The Great Canadian Shoe Heist

Guest Post by Bill Bonner

POITOU, FRANCE – Yesterday, when the Chinese woke up and heard The Donald threatening to impose an import tax on Chinese-made goods, they practically fell out of bed.

There’s a 10% daily circuit-breaker limit in the Chinese stock market. As the name suggests, when stocks fall too far, too fast, they flip a “circuit breaker.” Trading stops to stem the losses.

By the end of the day, more than 1,000 Chinese stocks had hit it.

U.S. investors were worried, too. Our message for today: They should be.

After falling for five days in a row, the Dow slid almost 200 points yesterday. By our reckoning, the primary trend for stocks is down.

If we’re right, stocks will probably not hit January’s high – above 26,600 – again in our lifetimes. At least, not in real terms. When hyperinflation gets underway – as we expect it will in a few years – who knows what will happen.

Empire of Debt

Meanwhile, the Russians, Japanese, and Chinese are all dumping U.S. bonds. As we pointed out 10 years ago in our book, Empire of Debt (written with Addison Wiggin), the U.S. empire is funded neither by tribute, like Rome, nor by trade, like Britain. It runs on debt.

Properly adjusted for inflation, their trade surpluses (where they give us more than we take from them) have totaled nearly $20 trillion.

Much of this money has been channeled into U.S. Treasury bonds; foreigners have financed some $8 trillion worth of U.S. deficit spending over the last 20 years.

Next year, the U.S. government will have to sell some $1.2 trillion in new bonds just to cover the deficit. In years past, it could count on two sources with deep pockets and an almost insatiable appetite.

Foreigners, described above, recycled trade surpluses into U.S. debt (thereby financing the whole shebang of financialization at home and militarization abroad). And what the foreigners didn’t buy, the Fed did; currently, it holds $4.4 worth of assets, mostly U.S. Treasuries.

But now, both sources of demand are drying up. Much discussed in these pages is the turnaround in Fed policy… in which America’s central bank goes from being the biggest buyer of U.S. Treasuries in the world to, effectively, the biggest seller.

Readers will recognize this, too, as a souped-up version of the Fed’s Mistake #2, in which it tightens up after being much too loose for much too long.

Smuggling Shoes

Now, we turn our attention to the other source – world trade. There, The Donald takes center stage.

The Russians’ selling of U.S. bonds comes in response to new U.S. sanctions imposed by Mr. Trump on their aluminum exports. In recent months, they’ve sold $49 billion worth of the American paper, nearly half their holdings.

India says it won’t be pushed around, either. Per Indian newspaper, Mint:

India has notified the WTO of a revised list of 30 U.S. imports, including apples, almonds, phosphoric acid, and [Harley-Davidson] motorcycles, on which it intends to impose retaliatory tariffs.

India is likely to introduce retaliatory tariffs worth $240 million next week on a revised list of 30 items imported from the U.S. to counter the American move to unilaterally hike duties on Indian steel and aluminium. The move comes at a time when India has decided to negotiate a “trade package” with the U.S. to ease tensions between the two sides.

And next door, Canadian smugglers are trying to dodge U.S. tariffs. That’s what the president told the National Federation of Independent Business yesterday. The Wall Street Journal reports:

“There was a story two days ago in a major newspaper talking about people living in Canada coming into the United States and smuggling things back into Canada because the tariffs are so massive,” Trump said. “The tariffs to get common items back into Canada are so high that they have to smuggle them in.”

And what does the president claim that Canadians are smuggling across the border? Shoes, of course.

“They buy shoes, then they wear them,” he explained. “They scuff them up. They make them sound old or look old.”

Oh, those devious Canadians. Now, they’re coming down here and buying our shoes! Unless something is done, Americans will soon be barefoot.

Fortunately, America is protected by our first line of defense: sharp-eared Department of Homeland Security agents stationed at the 49th parallel.

They are alert to the threat. No grandmother gets through an airport without a full-body scan… and no Canadian gets across the border with a new pair of shoes.

“Sir… you’ll have to come with me. Those shoes don’t sound old enough.”

Consummate Negotiator

Some will worry that the pressure of trying to punch it up with the entire world is getting to the American chief executive. Some will say that he is “losing it.” But we’ve come to see that POTUS works in mysterious ways… ways we mere mortals cannot grasp.

Tariffs imposed on Chinese goods will be paid by U.S. households; how raising prices on consumer goods will MAGA, we don’t know. But that is just one of the tricks of a consummate negotiator: doing things that don’t make sense so as to put your opponent off balance.

Or maybe, the president is just sending a signal to his main trade adversaries – the Chinese. From the Middle Kingdom, the U.S. imports more than half a trillion dollars’ worth of merchandise per year.

That’s the big wonton in America’s trade soup. Because the U.S. only exports about $130 billion to China. The difference is the single largest piece of America’s annual trade deficit.

This should be an easy win for the Great Dealmaker. With such a big imbalance in their favor, the Chinese have a lot more to lose than the U.S. The U.S. president just has to put the pressure on.

So not only did America’s head honcho threaten China with import taxes on $200 billion worth of goods, he also said that if the Chinese tried to retaliate, he’d wallop them with taxes on another $200 billion.

At the proposed rate – 10% – that is equivalent to a $40 billion tax hike on American families.

Trade is usually left to the private sector. It is no place for left jabs or widow-makers. And we doubt that Mr. Trump will have much more success with it than Misters Smoot or Hawley did before him.

But POTUS thinks he is in his element. He was cut out for the public sector all along, where every deal is backed by threats.

And now, he’s just following the script from his own ghostwritten book, The Art of the Deal. Hit. Hit back harder. Keep hitting until you win. Or until you go broke.

A word of caution: Don’t try this at home. The approach won’t work in the private sector. At home… in shops… at work – being a tough guy is a time-wasting distraction. Deals have to be win-win… or people won’t want to do them.

Try to bully people in the private sector and they’ll just take you for a jackass.

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27 Comments
Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
June 22, 2018 7:39 pm

735trillion in derivatives worldwide, many of them tied to dollars and leveraged out 10 to 1,000 to one. I’m sure someone is frantically trying to prevent them from unwinding but for how long can it hold. The 735 figure I saw in Asia Time about 2 weeks ago while scanning headlines so I didn’t pursue it. Just thought it was relevant to the article.

John
John
  Fleabaggs
June 22, 2018 8:25 pm

Absolutely!!!!!
You’re spot on !!!!!

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Fleabaggs
June 22, 2018 10:52 pm

yawn–
wake me when you have something the bankers & the mba s can’t handle–

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 22, 2018 8:21 pm

We have been on the “slow motion train wreck” with bad deals shelling out our country for far too many years. Either he has hit the self destruct button or thrown a hail Mary pass. Either way, let the shit show get started before I get too old.

Rdawg
Rdawg
  Anonymous
June 22, 2018 9:26 pm

Careful what you wish for.

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
June 22, 2018 10:11 pm

The Mega Corporations and Big Box stores pushed for and got all of this Chinese shit sold here.
They are the participants of the gutting of U.S. industry. I say screw them all and if they go broke, big deal! They don’t employ Americans anymore. All they do is hire retailing cashiers and people who are basically paper pushers and bean counters.
A good example: Harley Davidson was bitching about the tariffs on imported steel, and how it was going to raise their production costs which of course they would pass on the the consumer. Oh, okay, they just admitted that the steel in their “American Made”motorcycles is made overseas. Those people sure as hell didn’t cry when the 147 year old steel mill in my home town shut town, and neither did the cucks who bought the motorcycles. I say fuck them all, the horses they ride on, and the cavalry that follows them up!

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Coalclinker
June 22, 2018 11:19 pm

Coal – right you are! Those evil corps holding a gunto the cinsumer, driving them down to the store and forcing them to pull credit cards out of their wallets to buy Chinese shit cannot be allowed.

Why is it somany fail to understand that the people are responsible. The people chose to buy foreign made goods. They were not forced. If they had simply said no, and only bought US goods, this would not have happened.

Nope, easier to look for someone else to blame.

Oh, and the reason the 147 year old steel mill shut down was because it was so vastly inefficient it could not compete.

Vodka
Vodka
  Llpoh
June 23, 2018 12:32 am

I remember in the early 90’s Wal-Mart would have promotions touting ‘Made-in-America’ items of all kinds. There would be an end-cap display with a photo of 200 workers outside their Ohio factory. But Wal-Mart found out that consumers didn’t give a shit because they didn’t personally work there.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Vodka
June 23, 2018 1:51 am

Vodka – exactly my point. People bought that shit. They wanted low prices, and where it came from mattered not.

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
  Llpoh
June 23, 2018 7:40 am

That facility had a blast furnace. More blast furnace innovations came out of that place than any other in the world. They invented the method of replacing and relining the refractory only at the tuyères. Before that innovation the entire lining of a blast furnace had to be removed and replaced at great cost. That furnace also had the longest running refractory lining in the world- something like over 36 years. America is down to 9 blast furnaces. There were 28 furnaces prior to 2008. I don’t think efficiency really matters anymore, for no furnace means no virgin steel.
That place also had the very first rolling mill in the world, and innovated steel coatings as they made the first aluminized steel.
The next time you see a 6 year old car or truck that still has a nice paint job but has rusted out at the rocker panels, quarter panels, and fenders; that is how you can tell the steel is made overseas. Soon it will the turn of the auto manufacturers to completely go out, just like what happened in Australia.

starfcker
starfcker
June 23, 2018 3:13 am

“A word of caution: Don’t try this at home. The approach won’t work in the private sector.” Do you really believe what you write, Bonner? The man has spent his entire life in the private sector, in the cutthroat world of Manhattan high-rise real estate. He’s a billionaire, with a 757 with gold seat belts, and has a Slovokian model wife 25 years younger than him. I guess it’s time in the private sector was just a waste, huh? If only he had listened to you.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  starfcker
June 23, 2018 6:49 am

I guess inheriting bigly had nothing to do with nothing.

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
  Llpoh
June 23, 2018 9:27 am

A decade ago I would have agreed with you but not today.

While I have never inherited shit in terms of business and have built my humble little empire from scratch with $ from my own pocket, in a sense I am still the indirect beneficiary of generational ‘wealth’. My business partner inherited (sort of) a small business from his parents – he took over after years of slogging away in business for other people.

He honored his folks by applying his knowledge to that business and turned a mom and pop operation into a multi-million dollar enterprise. Then he hunted me down (I had knowledge and connections he didn’t at the time in our industry) and made me an equal partner in a new enterprise as we did the same thing over again in another city. We combined our money and expertise to essentially build on what his parents started.

Now we are almost ready to expand again.

The difference between Trump’s empire and ours is a matter of scale and degree. The mark of a successful man is not in where his money came from (I had other investors willing to give me money to get started – it didn’t have to be done the way I did it) but rather, in what he does with it once it is hand regardless of the source.

DJT honored his father’s gift/investment by building on it and not squandering it. Lesser men would have done the latter. If all of our families seized on this model I think it would be a better world. Generational wealth is the key to beating the bankers/politico’s game.

My son will graduate soon. He’s announced he will do a business degree. When he’s done, assuming he wants it, there will be a place for him at my table to continue my construction project. I’ll be honored if he accepts but will understand if he is not interested. I know that if he takes his place next to me that our little empire will grow again into something much larger.

In business, trust and reliability are very important. Sometimes family provides that. When it does it PAYS in spades. Seizing on that fact is less starting from 3rd base than it is just good sense and a way to secure the future for your posterity.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Francis Marion
June 23, 2018 3:50 pm

+100 foxy,
some of the greatest fortunes have been built by the 2nd generation who were trained by their dads(usually) but had the starting capital,risk cushion,and often a bit more sophistication than the 1st generation–

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  TampaRed
June 23, 2018 4:20 pm

Donnie relied on that risk cushion bigly. There was the time daddy came into the casino to buy $millions in chips and left right after.

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
  TampaRed
June 23, 2018 5:46 pm

I’m rough around the edges and could use the sophistication. And vacation time. I could use that too.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Francis Marion
June 23, 2018 8:23 pm

I have read that Trump would have as much today if he had just dumped the inheritance in a mutual fund.

So much for the crap about his skill. He could have just let it compound in the market and done as well as he has.

Yup, sounds like he really is a self made man.

He inherited vast wealth. That is a bit of a bonus in life, dontcha know.

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
June 23, 2018 6:37 am

I had this back and forth nonsense pre 1980 when my family member GM assembly worker cried buy American built cars save my job ! I replied what about the GE & Westinghouse workers now that GM buys wiring harnesses from Mexico or the Flint Michigan engine block foundry workers since the new minivan engines come from Mexico as his UAW brothers are in the unemployment and then welfare line . I called him a scab for not striking till US content in US cars were restored , he also shopped at non union grocery stores etc…
Let’s not leave out our government economic traders to the American workers where it allowed US auto manufactures to only use 20% US produced parts such as steel and other products and call it an AMERCAN PRODUCT .
Now on to shipping and shipbuilding , construction regulations for ships built in the US required double inner bottoms to protect enviormental tragedies like Exxon Valdez . A good plan however it doubled the cost of the ship below waterline . American Shipbuilders and Shipbuilding Steel Workers petitioned our US representitives to not allow foreign ships to operate in US waters without the same restrictions but no , foreign shipping and shipbuilding lobbiests bought enough congressman to once again sell out American industrial workers for a campaign contribution or a job for a family member ! Then this same group failed to pass the Cargo Preference Bill to secure 17% of all cargo shipped in or out of the US to be shipped on US flagged merchant ships with American Merchant Seaman as crews . This would have created a 30 year construction backlog in that heavy industry alone . Once again the American industrial worker got left out by their own government . Now on to Mitch Mc Connell the senator (Republican) who married the daughter of the Chi Com shipping billionaire her daddy gifted her around 10 MILLON of course the senator did not benefit by his wife’s new found wealth BUT ! This is a big BUT during operation DESERT STORM the US leased the use of cargo ships from China to supply the troops now isn’t that special , wow what a deal !
The point to this rant is the fact that for decades our own government in collusion with investment groups and corporations were treasonous economically throwing huge numbers of American industrial workers under the bus and then taxing them thru borrowing , inflation and devaluing the currency thus indenturing every American citizen to the debt created that few profited from . Essentially forcing Americans in a situation of paying for their own economic demise of their nation .
Anyone who cannot see this and understand this needs to return to a 3rd grade math class of 1960 and a 10th grade economics class of 1969

CCRider
CCRider
  Boat Guy
June 23, 2018 7:28 am

Very good Boat. How can you blame people who have seen their real wages drop for decades now afford to buy anything but the lowest price. It’s said that 40% of American’s can’t cobble together 400 bucks and like 60% a grand. Shit that’s 4 new tires. To blame them is fucking cruel. Personally, I would blame them only for voting. However you look at it the real blame is that criminal, rapacious monster on the Potomac.

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
  CCRider
June 23, 2018 9:56 am

You know it CC far too many Americans forget the oath to protect and defend against all enemies foreign and domestic ! The Wall Street to K-Street to Capitol Street Circle Jerk is the true enemy of the majority of average working Americans , close to 100 MILLON sitting idle or hanging to a job with insults to common decency for wages . Finding the will or intestinal fortitude to stop any of the true enimies now may assure our nations total destruction now . Especially considering the pentagon has been corrupted into that circle jerk fold !

CCRider
CCRider
  Boat Guy
June 23, 2018 11:01 am

Agreed. I’ve always thought that this nation’s fate will eventually wind up in the hands of the military. Either the gov’t will use them to squash the uprising that seems certain to come (like the one after kicking trump out of office). Or patriots from within overthrow the gov’t. Either way there’s a bad moon rising. I know I don’t have to remind a boatman but rig for stormy seas.

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
  CCRider
June 23, 2018 12:59 pm

To old and worn down to out run it so I batton down hold tight and ride it out . I can still stand and fight even if it is just to buy others time to counter punch .
The young that were in my charge are well educated and prepared and they know I have their backs and do not expect them to sacrifice for me . I worked hard and sacrificed for them and as they step into adulthood making their own way they realize just how much . Not a shabby return on an investment , it just cannot be measured in dollars and cents !

Luminae
Luminae
June 23, 2018 6:38 am

Amen, Star.

Martin brundlefly
Martin brundlefly
June 23, 2018 6:47 am

Canadians do come down and shop. Its true. Turkey is a big one due to canadian laws. Car exhaust systems. Clothing, shoes. Saw it all the time living in buffalo ny

Robert H Siddell Jr
Robert H Siddell Jr
June 23, 2018 11:04 am

I was young and patriotic making minimum wage (less than $2/hr) but patriotically bought an American made car (and had to pay the union workers their $20/hr). That car was hugely inferior from bumper to bumper compared to a Toyota or Datsun. I will never be so stupid again.

D. Johnson
D. Johnson
  Robert H Siddell Jr
June 25, 2018 12:29 pm

Yes, I remember the Ford Pinto, Chevy Vega, and the Ford Maverick. The beginning of the decline of the American motors.