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The Stupidity of Government Intervention
By Tom Dyson
December 17, 2008

The only other time I'd ever seen this was in my school history books, learning about the Great Depression...

In September 2007, Britain's most overleveraged mortgage bank – Northern Rock – asked the government for an emergency loan. When its customers heard the news, they rushed to the nearest branch of Northern Rock to withdraw their savings. They formed queues around the block.

The next day, the government announced it was guaranteeing Northern Rock's deposits, and the panic went away. Then a funny thing happened...

Suddenly, people started draining money from all the other banks in Britain and depositing it at Northern Rock!

The government intended to make the financial system stronger by shoring up Northern Rock. But it made the financial system weaker by undermining the financial strength of all other banks. In the end, the government ended up nationalizing the whole system.

The same thing happened in Ireland. It was the weakest financial system in the euro-zone. Then it guaranteed all its deposits. All the money in Europe started flowing into Ireland. This weakened the banking systems in the other European countries, and they had to guarantee their bank accounts, too.

In the United States, the government is doing everything it can to help homeowners stay in their houses. These people couldn't afford their houses in the first place, but the government wants to keep them happy. So it won't let the banks foreclose their properties, and it's making banks reduce the principal on the loans.

Would you lend money to a home buyer knowing the government won't let you take the house if he doesn't pay you... or that the borrower doesn't have to pay the whole loan back? No way. Not unless you could charge an astronomical interest rate. The government won't let you do that either. Government regulations cap the interest rates you can charge on a mortgage.

So the government thinks it's helping unfreeze the credit markets. But it's actually making them worse.

Here's the point: Government intervention makes the whole system weaker.

Intervention kidnaps money that would otherwise be available to businesspeople and entrepreneurs... and it invests it in places that businesspeople and entrepreneurs would never put their money... like uncompetitive car companies or failed banks. Then it creates unintended consequences that make everyone poorer.

Government stimulus does not stimulate, it stifles. So when you look at the current levels of government intervention all around the world... India, Australia, China, Taiwan, Britain, Europe, and the biggest of all in America... you have to conclude it will lead to the biggest loss of productivity ever.
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When the government controls an economy's financial decision-making, no one makes any money. This is why the government interventions haven't had any effect so far. It's also why stock prices will fall to valuations far lower than at normal bear-market bottoms of the past few decades.

So I'm not ready to call a bottom in the stock market. I'm only willing to buy a stock if it has a balance sheet with no debt, it generates tons of cash flow from selling a simple product, and it pays a dividend I know cannot be cut under any circumstance.

Besides that, I'm sticking to gold and cash.

Good investing,

Tom

Editor's note: Tom Dyson is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Tom Dyson.

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SUPERTRADER CALLS FOR A BOND DECLINE

It doesn't take long for a great speculator to explain how he or she makes consistent money in the market. The whole art can be summed up in eight words: "Whatever the crowd does, I do the opposite."

As our colleague Jeff Clark explained to his Growth Stock Wire readers yesterday, the great speculator has to consider going against the huge crowd piling into U.S. government bonds right now – no matter how tiny the yields earned. Jeff put it like this:

"Last Monday, the U.S. Treasury auctioned off $5 billion of three-month T-bills for 0.00%... [This] demonstrates the insatiable demand for Treasury securities over any other investment asset. Rather than take the risk of buying blue-chip stocks at cheap valuations and with fat dividend yields... rather than buy gold, silver, oil, or any other commodity at fire-sale prices... investors prefer to lock in a guaranteed negative real return."

As you can see from today's chart of the U.S. government bond ETF, the crowd is scared to death. They're chasing the price of bonds to the moon, and they're accepting pathetically low interest rates in compensation. When the crowd loves something, it's best to avoid it like grim death.

20+ Year Treasury Bond Fund

Toys "R" Us Asia Ltd., a unit of Hong Kong-based Li & Fung Group, scaled back expansion plans for 2009 and suspended entering new markets because it expects demand to drop further amid the global recession.

The company plans to cut new-store openings to seven from as many as 30, and will shut six underperforming outlets, Pieter Schats, chief executive officer for Toys "R" Us Asia, said today in an interview in Hong Kong. It opened 40 outlets this year. Same-store sales dropped by as much as 8 percent so far in December, its peak month.

"It's a hell of a hit," Schats said.

– Bloomberg

It does appear, if we are to believe many of the reports [Tuesday] morning, that President Bush is about to release a rather sizeable sum of money remaining the TARP for Detroit. We oppose this openly, and think this shall be one of the worst decisions made by the Bush Administration in a long series of bad decision. We shall be rewarding bad behaviour in the process of giving several tens of billions of tax payer money, and we shall be sending a signal to the market that "good behaviour" will be treated with disdain.

...And how can we even begin to explain how bailing out Chrysler, and thus Cerberus, the private equity fund that now owns Chrysler, with taxpayers' money is right. Taking the taxes from the plumber in Cleveland, or the wheat farmer in Kansas, or the small builder in Sacramento and sending them to Cerberus' management is utterly noxious to us... and yet that is where we are heading? Shame upon the Bush Administration if the decision to give Detroit money is made... today... or tomorrow or next week or ever.

– Dennis Gartman
The Gartman Letter

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