unusual.

Leverage loan for mergers and buyouts have dropped 75% since last year. They were only $50 billion in the first quarter, and it is almost certain to have dropped to even lower levels this last quarter.

And the leverage that was so helpful as it rose? It is now going to have the opposite effect. If you lose a billion and can't raise the capital, you are going to have to reduce your loan book or sell off assets by (using my analogy) $10 billion. If we have potential write-downs of several hundred billion more, that pain is going to be felt in both the corporate and individual worlds, as credit availability is going to decrease and rates are going to go up.

And the pain may not be abating. While some suggest that we have seen the bottom in housing and the economy, the data out the last three days suggest that is not the case.

Delinquencies and Foreclosures Spike UP

Phillippa Dunne (The Liscio Report) sent me this note a few moments ago:

"The MBA delinquency numbers just came out. In Q2, foreclosures were started on 1.19% of outstanding mortgages, up from 0.99% in Q1, and nearly three times the pre-2000 record. The total stock in foreclosure was 2.75% of all mortgages, more than twice the pre-2000 record. Seriously delinquent (90 days or more, plus those in foreclosure): 4.50%, also more than twice the pre-2000 record. Most of the previous records were set in the 1980s, when both unemployment and interest rates were considerably higher than they are now."

If 4.5% are 90 days or more behind, it is likely that foreclosures will rise precipitously. If you think there is a crisis today, just wait six months. Mortgages past due by 30 days are more are now at a nose bleed 6.35%

Think about this. Freddie and Fannie guarantee 50 times their capital in mortgages. What would a 2% default rate do to them? 8,000,000 homeowners now have negative equity in their homes as of the end of the first quarter. That number is rising as home values drop.

Some cheered the fact that home sales rose last month, and that is a good thing. But the number of homes for sale rose even more. There are now 11.4 months of inventory in the existing home market. New homes show an inventory of over 8 months versus an industry norm of 4.3 months.

As I have been saying for almost two years, the housing market will not normalize until some time in 2010. It is going to take a long time for the markets to work off the excess inventory.

Anecdotally, I have a realtor friend in Dallas who is working with a number of investors buying distressed homes (using some leverage) and condos and then leasing them for returns of 8-10% or more. I am sure that is happening in a lot of places. Such activity is needed to get excess inventory off the "for sale" lists.

Unemployment Rises to 6.1%

There is a reason that consumers are falling behind on their home loans (and on credit cards, auto loans and student loans - you get the picture). Over the last 8 months, unemployment has risen by 685,000. And that assumes there are hundreds of thousands of jobs created in the birth/death model. When the numbers are revised next year, I would be willing to wager that job losses are closer to 1,000,000. That would be consistent with an unemployment number of 6.1%, up from 5.7% last month. That is the highest level in five years.

Employment: Month over Month net change

Greg Weldon provides us with the following thought (www.weldononline.com)

"From the top-down macro-perspective, there is NO denying that the US Labor Market is in a RECESSION, as might be best evidenced via a perusal of the chart on display below, in which we plot the monthly change in the headline Non-Farm Payrolls, along with its 12-Month Exponential Moving Average. Indeed, EVERY time the moving average falls below zero ... it has indicated that the broader economy has dipped into a RECESSION, in 1973-74, 1980-81, 1990-91, 2000-01 ... and ... 2008 !!!!"

US Non-Farm Payrolls: Monthly Change Since 1970

Action Is Needed Now

It is unfortunate that the crisis in housing and the credit markets seems to be coming to a head in the middle of a hotly contested election cycle and a lame duck president. Matters are such that waiting until a new president is in power and has his new appointees in place is a very bad option. Things could spiral down very quickly without action by the Treasury and the Fed and other regulators.

Lax regulation of both the mortgage industry and the rating agencies allowed the current crisis to develop. While new regulations will be helpful in the future, we have to deal with the problems as they are today. As I noted above, the credit crunch has the potential to get much worse in the coming quarters. It is clear to a number of observers that Freddie and Fannie are dead men walking. They are going to need capital from the Treasury. Those with mortgages that have the ability to pay at some level should be helped, and the rest need to be sold off at market clearing prices. But that means mortgage debt must be available. Because of the problems in the markets, mortgage rates are higher than they should be, making the housing problems worse.

Since we are going to have to take action sooner rather than later, we should do it sooner. One of the main rules in investing is that "The first losses are the best losses." The longer we wait, the more distress there will be in the housing markets and the lower values will go. Putting off action until next year will mean more losses for taxpayers and more pain in the markets when action is finally taken.

It physically hurts me to write those words. It is so against my free market economic beliefs. But a slow implosion of Freddie and Fannie, and a non-existent jumbo loan market, will mean a very serious recession if not checked soon. Art Cashin sent me this note today: "Paul Volcker at Calgary Conf. says financial crisis "most complicated" he's ever seen.  Losses will clearly exceed $500B and U.S. growth will be slowest since the Great Depression."

Those are not light words from a man who is one of the better insights into the economy. I will leave it to wiser men than I to figure out how to stabilize the housing market and Fannie and Freddie. But it must be done.

Further, some thought should be given to allow for slower writedowns of assets, giving troubled banks with otherwise profitable businesses the time to heal. This should be done in conjunction with better regulations and a requirement for reduced leverage over time from investment banks that have access to the Fed window would be helpful.

And while I am indulging myself in wishful thinking, would someone please force Credit Default Swaps onto a regulated derivative exchange like futures and options? This has the potential to magnify the credit crisis into a real nightmare. Maybe we can dodge that, but why risk it? I see no reason to do so, and about $60 trillion (the value of the CDS markets) reasons to do so.

Annapolis, La Jolla and Wedding Videos

It is a good thing I looked at the invitation a few days ago. I thought I was going to Baltimore. As it turns out, I will be traveling to Annapolis (not too far away) tomorrow morning with Tiffani to go to my really good friend Bill Bonner's 60th birthday bash. We met 26 years ago. How time has gone by. When I first went to his office in a very bad part of Baltimore so long ago, I was seriously nervous about walking two blocks from my car. Bill decided that low rents were worth it. And as rich as he is, he is still frugal. He scraped and painted 100 shutters himself (with his kids) at his chateau in Ouzilly in the country side in France.

We have some things in common. Both our mother's are alive and served in the Women's Army Corps in WW2. He has six kids and I have seven. We both have several New York Times Best sellers. We have ridiculous travel schedules. And life has blessed us immensely. We also have a lot of mutual friends, so this is going to be a very fun weekend! Bill throws great parties.

Bill writes the Daily Reckoning. He is one of the best pure writers I know. I sometimes feel like a house painter looking at a Rembrandt when I read his essays. You can read some of his essays and subscribe to the free Daily Reckoning (be warned: Bill is quite bearish) by clicking on this link: http://www.dailyreckoning.com/rpt/mauldin.html.

Tiffani just sent me a link to this short version of what will be a major video production of her wedding in a few months. If you have a bride coming up in your family, you might view this to see what a non-traditional wedding can look like. And she is a very beautiful bride. Pay attention to the fireworks in the background as they kiss. You can see it at http://vimeo.com/1615007. And yes, the strawberries on the treasure chest wedding cake are to hide where I put my thumb through it, thinking it was a real chest.

Take some time this week to see families and call that old friend up and say hello.

Your really ready to party analyst,

John Mauldin
John@FrontLineThoughts.com

Copyright 2008 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved

Note: The generic Accredited Investor E-letters are not an offering for any investment. It represents only the opinions of John Mauldin and Millennium Wave Investments. It is intended solely for accredited investors who have registered with Millennium Wave Investments and Altegris Investments at www.accreditedinvestor.ws or directly related websites and have been so registered for no less than 30 days. The Accredited Investor E-Letter is provided on a confidential basis, and subscribers to the Accredited Investor E-Letter are not to send this letter to anyone other than their professional investment counselors. Investors should discuss any investment with their personal investment counsel. John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA), which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS), an FINRA registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return Partners, LLP; Pro-Hedge Funds; EFG Capital International Corp; and Plexus Asset Management. Funds recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. Before seeking any advisor's services or making an investment in a fund, investors must read and examine thoroughly the respective disclosure document or offering memorandum. Since these firms and Mauldin receive fees from the funds they recommend/market, they only recommend/market products with which they have been able to negotiate fee arrangements.

Send to a Friend | Print Article | View as PDF | Permissions/Reprints


You have permission to publish this article electronically or in print as long as the following is included:

John Mauldin, Best-Selling author and recognized financial expert, is also editor of the free Thoughts From the Frontline that goes to over 1 million readers each week. For more information on John or his FREE weekly economic letter go to: http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/learnmore

To subscribe to John Mauldin's E-Letter please click here:
http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/subscribe.asp

To change your email address please click here:
http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/change.asp

If you would ALSO like changes applied to the Accredited Investor E- Letter, please include your old and new email address along with a note requesting the change for both e-letters and send your request to wave@frontlinethoughts.com

To unsubscribe please refer to the bottom of the email.

PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.

John Mauldin is also president of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC, a registered investment advisor. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. All material represents the opinions of John Mauldin. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions. Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the staff at Thoughts from the Frontline may or may not have investments in any funds cited above. Mauldin can be reached at 800-829-7273.


EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here:
http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/unsubscribe.asp
Or send an email To: wave@frontlinethoughts.com
This email was sent to jmiller2000@verizon.net



Thoughts from the Frontline
1000 North Ballpark Way, Suite 216
Arlington, TX
76011

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Fw: Solzhenitsyn and the Struggle for Russia's Soul - Outside the Box Special Edition

 

Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 6:41 PM
Subject: Solzhenitsyn and the Struggle for Russia's Soul - Outside the Box Special Edition






Contact John Mauldin
Print Version

Volume 4 - Special Edition
September 4, 2008



Solzhenitsyn and the
Struggle for Russia's Soul
By George Friedman

As we search for "the" driver of financial markets, we look at all kinds of things. We pore over government statistics, company financial statements, and analyst research, trying to find that one nugget that will give us a glimpse of the future. Today, though, we're going to turn to literature. Because it's in Solzhenitsyn's vision of Mother Russia that we find an almost chillingly accurate roadmap of how Russia is likely to reemerge onto the global stage. When President Bush famously looked into Putin's eyes and saw his soul, what he saw - whether he knew it or not - was Solzhenitsyn's depiction of a true Russian leader.

Read this obituary essay from my friend George Friedman over at Stratfor. George puts Solzhenitsyn in historical context, using his life and writings to illustrate not just the evolution of the Russian/Soviet/Russian system but also the Western perception of Russia and what it says about future relations. It's uncannily ironic that Solzhenitsyn died just days before Russia forcefully punctuated its geopolitical prominence in going to war with Georgia. You can almost imagine Solzhenitsyn shrugging and asking, "What did you expect?" Over the Labor Day weekend, Russian President Medvedev used a press interview to lay out five points that will define Russian foreign policy going forward. Allow me to translate (loosely) from the Russian: "We're back."

You need to know where the West's relationship with Russia is heading. It's going to hit everything from energy prices to commodity markets to trade patterns. And nobody will do a better job of telling you where we're headed than Stratfor. When the war broke out, George's team was hours ahead of all the US media with situational awareness and analysis of what it meant. I strongly encourage you to click here for a special offer they make available to my readers. Included in this special offer is the latest in George's series of geopolitical monographs, on the Geopolitics of Russia. George is putting the final touches on it now, and I can assure you, this is something you simply don't want to miss.

John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box



Stratfor Logo
Solzhenitsyn and the Struggle for Russia's Soul
By George Friedman

There are many people who write history. There are very few who make history through their writings. Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who died this week at the age of 89, was one of them. In many ways, Solzhenitsyn laid the intellectual foundations for the fall of Soviet communism. That is well known. But Solzhenitsyn also laid the intellectual foundation for the Russia that is now emerging. That is less well known, and in some ways more important.

Solzhenitsyn's role in the Soviet Union was simple. His writings, and in particular his book "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich," laid bare the nature of the Soviet regime. The book described a day in the life of a prisoner in a Soviet concentration camp, where the guilty and innocent alike were sent to have their lives squeezed out of them in endless and hopeless labor. It was a topic Solzhenitsyn knew well, having been a prisoner in such a camp following service in World War II.

The book was published in the Soviet Union during the reign of Nikita Khrushchev. Khrushchev had turned on his patron, Joseph Stalin, after taking control of the Communist Party apparatus following Stalin's death. In a famous secret speech delivered to the leadership of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Khrushchev denounced Stalin for his murderous ways. Allowing Solzhenitsyn's book to be published suited Khrushchev. Khrushchev wanted to detail Stalin's crimes graphically, and Solzhenitsyn's portrayal of life in a labor camp served his purposes.

It also served a dramatic purpose in the West when it was translated and distributed there. Ever since its founding, the Soviet Union had been mythologized. This was particularly true among Western intellectuals, who had been taken by not only the romance of socialism, but also by the image of intellectuals staging a revolution. Vladimir Lenin, after all, had been the author of works such as "Materialism and Empirio-Criticism." The vision of intellectuals as revolutionaries gripped many European and American intellectuals.

These intellectuals had missed not only that the Soviet Union was a social catastrophe, but that, far from being ruled by intellectuals, it was being ruled by thugs. For an extraordinarily long time, in spite of ample testimony by emigres from the Soviet regime, Western intellectuals simply denied this reality. When Western intellectuals wrote that they had "seen the future and it worked," they were writing at a time when the Soviet terror was already well under way. They simply couldn't see it.

One of the most important things about "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" was not only that it was so powerful, but that it had been released under the aegis of the Soviet state, meaning it could not simply be ignored. Solzhenitsyn was critical in breaking the intellectual and moral logjam among intellectuals in the West. You had to be extraordinarily dense or dishonest to continue denying the obvious, which was that the state that Lenin and Stalin had created was a moral monstrosity.

Khrushchev's intentions were not Solzhenitsyn's. Khrushchev wanted to demonstrate the evils of Stalinism while demonstrating that the regime could reform itself and, more important, that communism was not invalidated by Stalin's crimes. Solzhenitsyn, on the other hand, held the view that the labor camps were not incidental to communism, but at its heart. He argued in his "Gulag Archipelago" that the systemic exploitation of labor was essential to the regime not only because it provided a pool of free labor, but because it imposed a systematic terror on those not in the gulag that stabilized the regime. His most telling point was that while Khrushchev had condemned Stalin, he did not dismantle the gulag; the gulag remained in operation until the end.

Though Solzhenitsyn served the regime's purposes in the 1960s, his usefulness had waned by the 1970s. By then, Solzhenitsyn was properly perceived by the Soviet regime as a threat. In the West, he was seen as a hero by all parties. Conservatives saw him as an enemy of communism. Liberals saw him as a champion of human rights. Each invented Solzhenitsyn in their own image. He was given the Nobel Prize for Literature, which immunized him against arrest and certified him as a great writer. Instead of arresting him, the Soviets expelled him, sending him into exile in the United States.

When he reached Vermont, the reality of who Solzhenitsyn was slowly sank in. Conservatives realized that while he certainly was an enemy of communism and despised Western liberals who made apologies for the Soviets, he also despised Western capitalism just as much. Liberals realized that Solzhenitsyn hated Soviet oppression, but that he also despised their obsession with individual rights, such as the right to unlimited free expression. Solzhenitsyn was nothing like anyone had thought, and he went from being the heroic intellectual to a tiresome crank in no time. Solzhenitsyn attacked the idea that the alternative to communism had to be secular, individualist humanism. He had a much different alternative in mind.

Solzhenitsyn saw the basic problem that humanity faced as being rooted in the French Enlightenment and modern science. Both identify the world with nature, and nature with matter. If humans are part of nature, they themselves are material. If humans are material, then what is the realm of God and of spirit? And if there is no room for God and spirituality, then what keeps humans from sinking into bestiality? For Solzhenitsyn, Stalin was impossible without Lenin's praise of materialism, and Lenin was impossible without the Enlightenment.

From Solzhenitsyn's point of view, Western capitalism and liberalism are in their own way as horrible as Stalinism. Adam Smith saw man as primarily pursuing economic ends. Economic man seeks to maximize his wealth. Solzhenitsyn tried to make the case that this is the most pointless life conceivable. He was not objecting to either property or wealth, but to the idea that the pursuit of wealth is the primary purpose of a human being, and that the purpose of society is to free humans to this end.

Solzhenitsyn made the case -- hardly unique to him -- that the pursuit of wealth as an end in itself left humans empty shells. He once noted Blaise Pascal's aphorism that humans are so endlessly busy so that they can forget that they are going to die -- the point being that we all die, and that how we die is determined by how we live. For Solzhenitsyn, the American pursuit of economic well being was a disease destroying the Western soul.

He viewed freedom of expression in the same way. For Americans, the right to express oneself transcends the content of the expression. That you speak matters more than what you say. To Solzhenitsyn, the same principle that turned humans into obsessive pursuers of wealth turned them into vapid purveyors of shallow ideas. Materialism led to individualism, and individualism led to a culture devoid of spirit. The freedom of the West, according to Solzhenitsyn, produced a horrifying culture of intellectual self-indulgence, licentiousness and spiritual poverty. In a contemporary context, the hedge fund coupled with The Daily Show constituted the bankruptcy of the West.

To have been present when he once addressed a Harvard commencement! On the one side, Harvard Law and Business School graduates -- the embodiment of economic man. On the other side, the School of Arts and Sciences, the embodiment of free expression. Both greeted their heroic resister, only to have him reveal himself to be religious, patriotic and totally contemptuous of the Vatican of self-esteem, Harvard.

Solzhenitsyn had no real home in the United States, and with the fall of the Soviets, he could return to Russia -- where he witnessed what was undoubtedly the ultimate nightmare for him: thugs not only running the country, but running it as if they were Americans. Now, Russians were pursuing wealth as an end in itself and pleasure as a natural right. In all of this, Solzhenitsyn had not changed at all.

Solzhenitsyn believed there was an authentic Russia that would emerge from this disaster. It would be a Russia that first and foremost celebrated the motherland, a Russia that accepted and enjoyed its uniqueness. This Russia would take its bearings from no one else. At the heart of this Russia would be the Russian Orthodox Church, with not only its spirituality, but its traditions, rituals and art.

The state's mission would be to defend the motherland, create the conditions for cultural renaissance, and -- not unimportantly -- assure a decent economic life for its citizens. Russia would be built on two pillars: the state and the church. It was within this context that Russians would make a living. The goal would not be to create the wealthiest state in the world, nor radical equality. Nor would it be a place where anyone could say whatever they wanted, not because they would be arrested necessarily, but because they would be socially ostracized for saying certain things.

Most important, it would be a state not ruled by the market, but a market ruled by a state. Economic strength was not trivial to Solzhenitsyn, either for individuals or for societies, but it was never to be an end in itself and must always be tempered by other considerations. As for foreigners, Russia must always guard itself, as any nation must, against foreigners seeking its wealth or wanting to invade. Solzhenitsyn wrote a book called "August 1914," in which he argues that the czarist regime had failed the nation by not being prepared for war.

Think now of the Russia that Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and President Dmitri Medvedev are shaping. The Russian Orthodox Church is undergoing a massive resurgence, the market is submitting to the state, free expression is being tempered and so on. We doubt Putin was reading Solzhenitsyn when reshaping Russia. But we do believe that Solzhenitsyn had an understanding of Russia that towered over most of his contemporaries. And we believe that the traditional Russia that Solzhenitsyn celebrated is emerging, more from its own force than by political decisions.

Solzhenitsyn served Western purposes when he undermined the Soviet state. But that was not his purpose. His purpose was to destroy the Soviet state so that his vision of Russia could re-emerge. When his interests and the West's coincided, he won the Nobel Prize. When they diverged, he became a joke. But Solzhenitsyn never really cared what Americans or the French thought of him and his ideas. He wasn't speaking to them and had no interest or hope of remaking them. Solzhenitsyn was totally alien to American culture. He was speaking to Russia and the vision he had was a resurrection of Mother Russia, if not with the czar, then certainly with the church and state. That did not mean liberalism; Mother Russia was dramatically oppressive. But it was neither a country of mass murder nor of vulgar materialism.

It must also be remembered that when Solzhenitsyn spoke of Russia, he meant imperial Russia at its height, and imperial Russia's borders at its height looked more like the Soviet Union than they looked like Russia today. "August 1914" is a book that addresses geopolitics. Russian greatness did not have to express itself via empire, but logically it should -- something to which Solzhenitsyn would not have objected.

Solzhenitsyn could not teach Americans, whose intellectual genes were incompatible with his. But it is hard to think of anyone who spoke to the Russian soul as deeply as he did. He first ripped Russia apart with his indictment. He was later ignored by a Russia out of control under former President Boris Yeltsin. But today's Russia is very slowly moving in the direction that Solzhenitsyn wanted. And that could make Russia extraordinarily powerful. Imagine a Soviet Union not ruled by thugs and incompetents. Imagine Russia ruled by people resembling Solzhenitsyn's vision of a decent man.

Solzhenitsyn was far more prophetic about the future of the Soviet Union than almost all of the Ph.D.s in Russian studies. Entertain the possibility that the rest of Solzhenitsyn's vision will come to pass. It is an idea that ought to cause the world to be very thoughtful.



Your attempting-to-decipher-the-riddle-wrapped-in-a-mystery-inside-an-enigma analyst,

John F. Mauldin
johnmauldin@investorsinsight.com

You are currently subscribed as jmiller2000@verizon.net.

To unsubscribe, go here.


Reproductions. If you would like to reproduce any of John Mauldin's E-Letters or commentary, you must include the source of your quote and the following email address: JohnMauldin@InvestorsInsight.com. Please write to Reproductions@InvestorsInsight.com and inform us of any reproductions including where and when the copy will be reproduced.


John Mauldin is president of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC, a registered investment advisor. All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors before making any investment decisions.

Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the staffs at Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC and InvestorsInsight Publishing, Inc. ("InvestorsInsight") may or may not have investments in any funds cited above.

PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.

Communications from InvestorsInsight are intended solely for informational purposes. Statements made by various authors, advertisers, sponsors and other contributors do not necessarily reflect the opinions of InvestorsInsight, and should not be construed as an endorsement by InvestorsInsight, either expressed or implied. InvestorsInsight is not responsible for typographic errors or other inaccuracies in the content. We believe the information contained herein to be accurate and reliable. However, errors may occasionally occur. Therefore, all information and materials are provided "AS IS" without any warranty of any kind. Past results are not indicative of future results.

We encourage readers to review our complete legal and privacy statements on our home page.

InvestorsInsight Publishing, Inc. -- 14900 Landmark Blvd #350, Dallas, Texas 75254

© InvestorsInsight Publishing, Inc. 2007 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

FYI ...   Tuesday - Sep  2,  2008

  The Federal Reserve Board released today its minutes of Board meetings to review discount rate requests by regional Fed banks over the July 7 through August 5, 2008 period. The minutes show increasing concern at some regional Fed banks that monetary policy is too loose, showing displeasure by asking for an increase in the discount rate. While not all regional Fed presidents vote at each FOMC meeting on the fed funds target rate, all regional Feds must make a request regarding the discount rate at least once every two weeks, based on statutory requirements.

The minutes noted that the board of directors of the Kansas City and Dallas Fed had voted on June 26, 2008 to raise the discount rate to 2-1/2 percent from 2-1/4 percent. At the same time, ten regional Feds asked for no change in the discount rate. The Board of Governors denied the rate increases. The same two regional Feds again requested the same increase on July 10, 2008. The Board of Governors denied these requests. But on July 24, the Chicago Fed's directors joined those from Dallas and Kansas City, adding to the chorus to raise the discount rate to 2-1/2 percent. The Board of Governors denied the three bank request to boost the discount rate.

The regional banks wanting a higher discount rate pointed to higher input prices and rising inflation expectations as reasons for the increase.

"Federal Reserve Bank directors recommending a 25-basis-point increase in the primary credit rate agreed that real economic activity continued to be soft and that financial markets had not yet fully stabilized. However, they cited indications that higher input costs were being passed through to product prices and that inflation expectations had risen and judged that the upside risks to inflation were of greater concern than the downside risks to growth."

Those opposed to an increase in the discount rate cited continuing stress in the financial markets and weaker economic growth as reasons for standing pat. But they also noted that there are upside risks for inflation.

"Federal Reserve Bank directors in favor of maintaining the existing primary credit rate expressed continued concern about the near-term economic outlook. They noted that stress in financial markets and the ongoing housing contraction were likely to damp economic growth further in the near term and saw appreciable downside risks to growth. However, they also noted that higher energy and food prices could pass through to core inflation measures. These directors concluded that the current stance of monetary policy achieved the appropriate balance between downside risks to growth and upside risks to inflation, and they preferred for now to monitor incoming information on the economy, financial markets, and inflation."

The bottom line is that the internal debate within the Fed over the direction of policy is getting hotter and that more regional banks are tilting toward concern over rising inflation. -- R. Mark Rogers

Monday, September 1, 2008

1

FYI ...   Monday - Sep  1,  2008

2:45 PM ET:  This afternoon, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Thomas Hoenig spoke on the changing mandates of the Federal Reserve during the recent financial crisis. Hoenig emphasized his concern that the Fed not encourage moral hazard and that the Fed needs to continue to look at the issue of prepared procedures for orderly liquidation of financial firms that come under distress. He argues against a "too big to fail" default policy. He believes that too big public safety nets have adverse effects. Hoenig believes that any institution that seeks discount window assistance should come under Federal Reserve regulation. He also noted that core PCE inflation is above Fed preferences and that policies helping the financial markets are making fighting inflation more difficult. The key point is that a regional Fed president sees current monetary policy as fueling inflation-suggesting that regional Fed presidents increasingly are going to push for rate increases soon.

"In the face of accelerating inflation, it is important that we not calibrate policy principally to deal with the financial crisis if it involves compromising to an unreasonable extent our ability to achieve our mandate for price stability. In the United States, core PCE inflation has been above most definitions of price stability for the past four years and is poised to move even higher over the near term. The current stance of policy, while understandably calibrated for responding to the immediate financial crisis, will make it difficult to achieve our mandate for price stability over the long run." -- R. Mark Rogers

9:30 AM ET: Federal Reserve Governor Randall S. Kroszner spoke this morning at an economics conference in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He addressed somewhat academic issues related to whether the U.S. remains heavily integrated in the international economy. He did not directly address monetary policy and only indirectly touched on the current status of the economy.

The bottom line is that Governor Kroszner sees the U.S. and world economies heavily integrated. Events overseas will continue to impact U.S. financial markets and economic growth - and the reverse holds true. Two issues of integration stand out. Slowing economic growth in the U.S. adversely affects growth overseas and, in turn, leads to a further slowing in the U.S. through exports. Also, rising food and energy costs affected not just the U.S. economy but economies world-wide.

Kroszner specifically notes how the U.S. subprime problems unexpectedly affected other economies.

"Some commentators suggested last year that the rest of the world would remain relatively unaffected by the housing slowdown in the United States. However, as turmoil emerged in financial systems around the world in the late summer of 2007, it became clear that this was not the case. Concerns about financial securities backed by U.S. mortgages spread to asset-backed securities more generally, which led to funding difficulties in European money markets at anything but the shortest maturities."

Indeed, the Fed governor emphasizes the linkages between economies for growth and inflation.

"Moving into 2008, concerns about potential spillovers from slower U.S. growth and weaknesses in the financial system weighed increasingly on advanced economy equity markets. As the step-down in growth of gross domestic product (GDP) in a number of advanced economies became apparent, we also began to see reduced growth and prospects for growth in many emerging market economies, and stock markets in emerging economies declined sharply. Throughout the world, the challenges posed by weakening economic activity were further complicated by mounting inflationary pressures as food and energy prices soared. By now I believe it has become clear that the initial assessment that the United States had decoupled from the rest of the world was incorrect, and that, in fact, the global economy remains closely connected by both trade and financial linkages."

Kroszer makes the case that reducing trade barriers is important for keeping inflation down.

"When domestic markets for goods and services are unrestricted and open to sellers worldwide and when supply adjusts efficiently to meet changes in demand, costs to consumers are minimized. The recent sharp increases in global food prices have underscored the importance of reducing barriers to trade in agricultural products. Reducing such barriers was one of the key subjects of the latest set of talks in the Doha round, and I am disheartened that this round of talks collapsed. Given the urgent need to expand the global food supply to meet burgeoning world demand, it is particularly unfortunate that these negotiations were unable to make progress."

The bottom line from a practical perspective is that one needs to monitor growth and inflation abroad to fully understand trends in the U.S. Currently, growth is slowing abroad while inflation remains high, suggesting that the Fed still has its work cut out in terms of bringing inflation down. -- R. Mark Rogers