I wade through hundreds of commentaries and news reports on a daily basis. Occasionally, I come across an article that really makes me stop and say: "Amen, brother." When that happens, I feel compelled to share it with Financial Armageddon readers (and anybody else who cares about what is going on in the world around us).
The latest example is a post entitled "Suppressing the Cognitive Dissonance of a Bogus Recovery," by Charles Hugh Smith, author of Survival+: Structuring Prosperity for Yourself and the Nation and publisher of the Of Two Minds blog, a long-time favorite of mine. I invite you to read through it and see if you don't agree with me that Charles' take on reality is a breath of fresh, unadulterated air:
Despite a 24/7 campaign of carefully managed "good news," 76% of Americans do not believe the U.S. "recovery." Hmm, I wonder why?
A massive outbreak of economic cognitive dissonance is being suppressed with wave after wave of manufactured "good news." Every visibly negative bit of data is run through a media and Central State assembly line to refashion it as "good news" and "evidence" that the "nascent recovery is taking hold." Whatever cannot be rejiggered is simply buried or suppressed.
The fact that five corporations control the the vast majority of the U.S. mainstream media certainly aids that manufacturing process.
Let's run through a few of the most blatant examples of suppressed dissonance:
1. If the economy is recovering so strongly ( +3% GDP growth in the first quarter!) then why are tax revenues down? Federal budget deficit hits April record: The April deficit soared to $82.7 billion. Total revenues for April were down 7.9 percent from a year ago. In the seven months of this year, corporate tax receipts are up 8.9% to $77.1 billion. The same cannot be said of individual income tax revenue, which is down 11.6% in the first seven months to $500.8 billion.
Through the first seven months of the current budget year, which began on Oct. 1, the deficit totals nearly $800 billion. That is down only slightly from last year's deficit during the same period of $802 billion. Revenues total $1.2 trillion in those seven months, down 4.5 percent from the same period last year.
How can tax revenues be falling when the economy is "growing strongly"? As for those corporate profits: corporate profits register biggest year-over-year gain in 25 years.
As this chart from the Federal Reserve shows, non-financial corporate profits were almost 14% of GDP before the global meltdown. In a $13 trillion economy, that's $1.8 trillion.
But much of the "good news" in Corporate America is not quite as rosy as presented.
2. Rising corporate profits mask falling sales. Consider Walmart's last report, which caused the financial media to quiver in ecstasy because the retailer logged a 10% increase in profits. But behind the hype, (profits rose $0.3 billion on $99 billion in sales, whoopie), Walmart same-store sales drop; gross margins decline.
You have to read to the very last line to get to the sobering reality: same-store sales dropped in the U.S. and gross margins declined. Both are bad news, yet you'd never know it from the lead paragraphs and talking heads.
3. Corporate profits are boosted with special charges and other accounting trickery. It takes a forensic accounting analysis of corporate filings to discern what's real and what's been juiced to boost quarterly "earnings."
Meanwhile, corporations are loading up on debt again: Junk bonds-- essentially risky bets on future corporate earnings--made up the biggest share of corporate debt sales on record last year. That hardly suggests prudence on the part of the companies loading up on tens of billions of dollars of high-interest debt. Load the company with debt, goose profits, cash out the big bonuses and then let the balance sheet implode.
4. Much of global corporate America's earnings resulted from the weak dollar. Now that boost to the bottom line has largely vanished in the collapse of the euro.
Many of America's premiere global companies earn most of their revenue overseas. Equipment maker Eaton, for instance, gets 55% of its sales from outside the U.S. Global companies such as Coca-Cola not only reap most of their sales overseas-- they also depend on international growth to boost their profits.
As the U.S. dollar has risen 25% against the euro, the U.S. multinationals' plump profits (in dollars) will take a huge hit. Indeed, American multinationals such as Caterpiller have already seen their stocks pummeled as traders realize the dollar's rise will slice their profits.
Here's how the weak dollar boosted U.S. corporate profits. In mid-2008, when a U.S. company booked 100 euros in profit made overseas, that translated into $160 in profits when calculated in U.S. dollars. Now that same 100 euros in profit translates into $122—a huge reduction.
If that wasn't bad enough, our major trading partners are heading into epic slowdowns. As the wheels fall off the credit/housing bubble in China--the global engine for commodities and manufacturing--and the credit storm takes down Europe--the world's largest trading bloc--U.S. corporate sales and profits will suffer.
5. Income inequality has risen to 1929 levels. If times are indeed good, they're only good for the top 5% of households. The bottom 80% have seen their net worth and incomes decline. So much for "trickle-down" prosperity.
6. U.S. households remain mired in debt. U.S. households took on too much debt and the consequences are still unfolding: 14% of mortgages delinquent or in foreclosure. This is only the above-water part of the iceberg; banks are holding tens of thousands of loans out of foreclosure lest their insolvency become too obvious. Tens of thousands of homes are being hidden in the "shadow inventory" of homes which are in default but which are not listed for sale.
Resetting the mortgage payments down a few dollars will do nothing to change the massive over-indebtedness: Home-Loan Aid Proves Little Help For Those With Other Big Bills to Pay.
Click here to read the rest.










Thanks for posting the article.
Here in Oregon, it was reported in the Oregonian that 19% (700,000) of the people in the state are reliant on food stamps.
Hard to see a recovery with those type of numbers.
Posted by: Phil | May 19, 2010 at 09:05 PM
April 9, 2010
from the link ... http://forums.armageddononline.org/showpost.php?p=354356&postcount=8
I've been looking for a new home for awhile, and I was looking before Christmas. I'm stunned at the number of houses sitting empty with signs attached saying "No Trespassing," or "Winterized." Almost every neighborhood averaged four or five, out of about fifty.
This inventory of empty dwellings is keeping prices artificially higher, because these houses obviously aren't on the market. This is also artificially keeping rent averages higher, affecting people displaced from homes they cannot afford, due to the bubble. So people are getting screwed in two ways in terms of their housing.
Not only did I see empty houses, I saw what can only be described as a blizzard of "for sale" signs in every neighborhood. I would estimate at least 4-5 in every neighborhood, out of about fifty. This doesn't count those that I missed for various reasons, but which I know are there. This means we're looking at 15-20% of available houses on the market, and/or potentially on the market.
I don't know how prices are holding up as well as they are, because the smart buyers are going to wait this out until prices fall even further. The exact same mentality that drove prices higher, should now drive them lower.
This will eventually have a profound effect on the banking system, because in order for a natural balance to be restored, you must have confidence, and that cannot come back without jobs.
Posted by: Don | May 19, 2010 at 11:15 PM
Thank God for "Financial Armeggeddon" and other websites like it.. you do such a very important service of providing honesty when all mainstream visual and print media outright lie. Keep up the great work!
Posted by: Tyler Eliott | May 20, 2010 at 02:16 AM
Hi,
I am Belinda Dawson, a webmaster of some finance related sites & blogs wanted to keep a good website proposal for you.
I visited your blog, financialarmageddon.com, which is totally related to FINANCE and I think that the content of your site will be of good interest to the visitors.
I believe that only good content will not help you in gaining the Google values. For that purpose healthy content link exchange or Normal link exchange is essential. If you agree with this we can exchange some articles as well as good links which will provide an extra benefit to our sites.
I wish to utilize this opportunity, because your site is fully related to my topic.
I would appreciate if you place my link within the content to our site and I will do the same. It will give extra mileage to our sites and help to gain some extra values in the eyes of search engines.
If you agree with me please reply me on this email: belinda[dot]dawson1984[at]gmail[dot]com. I have some good offers which can fulfill your requirements,
Looking forward for your positive reply!!
Thanks,
Belinda Dawson
Posted by: Belinda Dawson | May 20, 2010 at 03:40 AM
Obedience,belief,fate and hope.... what better way
to pacify the mob? why is everybody surprised?
this has been going on since the down of civilisation,
it's cheaper and less messy than bringing out the riot squad.
The only thing missing at the ATM machine is a confession
booth for the financial sinners.
PS: Two Minds blog, ,great site, thanks Michael
Posted by: roger | May 20, 2010 at 12:20 PM
sorry, (faith) ,stubpid key board!
Posted by: roger | May 20, 2010 at 12:49 PM
Charles Smith is one of my favorite writers. He has some deep insights to offer on the sham economy (plus many other issues) and is a definite wordSmith. Go Charles!
Posted by: robert | May 20, 2010 at 02:33 PM
Lying holds everything together! It seems it directly correlates with your success!
Keiser Report
This week we look at the scandals of lying children, probing banks, Wall Street barbarism and German fantasies.
http://tinyurl.com/29ma7mw
Posted by: The world has changed | May 20, 2010 at 03:06 PM
As a sign of the times, the Emirates Palace, the most luxurious hotel in Abu Dhabi, has just installed the first ATM dispensing 10 gram gold bars instead of notes. Source: CNBC, 05/13/2010
Posted by: roger | May 20, 2010 at 04:31 PM
Very refreshing article, doesn't mention energy or the dollar/crude oil connection.
Why is there a 'strong' dollar? Because one can buy a half- gallon of a product that is absolutely essential to modernity. Can't say the same thing about soft drinks or fork lift trucks ....
Posted by: steve from virginia | May 20, 2010 at 05:49 PM