The importance of the consumer in our economy cannot be understated. The consumer's actions account for 70% of our Gross Domestic Product.
The chart below (from chartistfriendfrompittsburgh) shows a fading GDP, much of which is due to a consumer that is just plain tapped out. On our last post we showed a chart that reflected the decline in net wage income that has been going on for some 20 years. The consumer's net worth is also in the tank as a result of the home and banking crashes we entered in 2005 and we are likely headed for another recession in 2013 which in reality is just a continuation of the recession that never ended. Now if you live in "bizzaro world" you believe we are on the road to recovery and we just need to spend a few trillion more to insure our success.
The real issue we need to address is the monumental amount of debt we have amassed in the pursuit of output to feed the consumption machines (the consumer). Here's a couple of quotes from Kyle Bass in an article on the Economic-Undertow.com blog. The Debt problem we face now is so monumental that no amount of Taxation nor spending cuts, in the short term, will be able to fix the problem.
(1) "...... the bottom line is … the total credit-market debt to GDP globally is 350%, it’s $200 trillion dollars worth of debt … against global GDP of roughly $62 trillion …"
(2) "Debts cannot be serviced — much less retired — with the economies at death’s door: future GDP growth is theoretical."The article this information was taken from is titled "Japan=Detroit". The link is below and its worth reading and watching the video of what Detroit looks like today. All the spending brought us to the edge of the abyss.
http://www.economic-undertow.com/2012/11/22/japan-detroit/
From "The Burning Platform" blog comes this rather scathing view of what most consumers have become. It really pays to look in the mirror sometimes to see what's looking back at you. I tend to agree we really need to begin looking at what's important rather than how much crap can we accumulate.
The Soulless Consumer
“In the developed countries there is poverty of intimacy, a poverty of spirit, of loneliness, of lack of love. There is no greater sickness in the world today than that one.”
Americans are trained from the time they are babies their duty and right is to consume. Even a person living in a cave knows what generates 70% of our economy: consumer consumption. As an American there is no greater good and no better vocation than consuming as much as you can. It’s the mantra spewed forth from T.V.s, the internet, radio, billboards; there is no escaping advertising designed to make you feel compelled to consume. Americans have learned their lesson well, they consume more per capita than any other country in the world. But what does consumption get you really? Mother Teresa hit the nail on the head: Poverty of intimacy, spirit; loneliness, lack of love. There is no greater sickness. This from a modern-day saint who treated leprosy and saw more suffering and sorrow than most people can imagine. Yet, there is no greater sickness than in developed countries. A scathing conclusion.
The modern day consumer. Walking the isles at Wal-Mart (the largest company in the world), wandering around the malls, filling grocery carts with crappy food that will make them fat. Consume until you can consume no more. Consume until you can barely walk anymore. Watch T.V. commercials for hours on end to get motivated to do it all again. On Saturday morning, get out of the way on the highways and byways, rabid consumers will run you over trying to get to stores to spend their hard-earned dollars on stuff they don’t need and can barely afford.
Mother Teresa “In My Own Words”
Yet look into their eyes, as they try to get ahead of you in the check-out line. Their eyes are empty, their souls are gone, they don’t look happy like in the commercials, they look strung-out, vacuous. There is little joy in consumption.http://www.theburningplatform.com/?p=44211
Now here's a look at the Market:
Found a great site that covers cycles and is very well done. It's called Swing Trade Cycles and it can be found at the address shown below the chart. Last post we showed an Elliott five wave down in process with the end of the fifth wave near the 1320 mark. Here the cycles also show the move lower and the initial target is the 1348 range. The target timing for the completion of this move lower is mid-December. We should then get a rally into January to placate all the folks that count on a Christmas rally.
| www.swingcycles.blogspot.com |
















































