Circle of Money

by Kris_Tuttle on October 6, 2009

We’re lis­ten­ing to the lat­est eco­nomic and mar­ket analy­sis from the smart gents at GaveKal research and dur­ing the talk we were reminded of some con­di­tions that existed dur­ing the most intense phase of the tech­nol­ogy bub­ble of 1999 and 2000.

It’s obvi­ous that China has been financ­ing US con­sump­tion so that they could enjoy the growth that has helped to pro­pel their econ­omy.  Equally true but less obvi­ous is that Ger­many has been doing the same thing for weaker coun­tries in Europe to the tune of a few per­cent­age points of GDP.

Some may not remem­ber that in 1999 we wit­nessed some extreme busi­ness prac­tices.  A startup com­pany would accept a large invest­ment from a larger com­pany.  At the same time the large com­pany would be come a “mar­que cus­tomer” of the startup.  On top of that cozy mutual reward sys­tem the startup would offer the larger com­pany pay­ment terms, basi­cally financ­ing their purchase.

In ret­ro­spect it is dif­fi­cult to imag­ine that investors tol­er­ated this type of activ­ity.  But tol­er­ate they did and until the dam broke early in 2000 many embraced it with both arms.

Right now this same type of activ­ity is going on with respect to China and the US and Ger­many and many of the EU coun­tries. Of course the scale of these oper­a­tions are vastly larger than what hap­pened in the US tech­nol­ogy sec­tor back in 1999.  But it has been going on for some time and there is no way to know how long it will con­tinue.  Some have spec­u­lated that the Ger­mans tol­er­ate it because the aver­age man on the street doesn’t real­ize that it is going on and those that do real­ize it’s a bit like a fatal embrace.  If Ger­many were to clamp down, their own econ­omy would tank.  The same sit­u­a­tion vis a vis China has been dis­cussed ad nauseam.

What should one make of this?  In the short term there doesn’t appear to be much to do about it.  The US and the global econ­omy has sta­bi­lized and is recov­er­ing.  All eco­nomic play­ers are com­mit­ted to main­tain easy money for some time and the cur­rent worry is more defla­tion than infla­tion.  Nearly all the play­ers have a strong shared inter­est in main­tain­ing this broadly faith-based sys­tem of mea­sures to keep all the plates spinning.

We thought that a piece we pub­lished back in April of 2007 “What would Godel do?” was now very much out of date but it may come in handy again.

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