Tuesday, November 20, 2018

It's Possible The Decline Has Already Begun




It’s possible the decline has already begun. . .



I remember spending time in Florida back in 2007 when property prices had already started declining.
All the real estate agents I met kept telling themselves ridiculous affirmations about how the market was going to come roaring back soon, and the good times would return.
Less than a year later the worst financial panic since the Great Depression had set in. And it would be years before prices would finally recover.
Remember—asset prices peaked in October 2007. But the giant financial crisis didn’t kick off for nearly a year, in September 2008.
We might be in a similar situation today; it's possible that markets peaked last month. And we're now in the "stew and fester" phase where prices gradually decline while people keep hope that the boom times are coming just around the corner. 

And then, within a tear or so, something sets off another huge crisis that pops the bubble once and for all...just like the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers did back in 2008. 

We won't know what that event will be until after it happens. 

But what we do know for sure is that the last financial crisis was caused by too much idiotic debt in the system. 

Banks were lending money to legions of borrowers who had a history of not paying their debts...and then actually presented like these toxic loans were great investments. 

Today, we're seeing the same stupid debt work its was onto the corporate and government sectors. 

Instead of giving million-dollar mortgages to unemployed borrowers with a history of default, investors are loaning billions of dollars to money-losing zombie businesses, or to governments that are already in debt up to their eyeballs, all while pretending these are safe, credible investments.


Total global debt back in 2008 was about $173 trillion, worth about 280% of GDP.
Today total global debt is $250 trillion, worth about 320% of GDP. It’s only gotten worse.
This is the sequel of the same movie we saw ten years ago… and it would be pretty foolish to not expect the same ending.






These large stock market declines are starting to become a regular thing, and tech stocks are getting hit particularly hard.  But we have been in a bull market for such a long time that many investors are having a difficult time comprehending what is happening.  Many just keep believing that their beloved tech stocks will eventually bounce back because they just can’t accept the fact that the party is over.  At this point, all of the “FANG stocks” have officially entered bear market territory.  Facebook is down 39.5 percent from their 52 week high, Amazon is down 25.4 percent, Netflix is down 35.6 percent and Google is down 20.3 percent.  And since many throw in Apple to make the acronym “FAANG”, we should also note that Apple’s stock price is now down more than 20 percent from the peak.  The tech stock crash that so many have been waiting for has arrived, and many analysts believe that it is going to get a whole lot worse.

The combined market value of Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google has fallen by 610 billion dollars so far.
Just think about that for a moment.
Most Americans don’t even realize that tech stocks have been crashing, and many of them simply assume that their investments are safe.
And at one time Facebook was considered to be a very safe investment, but now 39.5 percent of the value of Facebook has already been completely wiped out.
It looks like November will be Facebook’s third month in a row in the red, and that will be the longest monthly losing streak that it has ever had.
A lot of people are shocked that this is happening so rapidly.  But really the only surprise is that it has taken this long for these massively overvalued stocks to crash and burn.
The truth is that these companies have been priced beyond perfection.  So when even the smallest piece of bad news comes along, investors can start to panic.
For example, one of the big reasons why Apple has declined so much is because production orders for all three of the new iPhones that were unveiled in September have been slashed.  It looks like iPhone sales are not going to be at quite the level everyone had anticipated, and Wall Street responded by throwing a huge temper tantrum.
And things look even more ominous for Facebook.  As Joel Kulina of Wedbush recently noted, the number of people that are using Facebook on a daily basis in North America is falling…
Joel Kulina of Wedbush says problems in the company have been evident longer than this month. “If you go back to that earnings report back in July, they missed across the board and what really jumps out at me is that we’re seeing declining daily and monthly active users in North America or stalling active user metrics in North America, declining in Europe and the only regions that are seeing growth is in Asia where the average revenue per user is much lower than the Western world,” Kulina said.
When Facebook decided to start censoring people for their political views on a massive basis, that was the beginning of the end for the company.  At this point they have alienated millions upon millions of users that were once addicted to the service, and that is damage that will never be repaired.
And it is inevitable that something newer, better and more engaging will eventually come along.  Not too long ago, MySpace was the unbeatable giant in social media, but then Facebook came along and crushed them.  Now it is clear that Facebook has peaked, and the void that is being created as Facebook declines will certainly be filled by someone else.
But what we are witnessing in the financial marketplace is not just about tech stocks.  This is a broad-based global decline, and it has been going on for quite some time.
In fact, just check out the following tidbit from Simon Black
Deutsche Bank says 89% of all asset classes it tracks are negative this year – the worst year since 1901. 
This is often how a big downturn begins: gradually, then suddenly. Asset prices stew and fester, slowly grinding downward for months while people maintain hope that prices will recover.
Yes, you read that correctly.
89 percent of all the asset classes that they track are down in 2018.
That is an absolutely astounding number.







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