The Deadly Truth About the Great Boom and This “Recovery”

Harry_headshot-150x150A Yahoo Finance headline this morning reads: “Unhappy New Year: The U.S. Economy Is Stalling Out.”

We recently learned that existing home sales in November crashed 10.5% from the month before.

Guess when the last time was when we saw these levels? The housing crisis of the mid- to late-2000s!

I also recently shared a chart showing a cataclysmic 82% drop in the ratio of new home sales to the U.S. population. To put it simply, we won’t need more real estate for decades to come, with baby boomers increasingly dying to offset rising millennial home purchases.

I and a few other experts like David Stockman have continued to argue that this re-bound since 2009 has been all smoke and mirrors – artificial stimulus that has only created greater bubbles in financial assets like stocks, and financial engineering to create rising corporate profits. None of it goes toward real expansion for future jobs, productivity and growth… things like new office space and industrial capacity.

Wall Street analysts and corporate CEOs can argue against this with their “this is not a bubble” logic, but this chart tells the real story.

Below is a chart that shows the office space per worker in square feet. It shows a rise into the height of the financial crisis, after which it’s fallen like a rock!

At first this could seem counterintuitive. Why did the square footage per worker go up into the worst of the recession into mid- to late-2009? That’s because companies were laying off workers going into that recession, meaning there were more workers per square feet.

But the real story comes in the recovery from late 2009 forward.

Demand for Commercial Real Estate Takes a Dive

Square footage per worker has declined very sharply from 371 square feet to 270, down a whopping one-third in just over six years as businesses have rehired a large portion of the laid-off workers – which means largely NOT creating new jobs.

You should not look at this chart and assume that because less square footage per worker means more workers than in the past that everything is hunky dory.

What’s more important is that the sharp decrease in square footage implies a lack of demand in commercial real estate. And that’s because commercial real estate is already way over-expanded! We overbuilt it in the great boom of 1983 to 2007, so even these hires have not filled up the available space. Which means businesses aren’t expanding their office or industrial space!

So while hiring more workers sounds fine out of context… it’s masking much more severe, deeper-set issues in our capacity to build for the future.

This is the hard truth that no one is looking at: businesses are merely re-employing their past capacity, and not creating new plants and offices for future employment. All the 200,000-plus jobs numbers per month, if they are even fully real, are just catching up with the past. And we shouldn’t be investing in such new work space as we already have all we need for decades ahead.

This is the reality of demographics that clueless economists just don’t get.

Meanwhile, more and more people drop out of the workforce either from giving up on finding a job, or retiring earlier once their kids have left the nest.

And more jobs are part-time or in the low-end service sector – like bartenders and waiters, not the higher-paid manufacturing and professional jobs of the past.

To top it off, fewer and fewer people are entering or staying in the workforce. Hence, the workforce participation rates continue to edge down – after falling sharply for years.

And all of that means… we’re not even at capacity for all this overbuilt real estate.

Folks, this “recovery” isn’t working! And no one has expected it to given the over-expansion in the greatest debt bubble in U.S. history from 1983 to 2008.

Inflation hasn’t risen due to excess capacity here and around the world, especially China

Money velocity continues to drop without lending and productive investment to expand it…

Businesses are struggling with stagnant earnings because we already hit the peak of debt capacity and demographic spending growth in the great boom that finally peaked in late 2007, as I forecast two decades before.

A Debt Fueld Boom US Debt versus GDP Growth

Debt was running at 2.54 times GDP for 26 years. It doesn’t take a rocket scientist or nuclear physicist to tell you that pretty much guarantees a massive period of deleveraging and depression – not continued expansion.

So since growth is all but impossible, corporations have resorted to financial engineering to keep the wagon rolling – all courtesy of the Fed, with near-zero short- and long-term interest rates.

They’ve had two options: either increase stock buybacks to leverage their stagnant earnings with rising earnings-per-share on fewer shares, or increase dividends to compete with lower and lower yielding bonds (also courtesy of the Fed). And they’ve been milking both options for all they’re worth!

But financial engineering does not result in real growth.

And speculation does not expand the money supply.

It is only a sign of decreasing money velocity, and a bubble that will only burst – like in 1929, 2000, and now again!

It’s a mirage.

It isn’t real.

And it isn’t sustainable.

Despite such endless financial engineering, sales for the S&P 500 have been declining for the last three quarters. And profits have declined for the first time since the 2009 expansion.

I’d be surprised if both didn’t continue down in the 4th quarter.

This will end badly… which is the only way bubbles end.

My forecast today: the stock market will start to crash by early February, if not sooner, when it gets this clear realization.


Harry

Follow me on Twitter @harrydentjr

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This is a syndicated repost courtesy of Economy and Markets » Harry Dent | Economy and Markets | . To view original, click here.

 

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14 Comments
Dutchman
Dutchman
December 31, 2015 12:13 pm

WTF? What rock did this guy just crawl out from under? He just realized this?

Emilio Camino
Emilio Camino
December 31, 2015 1:21 pm

Great article, Harry. I agree

Personally I appreciate the ability to synthesis and clarity of what you expose.

It has long been interested in your work and I hope you to continue sharing your knowledge.

Thank you so much.

bb
bb
December 31, 2015 1:37 pm

90 million+ Americans of working age not in workforce. Another 10+million. unemployed.47 million + on food stamps. Almost 11million on disability.
Yes dear something is terribly wrong.

VegasBob
VegasBob
December 31, 2015 2:32 pm

I’ve always maintained that this so-called economic recovery is a fraud, engineered by zero interest rates and massive money printing needed to finance obscene government deficits.

What is surprising to me is how long the charade has continued. I would have thought that paying attention to basic arithmetic would have destroyed the economic recovery delusion 4 or 5 years ago.

Instead, we celebrate a Potemkin economy that consists of selling/recycling overpriced housing, transportation, higher education, healthcare, booze, coffee, hamburgers, and pizzas, all of which are paid for with borrowed or freshly-printed counterfeit electronic money.

So, I have to give credit to TPTB for engineering an unprecedented economic fraud that has successfully kept reality at bay for over 6-1/2 years.

Still, no country in all of world history has ever successfully borrowed or printed its way out of economic distress. What is certain is that the United States will not be the first country to succeed at this kind of nonsensical financial alchemy.

I suspect that we are finally coming to the end of the line for this phony recovery. An unprecedented level of economic pain is about to be visited upon those who are not prepared.

Archie
Archie
December 31, 2015 5:29 pm

Great comment vegasbob. Me too. I cannot believe this shitshow has gone on this long. Maybe IS is correct and we will go on and on like this for years. The date on the USA and the dollar expired a long time ago as far as I am concerned.

Homer
Homer
December 31, 2015 5:40 pm

VegasBob says,”Still, no country in all of world history has ever successfully borrowed or printed its way out of economic distress.”

Hells Bells, Bob, you get it and I bet you’re no rocket scientist. Don’t you think that Yellen and the other TPTB understand that, too. They’re not stoopid as many would have you believe. SO…What is their plan in destroying the economy, middle class, the Republic, and taking us to the brink of war?

Perhaps, the pain that you suggest our future holds will be more than economic pain.

I refuse to believe that our leaders are a bunch of Keystone Cops blundering their way into ever diminishing choices. There is an insidious agenda going on when viewed from an all encompassing perspective. I’ve heard many explanations about this agenda from ‘good vs evil’ to a NWO. Where in the hell is our world taking us? Inquiring minds want to know. It doesn’t look good.

Stop the world, I want to get off!

Homer
Homer
December 31, 2015 7:53 pm

I never completely gone along with Harry Dent, but I believe his work on demographics is spot on. All the baby boomers that think the world owes them a living because somehow they paid into it should smell the coffee, dump the AARP and grow their own food in the back yard, cuz you’re gonna need it.

I can just hear them sniveling, “I paid for it. I want mine.” They, never realizing that the money they paid in was spent before they even earned it. Spent for growing a bigger, all encompassing government and the pursuit of world hegemony. Never put into a lock box as Senator Orin Hatch among many others claimed on national tv. What a Con.

These Baby Boomers never went to the trouble to ensure that the money they were putting aside was actually being put aside and not spent with reckless abandon by thieving politicians. They were remiss is not down right negligent in their civic duties. They will soon reap what their inattention created for them–a big fat goose egg. Sorry, not enough jobs or young people to foot the bill and borrowing has reached its limits. Maybe Soylent Green is the answer.

Thanks Baby Boomers, you have given us a future of deprivation and the threat of nuclear annihilation. But, I suppose, what do you expect from the Hippy generation.

Stucky
Stucky
December 31, 2015 10:05 pm

Homer,

You want me to send you some Anus Creme for your butt-hurt? Get over it, ya pussy.

Sincerely,
Stuchenboomer

Homer
Homer
December 31, 2015 10:29 pm

Hey, it’s Stucky. I was wondering where you went. I conjured up thoughts of the possibility that they finally came for you at 3 am, you, never to be seen again. One of the disappeared.

Glad I was wrong. Now I can sleep better a night.

Stucky
Stucky
December 31, 2015 10:32 pm

Homer,

Stop being nice to me.

I am a fatfuk BOOMER, destroyer of “Murika, a dream snatcher, and sometimes I kick dogs. I am worthy only of contempt and utter disregard.

Homer
Homer
December 31, 2015 10:51 pm

Stuchenboomer, Nah. I’m the least depressed guy around, but, I do have concern for the people I meet on a daily basis. What’s going to happen to them if we do go into a major panic with a collapsing economy?

I’m not a baby boomer, having been lucky enough to be born before they made their appearance on this big blue marble.

Homer
Homer
December 31, 2015 10:54 pm

Be careful what you say about Stucky. He’s a friend of mine.

B
B
December 31, 2015 11:49 pm

Globalism and the continuing global wage arbitraging guarantees a continuing decline in the standard of living in the developed world. It is a process that eats it own. The Elite believe they will continue to prosper, or at the least, remain unaffected. They are wrong.

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
January 1, 2016 7:32 pm

All you Useful Idiots that think Boomers are responsible for the NYC Fascist economy and the Socialist government can kiss my grits; you are more guilty than any other group!