| MAMMON'S CHRISTMAS THE DAILY RECKONING BALTIMORE, MARYLAND THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1999 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * In Today's Daily Reckoning: *** Profit taking ends *** Loss taking continues *** Pokemon out of stock! * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *** The bear market continues. The Dow rose 66 points yesterday. Nasdaq was up 50. But the IIX, the Internet average, fell. And so did most other stocks. *** Market pros refer to this as "declining breadth" or bad breadth. It's what's been happening for the last 20 months. *** Yesterday, for example, even though the Dow rose and the headline story on CNN was that "Profit Taking Ends," what really happened was that Loss Taking Continued! Nearly 10 times as many stocks hit new lows as hit new highs. *** The big news was that Bill Gates got richer when MSFT rose $9. The apparent reason? The company announced that its Windows 2000 version would be ready in February. The real reason, guesses Bill King, is that there was a massive play in the options market. Call options were released, which squeezed the shorts. *** Red Hat, posing a long-term threat to MSFT with its Linux system, also rose -- $26 bucks. *** But most stocks fell. And this bad breadth has been going on for so long you'd think the bear would need a rest. *** Ninety-six mills. That's all that separates a dollar from a euro. Less than a penny. As predicted in this space, the dollar has achieved parity with the euro. What's ahead? Steve Hanke, writing in "Forbes," says, "The only thing that can stop the euro's decline versus the greenback is if it gets lucky and Wall Street takes a dive." That's what I'm worried about. *** Crude oil is up over $26. Not to worry, the world economy is less dependent on oil than it was in the '70s. *** If oil means less...gold means almost nothing. The world financial system seems to have forgotten its romance with gold years ago...took the photo off the mantel...threw away the letters... Gold? Who? But the stuff rose $2.60 yesterday, in oblivion. *** And T-bond yields rose, too...as Geoffrey Moore's Future Inflation Gauge rose to a four-year high. *** You may recall that my son Edward, age 6, was so taken with Pikachu and the other Pokemon characters that when asked what he wanted to be when he grew up he replied, "Japanese!" So, I thought I'd pick up a couple of toys while in the United States. Easier said than done. They're sold out of many items. Even on E-Toys. *** Speaking of toys...Elizabeth asked me to get a toy for Edward called a "knocker." I had no idea what that was. "Just go up to the salesgirl," suggested Elizabeth innocently, "and ask to see some knockers." I think I'll try a different approach. *** Zimbabwe is in trouble. It has only a few days of financial reserves. Inflation is running over 70%. Who cares? I don't know...I just like to stay informed. *** PICT...Newbie...ASP...ColdFusion. There, just thought I'd toss out a few irrelevant Net terms. *** Maybe it's harder to get a woman pregnant today than it was when I was in college. I don't know why...but pregnancies fell to their lowest level in 20 years in 1996. There were 6.2 million babies conceived; 1.3 million of them were killed by doctors. Some women miscarried. There were 3.9 million births. *** In Europe, people are worried about the "Leap Year Bug." Year 2000 is a leap year. Supposedly, the way computers are programmed, they won't be able to recognize it. Big problems on Feb. 29, they predict. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
MAMMON'S CHRISTMAS Everyone is getting rich. There is even a popular TV show, I am told, called "Who Wants to be a Millionaire." Just glancing over the magazines in the lobby, I notice that almost every one has a headline implying that the reader can get seriously rich. "Forbes" has a clever parody of these covers on its current edition. The headline says: "Everyone Ought to be Rich." But when you look carefully, you see that it is a quote from John Raskob, circa 1929. But apart from the occasional doubter, the rest of the nation is ready for wealth and little else. "If not now," as Jim Davidson asked me yesterday, "when?" All of America seems obsessed. Mad. Money crazy. And yet, on Main Street as on Wall Street, it is only a very few people who are actually getting rich. Those are the people in the tech and Net sector. Most stocks do poorly. Most businesses limp along. Most people earn barely more this year than the last. But the money is moving from the old economy to the new one. And if you are in the right one...you stand to get rich. Microsoft alone is said to have about 8,000 employees who are millionaires, thanks to stock options. My advice to those lucky few, "take the money," forget about it...enjoy the Christmas season. "On the eastern coast of the Caribbean island of Barbados," writes Ray DeVoe, "is a large dish-shaped antennae pointed at an orbiting synchronous satellite." "It is a joint venture between the government and American Airlines that allowed the airline to close down their Dallas/Ft. Worth billing and reservations operations and hire Barbadians to do the job. Neither American Airlines nor the Barbadian government will disclose the wages and benefits paid, but knowing the island, the cost in that region would be roughly a quarter of what the airline would have to pay in wages and benefits in Texas." This is the future of e-commerce -- moving expensive, information-laden operations to low-cost places. You may remember that America used to manufacture things like radios, televisions and cameras. But the industry moved to places where labor is cheap. First, Japan...and then the rest of Asia. This trend has gone to such an extent that China recently recorded the highest trade surplus with the United States of any country ever. They make things in China. We buy them. And during the month of September alone we bought $6.9 billion more from the Chinese than we sold to them. Ray DeVoe chronicles how these Asian imports gained a foothold in the U.S. market. Distributors and manufacturers of American products were alarmed by the aggressive discounting in stores such as Korvettes. So they refused to sell to them, fearing Korvettes would undermine their price structure elsewhere. Korvettes turned to imported substitutes. Ray discovered Panasonic radios, for example, because the RCA models were not available in the discounters' stores. He tried the Japanese model and found that it was not only just as good -- it was better. It wasn't long after that the American manufacturers were completely replaced by their Asian competitors. E-tailers such as the E-Toys I visited last night claim they are able to offer better service and lower prices by cutting out the distributors. But they are vulnerable, too. The E-Toys back office could have been anywhere. If cost-saving is the name of the game, why not set up shop in India? There are as many bright, well-educated, English-speaking people in India as there are in America. And they work for a whole lot less. I had dinner last night with Dan Denning -- who discovered Pokemon as an investment opportunity more than a year ago. Dan is researching Asian software companies for the next "Fleet Street Letter" because he believes that Asian entrepreneurs will do to e-commerce and the software industry in the United States what they did to manufacturing in the 1980s. They'll take the best ideas and replicate them...operating faster and at lower costs. And they'll take the whole e-tail industry to the next level -- bypassing the giant e-tailers such as E-Toys and Amazon...and connecting customers directly with what they really want. The Internet is a great tool for exchanging information. It does not seem to me to be a very good device for shopping. When I discovered that the Pokemon that I was looking for were not in stock...I did not browse around the shop and see what else the boys might like. Maybe other people do that...but I couldn't imagine being able to make a selection based on the images and information on the screen. I could only buy what I already knew I wanted. It was just a means of ordering, not shopping. The "WSJ" carried an article about one of its reporters who planned her whole wedding on the Internet. She ordered everything sitting at a computer terminal. "How sad," writes Ray. Planning a wedding is "supposed to be savored, enjoyed and shared with others." This year, no doubt, people will organize their entire Christmas celebrations on the Internet. Maybe they will also sing carols while downloading the lyrics...and looking at photos of shut-ins. And they will get frustrated...eager for the holiday to be over so they can get back to the real world...of getting rich in the new economy. But if the things people really want -- the toys, the electronics, the clothes -- are manufactured in China and other lower-cost places...which they are... And if the sales channels are streamlined to reduce the importance of U.S. distributors, both traditional and Internet...which I predict... ...then you have to wonder what will be done in the United States? Will we all "take in each other's laundry," as Harold Wilson once asked? Getting rich in the new economy may not be as easy as they think. Bill Bonner * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
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