By Charles Hugh Smith
July 24, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The lower reaches of
the financial food chain are already dying, and every
entity that depended on that layer is doomed.
Though under pressure from climate change, the
dinosaurs were still dominant 65 million year ago--until
the meteor struck, creating a global "nuclear winter"
that darkened the atmosphere for months, killing off
most of the food chain that the dinosaurs depended on.
(See chart below.)
The ancestors of modern birds were one of the few
dinosaur species to survive the extinction event,
which took months to play out.
It wasn't the impact and shock wave that killed
off dinosaurs globally--it was the "nuclear winter" that
doomed them to extinction. As plants withered, the
plant-eating dinosaurs expired, depriving the predator
dinosaurs of their food supply.
This is a precise analogy for the global economy,
which is entering a financial "nuclear winter"
extinction event. As I've been discussing for the
past few months, costs are sticky but revenues and
profits are on a slippery slope.
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Businesses still have all the high fixed costs of
2019 but their revenues are sliding as the "nuclear
winter" weakens consumer spending, investment in new
capacity, etc.
Despite all the hoopla about a potential vaccine,
no vaccine can change four realities: one, consumer
sentiment has shifted from confidence to caution and
from spending freely to saving. This is the financial
equivalent of "nuclear winter": there is no way to
return to the pre-impact environment.
Two, uncertainty cannot be dissipated, either. There
are no guarantees a vaccine will be 99% effective, that
it will last more than a few months, that it won't have
side-effects, etc. There are also no guarantees that
consumers will resume their care-free spending ways as
credit tightens, incomes decline, risks emerge and the
need for savings becomes more compelling.
Three, consumer behavior and uncertainty have already
changed, and so businesses that cannot survive on much
lower revenues won't last long enough to emerge from the
"nuclear winter" of uncertainty and a shift in
sentiment.
Four, assets based on 2019 revenues, profits and
demand are now horrendously overvalued, and the
repricing of all assets will bring down the
predators, i.e. the banks.
As I've noted here before, the top 10% of
households account for almost 50% of consumer spending.
These households are older, and own the majority of
assets --between 80% and 90% of stocks, bonds, business
equity, rental real estate, etc. This is the demographic
with the most to lose in returning to care-free air
travel, jamming into crowded venues and cafes, etc.
This demographic has "been there, done that" and
foregoing fine dining, sports events, concerts, cruises,
etc. is not much a burden and may actually be a relief.
Meanwhile, the entire food chain of landlords,
banks, local government, employees, etc. depends on
enterprises returning to 100% of 2019 revenues. As
tenants stop paying rent, landlords default on
mortgages, sending banks into insolvency, leaving local
government with less tax revenues and employees with
fewer job prospects.
To a degree few appreciate, the "recovery" since
2009 has been dependent on over-spending, over-borrowing
and over-speculating: as spending, borrowing and
speculation all pull back to what would have been
"normal" levels two generations ago, the economy
collapses because it's become completely dependent on
over-spending, over-borrowing and over-speculating.
As consumers and businesses retrench, borrowing
declines while defaults and bankruptcies eviscerate bank
profits and balance sheets. As spending declines,
businesses with high fixed costs and pre-pandemic
business models (crowding people together in close
quarters, etc.) cannot generate enough revenues to
survive. As the collateral of commercial real estate and
profit streams collapse, assets are repriced all down
the food chain, reversing the wealth effect: as
people feel poorer, they borrow and spend less, creating
a feedback loop of lower valuations, lower spending,
lower profits, lower borrowing all of which feed back
into each other, pushing everything lower.
The lower reaches of the financial food chain are
already dying, and every entity that depended on that
layer is doomed: the small business die-off will
bring down distributors, banks, landlords, and
employment, and as the this layer collapses then the top
predators will starve to death as well: Big Tech,
healthcare, higher education, tourism, local tax
revenues, etc.
The clouds are spreading and thickening, and the dawn
sky is tinted an ominous red. This is a financial
extinction event, and the Fed's pathetic shamans can't
reverse history.
Charles Hugh Smith is a
contributing editor to PeakProsperity.com and the
proprietor of the popular blog OfTwoMinds.com. He is
the author of numerous books, including Why
Everything Is Falling Apart: An Unconventional Guide
To Investing In Troubled Times.-
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