
MCNOSIS,
RETIRING BOOMERS AND THE SILENT CRASH
by Michael A. Nystrom
BullNotBull.com
February 1, 2007
If
there was any doubt that the American people were engaged in a deep,
collective slumber, one need look no further than the cover story of the
most recent BusinessWeek "McDonald's
Goes 24/7," for evidence. The article describes the company's
new "sizzle" that has its earnings growing like gangbusters,
as well as a number of cultural trends that that are transforming both
McDonald's and American society in general. While the restaurant chain
had previously focused on a growth strategy that relied on opening more
stores, it has recently changed its focus to squeezing ever more revenue
out of existing stores by: extending breakfast hours (for people on the
go), serving different kinds of snacks (for people on the go), and --
you guessed it -- staying open 24 hours a day, for people on the go.
Today 40% of McDonald's are open around the clock, compared to just
half of one percent in 2002. Talk about growth -- this is a company
on overdrive! But these business hours necessarily implies that that it
is not just the company, but also the entire country that is on
overdrive, too busy to cook, routinely pulling all-nighters and working
graveyard shifts.
Who are all these people on the go? At 3:30 in the morning, it is a
young man who's just finished a 12-hour graveyard shift at a nearby food
warehouse, on his way home to crash. Whereas he used to stop by a
convenience store or a diner for his supper, now he says he stops by
McDonald's at least five times a week. Dude! I don't care what
anyone says, that is not healthy. I guess he never saw the film Supersize
Me. Chances are he didn't, because chances are, that like many of
McDonald's own employees, he is poorly educated and perhaps a even high
school dropout. In the age of "No Child Left Behind," nearly
1/3 of public high school kids will never graduate. This too is part
of the ongoing evolution of America - graveyard shifts by high-school
dropouts working at low paying jobs, serving ever more people without a
moment to spare.
By six a.m. in the same store, the restaurant's wall-mounted flat screen
TV's are tuned to CNN, so that customers can stare at the scrolling news
ticker as they wait for their McGriddles and coffee in the predawn
hours. By lunchtime, the drive-thru is serving 90 cars per hour.
Business is brisk because people are busy, the food is cheap and
McDonald's specifically engineers new snacks that can be eaten while
driving. More than ever, Americans today are in a mad rush to get
wherever it is that they are going, and more than anything, that is good
for business. There are no explicit limits to this kind of growth, no
laws or regulations on business hours, and no minimum wages for working
through the night. It is simply what the market will bear. What I find
curious about this is that while business people would balk at any kind
of centralized government regulations of these kinds, there is no outcry
at all over the nation's centrally planned and regulated currency.
Yesterday the nation's Federal banking cartel (aka "da Fed")
announced the results of its most recent price fixing meeting, and the
market cheered!
Few people, neither those working at McDonald's nor those rushing in and
out for their meals have time to think about anything as arcane as this.
There is little time to ponder the larger issues that may be confronting
them or the society they live in. "Eating is something they simply
'check off,'" the article says. There are lots of things on that
daily list to check off, and as a result most have become mere bundles
of conditioned responses. Ivan Pavlov taught us about conditioned
responses with his dog: Ring the bell, give the dog food, his mouth
waters. Ring the bell, give the dog food, his mouth waters. Ring the
bell, and eventually even without food, his mouth still waters. This is
how more and more Americans are living each day of their lives, going
through all the motions without the foggiest idea as to why, living
lives in a collective state of zombified hypnosis (McNosis). And this
isn't just the working class, but the professional classes too --
traders, doctors, lawyers, executives, lawmakers, and the like. There
are simply too many stimuli to respond to every day, leaving too little
room for actual thinking. So this is what America has become. In such a
heightened, frenzied state, a person's responses become instinctual,
emotional, governed by the primitive limbic system, or
"reptilian" brain.
Traders know that in such frenzied arenas as financial markets this is
taken to the extreme. Markets do not plan their movements, but dance to
a primal tune. Wednesday, for example after "da Fed" gave the
market what amounted to an all clear on Wednesday, US financial markets
proceeded to go ga-ga! Stocks rose and bond yields fell in a euphoric
celebration. Had anything fundamentally changed to justify such a
response? Only the most important thing: perceptions. A certain
perception of the future (the Goldilocks future) caused an emotional
market reaction, leading the Dow into record territory once again.
But these charts, from the December Elliott Wave Theorist, show that
from an inflation-adjusted standpoint, what is actually going on in the
stock market is a crash of historic proportions - a "Silent
Crash" as Prechter calls it. The first shows the Dow measured in
gold, the second measured by the CRB index.

You won't hear about this silent crash on Bubblevision, nor read about
it on the scrolling CNN news ticker at McDonald's. Your coworkers won't
talk about it. And though you may have a vague sense of unease that
something is not right, you won't know why because everything on the
surface looks so peachy. "Something
is happening, but you don't know what it is - do you, Mr. Jones?"
But if history is any guide, this crash won't stay silent forever. The
noisemaking should begin any time now.
Editor's Note: Through an exclusive one-week
promotion From Feb 1-8, you can download this entire report for free, as
well as see a video presentation on the Silent Crash by clicking
here. I highly recommend it.
What the charts above demonstrate is a persistent inflationary trend.
Even though the Dow has been making new nominal highs, the value of
real, hard goods - gold and commodities - have been rising faster. Can
this continue, or will the law of gravity reassert itself?
Retiring Boomers
Considering the glowering generational storm clouds that are hanging on
America's horizon, it makes little sense on the surface that the market
is making new highs. Not more than two weeks ago, Bernanke, head of the
same Fed that sounded the all clear yesterday, was on the Hill finger
wagging at the Senate Committee on the Budget saying they've got to
get the country's fiscal house in order, and quick. While things look
okay now, he said (if you call a $248 - $434 billion budget deficit okay),
they're only going to get worse as our nation's population ages. Boomers
are getting older, they're getting sicker and when they start to retire
they're going to be expensive, and suck up much of the country's
resources. Bernanke goes into this in his speech, but something a little
more succinct and readable is here: Tough
Times Ahead for Elder Boomersa short excerpt from Peter G.
Peterson's 2004 book Running
on Empty.
Peterson goes on to say:
If we can't grow our way out of the cost problem, some say there's another option: inflating our way out of it. Printing money has been the last recourse of governments throughout history. From Revolutionary France in the 1790s to Weimar Germany in the 1920s, regimes under duress have made their ends meet by inflating their spending power ahead of their fixed obligations. Although no one, Democrat or Republican, today advocates a policy of deliberate inflation, many suppose that if all else fails, the government could someday resort to inflation to reduce its long-term entitlement obligations.So there you have it. Just FYI - that's the Chairman of the CFR speaking.
Is this a realistic option? Probably not. Inflation usually ends up destroying social trust and ruining the economy. Furthermore, it is a "fix" that can only be used once - indeed, can only be discussed once. The mere expectation of inflation would cause interest rates to leap upward to compensate creditors for the anticipated erosion of their real claims. Even as a short-term palliative, moreover, inflation may not have the desired effect. Social Security benefits are by law indexed to the price level - and Medicare benefits are in effect indexed to it. Yes, inflation would reduce the real value of the formal public debt. But it would do little to reduce the value of our unfounded entitlement promises, which we have seen are many times larger. In the end, deliberate inflation would act like a perverse chemotherapy regime that ravages the body while leaving the tumor untouched.
McNosis
As Bernanke (also (of course) CFR) noted, without radical changes, the long-term economic picture is grim. The debts already pushed onto future generations are staggering, and inflation isn't a potential solution. I think this goes a long way towards explaining the Silent Crash that is already underway. On the surface, the economy looks fine, but peel back the fa�ade and you see our foundation of prosperity is crumbling. This is clear enough from a common-sense standpoint: As a nation, we can't expect to go on spending more than we make forever -- such are the thoughts of a na�ve young country -- though our politicians repeatedly tell us otherwise. At this point however, the collective perception - the McNosis, if you will - is that America is somehow different, somehow special, somehow exempt from history.
In the coming years we'll have the choice between creating a society that is either like heaven or hell. But the first step towards a solution is having a clear and accurate understanding of the realities we face. Creating a prosperous future for all will require very real, deep and heavy thinking that results in a radically re-envisioned society. It will likely require a redefinition of what it means to be both human as well as an American. I'm the first to admit that there is no easy McSolution. It will take more than conditioned responses.
Your comments, and solutions are welcome here.
© 2007
Michael A. Nystrom
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Michael A. Nystrom
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