What We Learned From 2018…

Guest Post by Bill Bonner

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND – Yesterday, we awoke to the sound of sirens.

After a week at the family farm, we had come back to the city for New Year’s Eve. But hardly had the new year begun when the echoes of the old year filled the streets and alleyways.

Over the holidays, a mental defective had firebombed nine cars near our house in Baltimore. And this morning, the bums are still sleeping at the church entrance next door. One of them has turned the whole area into a dump, with trash and rags strewn all over the steps.

“Yes, it looks like 2019 is going to be a lot like 2018,” said one of the children.

Where We Come From

But before we get to where we are going, let us back up to look at where we come from.

What happened in 2018? We went around the table on New Year’s Eve and asked what everyone had achieved in the 12 months just passed.

“We put a roof on one barn and a foundation under another,” we volunteered. We had just spent the holidays working on the family farm, shoring up an old barn with concrete and cinder blocks; the dirt was still under our fingernails and the work still fresh in our mind.

It was little to show for a whole year, but at least it was something real and durable.

But what about the wider world? Are our foundations more solid? What did we learn?

The headline events are easy to recall. “It if bleeds, it leads,” say the old newspaper editors.

Mr. Trump, waving his saber wildly, made the headlines every day. North Korea, China, Canada, his own staff… trade wars… porn stars… shyster lawyers… Trump charged like Cardigan at Balaclava – with great gusto, but little reconnaissance. And like Cardigan, he survived and became a hero to his fans.

But for all the sound and fury, what did it accomplish? Where did it take us? Are we better off?

Eerie Facts about World War II (and a prediction about the future that will leave you chilled)

Follow the Money

Our beat here at the Diary is money. So we will skip the culture wars, nominee confirmations, and foreign policy initiatives. Let’s just follow the money.

And what we notice immediately is that the last decade (save the final three months) was a great time to be rich. The Fed pumped up your stocks, bonds, real estate, and collectibles… And then, Donald J. Trump added a tax cut.

Even after the selloff at the end of the year, the typical stock owner was still two to three times richer than he was in 2009.

But his luck seemed to be running out. By the end of 2018, he was losing money and ended the year down about 6%.

In keeping with the loony zeitgeist of the year, the stock of WWE (pro wraslin’) tripled during the first nine months of 2018. But the typical fan didn’t own the stock; he didn’t have a stock portfolio.

He had only his time to sell – by the hour, the day, the week, or the month.

And his time became less valuable. In March 2009, he could have worked for 40 hours and used the money to buy the entire S&P 500. Now, he’ll have to work three times as long – 127 hours – to buy the same collection of stocks.

And even over the last 12 months, his time took a body slam. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average working stiff earned $26.71 per hour on January 1, 2018. Today, he earns $27.35 – 64 cents more, or a 2.4% increase.

But the inflation rate for 2018 was about 2.5%. That means he actually lost 2 cents per hour during the last 12 months.

That would account for a savings rate that has dropped to the lowest level in 12 years – 2.4%. A lower savings rate, of course, means that people have less to save… or are drawing down previous savings.

Either way, it is what people do when they are losing ground.

This guru was mocked by the mainstream. But is his strange financial prediction about to come true?

Ugly Bubble

Overall, real wealth (very roughly measured by GDP) grew at about 3% in the U.S. last year – totaling some $600 billion worth of additional output.

But at the same time, debt grew faster. The federal deficit alone was $833 billion (and is already programmed to go to $1 trillion this year). Altogether, corporate, government, and household debt grew by $1.9 trillion – or more than three times as much as the output that must support it.

The 2018 economy was heralded, nevertheless… by the press, Wall Street, and the president… as a great achievement.

Mr. Trump quickly forgot all about the “big, fat, ugly bubble” that he claimed Barack Obama had created. Now, it was HIS big, fat, ugly bubble… and it was beautiful.

Unemployment went down to levels not seen since the 1950s. GDP growth even pushed up into the 3-4% range for a couple of quarters – just as it had under Barack Obama.

Trouble was, it was still a big, fat, ugly bubble… and Mr. Trump made it even bigger, even fatter, and even uglier by adding more lard.

The idea was that cutting taxes for the rich would cause the economy to grow faster and wealthier.

And it would have worked if the feds had cut spending too.

This would have released real resources that the feds were wasting on assorted boondoggles to be put to work shoring up businesses and improving output.

Alas, that part of the message wouldn’t fit into the tweet. Instead, the feds increased spending and increased the debt.

And, as we’ve mentioned before, if you could get rich by borrowing and spending – or by simply “printing” money – there would be a lot more rich people on God’s green ball.

And so it came to pass that in 2018, the Fed continued to lend money at below the rate of consumer price inflation (effectively giving it away)… and Washington continued to spend money it didn’t have on things it didn’t need.

The rich lost money on Wall Street. The poor lost money as the Main Street economy stumbled. The year came to a close, and we were all, collectively, older and poorer. But no wiser.

What’s ahead for 2019? Tune in tomorrow…

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10 Comments
Javelin
Javelin
January 2, 2019 4:25 pm

I dumped the small amount of stock shares I held about six months ago… right after Buffet and Soros did.
Wife’s 401k’s are going to get creamed though.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
January 2, 2019 5:12 pm

Lying sack of shit.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
January 2, 2019 5:14 pm

Barack Obama Is Now The Only President In History To Never Have A Year Of 3% GDP Growth

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-01-27/barack-obama-now-only-president-history-never-have-year-3-gdp-growth

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
January 2, 2019 5:16 pm

But the contrast in economic performance between the two presidents is undeniable. Obama’s multitrillion-dollar spend-and-borrow policies produced 2 percent growth. In his final year, Obama handed off to Trump an economy that was limping at 1.6 percent.

https://nypost.com/2018/09/12/this-economy-definitely-is-not-obamas-recovery/

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
January 2, 2019 5:19 pm

America finally got a raise.

The U.S. economy added 200,000 jobs in January, and wages grew at the fastest pace in eight years.

The unemployment rate stayed at 4.1%, the lowest since 2000, the Labor Department said Friday.

Wages were up 2.9% compared with a year earlier, the best pace since June 2009. Wage growth has been the last major measure to make meaningful progress since the end of the Great Recession.
https://money.cnn.com/2018/02/02/news/economy/january-jobs-report-2018/index.html

Big Dick
Big Dick
  gatsby1219
January 2, 2019 7:12 pm

Too bad they are goobermint lies and manipulated statistics far from reality.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
January 2, 2019 5:21 pm

Trump is right: The Fed has raised interest rates too fast
https://nypost.com/2018/10/27/trump-is-right-the-fed-has-raised-interest-rates-too-fast/

Llpoh
Llpoh
  gatsby1219
January 2, 2019 7:00 pm

Bullfuckingshit. The rate is currently 2.5%, which is stealing from every average saver in the country in order to prop up the big boys, keep the interest on the $20 trillion down, make spending cheaper, making the purchase of imported goods cheaper, overheated stock and real estate markets, and made saving more expensive. The long term average is around 5%, and that is where it should be now.

The elderly, and young for that matter, savers have been screwed by this fucking bullshit. Those low rates should never have been put in place. They resulted in massive public and personal debt, and have done untold damage.

Maybe if you had some savings you would understand this shit. Get a fucking clue.

NickelthroweR
NickelthroweR
  Llpoh
January 2, 2019 9:20 pm

Greetings,
Instead of telling people to “get a fucking clue”, I put my money where my mouth is. After all, we savers may get a slap in the face when hyperinflation rears its ugly head. People in debt up to their ears may find out that they can pay everything back and do so in worthless dollars. It is tough to say how all of this will play out.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
  Llpoh
January 3, 2019 6:53 am

You keep your money in a savings account…..and I need to get a fucking clue… Laughable.