Don’t believe the hype about the US ‘recovery’

By MoneyWeek Editor John Stepek Feb 09, 2012

John Stepek

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The bulls have a new story for investors to get excited about.

Don’t worry about Greece and don’t worry about China, because the US is on the mend.

Sure, things still look ugly out there - unemployment is high and house prices are still falling - but Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke can sort all that out with a bit of money-printing. After all, with all this deleveraging going on, we won’t need to worry about inflation for a long, long time.

Sounds good. And as we’re seeing right now, the promise of more quantitative easing is certainly enough to give markets another sugar rush.

But don’t get carried away. A new report from broker Tullett Prebon serves as a timely reminder that underneath all the sticking plaster of cheap money, the US hasn’t even begun to address its problems.

America is more indebted than during the Great Depression

Feeling optimistic about the outlook for America? Well you shouldn’t.

Dr Tim Morgan, global head of research at broker Tullett Prebon, has turned his eyes to the US. Morgan recently wrote a trilogy of reports on the state of the UK economy. My colleague Merryn Somerset Webb covered them on her blog. But if you missed that, don’t worry. All you need to know is that the title of the series was “Project Armageddon”.

Morgan’s review of the state of the US isn’t any cheerier. In short, America has too much debt. It’s growing too slowly to get out of the debt hole. Now it needs serious structural reform (ie it needs to come up with a better idea than just printing more money in the hope that another consumer boom will kick off). And that’s not going to happen for as long as politicians are too focused on winning elections to be honest with voters.

Take the debt first. In the ten years to 2011, America’s total debt (private sector as well as public sector) has grown from 275% of GDP, to 358% of GDP. That’s not as bad as the UK, but for the US, this is “unprecedented”, “exceeding even the levels reached in the Great Depression”.

And it’s the rate of growth in the ratio that’s the real problem. From 1945 to 1980, debt/GDP ranged between 130% and 170%, says Morgan. But the “credit supercycle” from 1980 saw the ratio roar upwards as the US economy was driven by “excessive debt-fuelled consumption”. Now we’re at the end of the supercycle, “no one seems to have worked out how to manage an economy that is not debt-propelled”.


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Lies, damn lies, and US inflation statistics

The other problem is that most Americans don’t realise just how desperate their situation is, because the figures are fiddled. “Under a process which began in the early 1980s, reporting methodologies have been massaged to the point where the true scale of the economic malaise is masked from most Americans.”

All the bad things – debt, the deficit (the annual overspend), inflation and unemployment – are understated. Meanwhile, “growth and absolute GDP, are flattered, and not to a minor but to a fundamental degree”.

The official inflation figure is particularly misleading. There’s 'hedonic adjustment', whereby if a product gets better, then it’s deemed to be cheaper. So a $500 high-definition TV, say, is seen as being ‘cheaper’ than a $500 ordinary TV.

Then there’s substitution, where if steak gets particularly expensive, consumers are assumed to buy chicken instead. As Morgan notes, as well as masking the true inflation figures, this “turns the index from a calibration of the cost of living to a measurement of the price of survival”.

You’ve probably heard about these things before – certainly if you’ve been reading MoneyWeek for any length of time. But the extent to which they distort the figures is staggering. Morgan reckons “true inflation might be at least 9%, rather than the 3.4% reported in December”.

What does that mean? In short, it means that your average American could be a lot poorer than anyone imagines. If you take the official figures, the US dollar has lost 21% of its purchasing power in the last decade; if you assume the higher rate of inflation, it’s more like 55%.

There is hope

The US has lots of other problems. Unemployment data are also fudged. And just as in Britain, in the past decade, too much money has been misallocated to property. And as in Britain, the financial sector has become too dominant.

You can argue that we knew all this already. But given the recent spurt of optimism over the US economy, it’s a useful reminder that underneath all the money-printing and fudged statistics, America is in a bad way. And the solutions – because they’re politically difficult – won’t be reached for until things get far worse.


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That’s not to say that you should shun the States, or that there’s no hope. For one thing, there are signs of a pick-up in the US manufacturing sector. With wages in China rising, and unions in the US more willing to compromise, the cost advantages of outsourcing is rapidly falling. The same can be said for the UK.

My colleague James McKeigue looks at how to profit from 'reshoring' in the next issue of MoneyWeek magazine, out tomorrow. If you’re not already a subscriber, you can get your first three issues free here http://www.moneyweek.com/shop/moneyweek-free-trial.aspx.

The other point, as Merryn notes, also in the latest issue, is that in the short-term at least, what drives share prices is money flows. If everyone decides they like the look of the US better than anywhere else, then the country’s stock market will do well.

But don’t be fooled into thinking that the latest rally signals that the crisis is over and that a lasting recovery has begun. That’s another good reason to hold onto gold as insurance – just in case America doesn’t manage to sort out its problems.

• This article is taken from the free investment email Money Morning. Sign up to Money Morning here .

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Comments (14)

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  • 1. Roger

    (09 February 2012, 10:50AM)  Complain about this comment

    Globalization took 30 years to complete, the reverse will probably take even longer. Do not use that as a guide for investment because it is a generation thing.

  • 2. Omega

    (09 February 2012, 11:30AM)  Complain about this comment

    For alternative US statistics use:
    http://www.shadowstats.com/

    And for more on how stats are manipulated:
    http://www.chrismartenson.com/crashcourse/chapter-16-fuzzy-numbers

    I would recommend anyone who is interested in finance/economy/energy to see the full crash course by Chris Martenson and also video blogs by Nicole Foss.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJKZT5TNjYw

  • 3. HL

    (09 February 2012, 11:35AM)  Complain about this comment

    Well said, Roger. It is certainly a generational thing. An unimaginative brand of smugness is its hallmark.

    A friend summed it up for me thus: in Harry Potter, the majority of people are called 'muggles' -- in the real world, they are 'smuggles'.

  • 4. JB Yorkshire

    (09 February 2012, 11:44AM)  Complain about this comment


    The advice as always is, 'Hang onto Gold' but does this apply to gold mining stocks as well?
    I don't know whether to keep mine or not, as they seem to underperform the upward tren in gold.
    Advice appreciated.

  • 5. Martin G

    (09 February 2012, 12:00PM)  Complain about this comment

    “No one seems to have worked out how to manage an economy that is not debt-propelled”. I'm not sure anyone has properly worked out how to manage an economy that IS debt-propelled, which is precisely the systematic problem we have today. Our debt-driven consumption has transferred liquidity to cheaper suppliers like China and emerging markets, while we don't produce enough of real economic value to them. Left to its own devices, globalisation will act like a great leveller- money isn't called liquid for nothing! All empires have their cycles of rise and fall, and unless/until we work out exactly where our economic value lies, and how to exploit it, that's where we are headed.

  • 6. alex

    (09 February 2012, 12:02PM)  Complain about this comment

    It's interesting to note that the backdrop to all of this exuberance has been that Brent oil has quietly been rising to within a whisker of the $120 a barrel generally reckoned to trigger a global slowdown.......

  • 7. Dr No

    (09 February 2012, 03:37PM)  Complain about this comment

    The recovery in the US probably won´t last sure, but stocks are in for pretty good run. Why? It´s cyclical! In a zero interest rate environment the "New Fed Funds Rate" is inflation and/or the price of oil. Regardless how fuzzy the inflation numbers are, they have come down! Globally! So has the oil price. The LEIs are rising globally! Of course nothing has changed structurally but the herd is totally paralyzed in all the doom and gloom. Industrials are one of the leading sectors. This is the time for a contrarian bet at least for the next few months.

  • 8. jrj90620

    (09 February 2012, 04:34PM)  Complain about this comment

    According to Shadowstats the actual inflation in the U.S.,over the last 12 months,is about 10%,using 1980 methods of calculation and about 8% using 1990 methods.So,averaging the 2,gives about 8%.If most Americans buy into the phony govt inflation numbers and accept low,yearly wage increases,eventually we become competitive.I guess,this sneaky way of lowering Americans' wages,over a long period, works better than asking them to take major pay cuts.

  • 9. jrj90620

    (09 February 2012, 04:34PM)  Complain about this comment

    According to Shadowstats the actual inflation in the U.S.,over the last 12 months,is about 10%,using 1980 methods of calculation and about 6% using 1990 methods.So,averaging the 2,gives about 8%.If most Americans buy into the phony govt inflation numbers and accept low,yearly wage increases,eventually we become competitive.I guess,this sneaky way of lowering Americans' wages,over a long period, works better than asking them to take major pay cuts.

  • 10. Boris MacDonut

    (09 February 2012, 05:00PM)  Complain about this comment

    America has had it's day. The World is waking up to the more benign influence of cultured Europe, hence the clamour on Europe's periphery to liberalize, democratize and civilise.
    The USA has 50 million food stamp recipients, near 10% unemployment, 2 million in gaol, 2 million on parole and 9 million former cons ....all denied the right to vote. It is burdened with funding half the World's defence expenditure from just 22% of the Worl'd wealth. Their south is dominated by Spanish and Mexican people and once the dream is over Old Mexico will soon re-emerge.

  • 11. anon485

    (09 February 2012, 06:21PM)  Complain about this comment

    You are right about the understated inflation figures. However, the true figure cannot possibly be as high as you state, for if it were, real US GDP would be grossly negative. That would imply either extremely high unemployment, or an inconceivable deterioration in the terms of trade.

    Mr Morgan seems to have overlooked this.

  • 12. MF

    (09 February 2012, 07:49PM)  Complain about this comment

    "The other problem is that most Americans don’t realise just how desperate their situation is"

    ... when you're unemployed and there are no jobs available ... when you know several people who are long-term unemployed ... when 2 or ore houses on your street are still empty since they were foreclosed on ... when your kids graduate from school and still cannot find a job ... that's how "most Americans" know how bad the economy is.

    "Most Americans" dont use the Government figures to tell them how bad things are! It's people with the money to invest in Wall Street who use the Government figures to judge the state of the economy

  • 13. Velocity

    (11 February 2012, 02:06PM)  Complain about this comment

    Thought the UK's Debt to GDP was nearer 960% than 360%

    if independent economists cannot agree figures we cannot expect the worst managers in the history of the world, politicians, to come close to being right either

  • 14. Boris MacDonut

    (12 February 2012, 01:45PM)  Complain about this comment

    #13 Best guess is about 470%. But remember the basket case of Ireland is at 1300% and rising fast.

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