From a 40-year period of falling interest rates and rising asset pricesâ¦it is moving towards a long trend of higher real rates and lower real asset prices. Most likely, the movements will be distorted by inflation. That is, the dollar is likely to decline in value making the actual price trends hard to decipher. Meanwhile, the great Empire rolls overâ¦degenerates, declinesâ¦the genders get reassignedâ¦the pronouns get scrambledâ¦reparations get passed out, or notâ¦the deficits get biggerâ¦growth gets weakerâ¦free speech is suppressedâ¦the military/industrial/spook/university/pharmaceutical/medical/press complex gets richerâ¦the middle class gets poorerâ¦the new digital money replaces the dollarâ¦the Federal government goes brokeâ¦and everything is distorted by fraudulent money and the fake media. But wait. Itâs not that simple! Familiar faces Yesterday, Guy came over to dig a trench for an electric line for a new apartment. Guy is short, muscular, tannedâ¦.in his 60s. Weâve known him for at least a quarter of a century. But weâve never seen him without a small cigar in his mouth and a slightly rakish look. âBonjour Monsieur Bonner,â he greets us rather formally. But when he sees Elizabeth, his arms stretch out. He embraces her and addresses her with the informal âtuââ¦which is shockingly familiar. âYou are looking as âmignoneâ as ever,â he continues, giving her a big hug. âYou might need to get your eyes checked,â Elizabeth was quick with a comeback. There is always a bit of flirtiness in the French countryside. Perhaps it comes from the lack of other distractions. Without it, men feel less manlyâ¦and women are disappointed. As for todayâs non-binary farmhandsâ¦we donât know how they roll. Weâre here in France where weâve spent summers for the last 28 years. According to the news, southern Europe is roasting. But here in central France, we wear sweatersâ¦it is rainy and chilly. Do reports on the summer weather patterns give us an accurate view? Or do they distort it? We live in a house that was once the centre of a large farm. The house is bigâ¦if a bit ramshackle. And there are many outbuildings that once served as barns, workshops, storage areas, living quarters, stables, poultry houses, a bakery â everything that a farm community needed in the 19th century. Once there were many families living here. Now there is only ours. And our family too has been greatly reduced. The children have grown up. They have their own careers and children of their own. And our aged relatives â who lived with us â have passed away. A confusing mix of signals Often, Elizabeth and your editor are here alone dwarfed by history, the house itself and its surroundings. But in the summer, we encourage the whole family to come for a vacation. And so, they come â childrenâ¦grandchildrenâ¦niecesâ¦nephewsâ¦friendsâ¦friends of friendsâ¦and sometimes a few people of uncertain provenance. Suddenly, the place comes alive againâ¦as it was when our own children were little. And then we discover â we donât have enough space for them all! So, your editor has set to work, turning a loft in one of the empty outbuildings into an apartment. (More about that anon.) And that too brings back the old days with all the noise and commotion of renovating an old house. Guy with his diggerâ¦an electrician with his drillâ¦hammers hammeringâ¦plumbers a-plumbingâ¦and six geese a-laying. What a delight! But enough idle chit-chat. Returning to the US economy⦠We are looking at distortions â a confusing mix of signals. Some tell us that the old economy, 1982â2022, is still doing its thing. Others tell us that things have changed. And some donât know what they are trying to say. A teary ending Letâs begin by looking at those that signal trouble ahead. Charlie Bilello: âThe Leading Economic Index declined in June for the 15th month in a row, the longest down streak since 2007â08. The Conference Board is still forecasting a recession from Q3 2023 to Q1 2024 driven by âelevated prices, tighter monetary policy, harder-to-get credit, and reduced government spending.â âUS Industrial Production is already seeing a slowdown, with growth turning negative on a YoY basis for the first time since February 2021. âAdditionally, US Retail Sales have increased less than 1% over the last year and after adjusting for inflation have declined on a YoY basis for eight consecutive months.â Yahoo Finance reports that⦠âJohn Hussman is doubling down on his dire outlook for US stocks⦠âStretched equity valuations suggest that the S&P 500 index would be required to plunge by as much as 64% for the market to return to more balanced conditions, according to the asset-bubble expert who successfully predicted the stock routs of 2000 and 2008. ââThe present combination of historically rich valuations, unfavourable internals, and extreme overextension places our market return/risk estimates â near term, intermediate, full-cycle, and even 10â12 year, at the most negative extremes we define,â Hussman, president of the Hussman Investment Trust, wrote in a note. âYes, this is a bubble in my view. Yes, I believe it will end in tears.ââ On the other hand, yesterday brought another (barely) positive day of trading. If there is trouble ahead, the stock market doesnât see it. But then, it never does. It is always at the very peak of the day that the evening begins. Overall, the stock market indexes are now within whiskers of setting new highs â in nominal terms. We add that âin nominal termsâ because already, the price structure has changed a lot over the last couple of years, distorting real values. Let us say Americans pay about 10% more for consumer goods and services than they did in 2021 when the Dow boomed over 36,000. In order to stay even with inflation, the Dow would have to go to nearly 40,000. Thatâs what inflation does to everything; it distorts the truth. It lies. It prevaricates. Investors think they are making money, but they are just keeping up with rising prices. Unmolested spiders Our guess is that whatever else is happening, the distortions will become more complex in the years ahead. The much-anticipated recession hasnât happened yet. But keep your shirts on â please! Most likely, the economy will begin to walk backwards later this year. And most likely, the recession will be deeperâ¦and longerâ¦than people expect. This will prompt the Fed to begin cutting rates rather than raising them. And that is where the real distortions and confusions begin. Prices will go up. But real values will fall. It will be hard to know if youâre getting richer or poorerâ¦coming or going. Probably the most confusing market right now is the US housing market. While other prices are coming down, housing prices are still near an all-time high. But the number of houses for sale has plummeted. People are âlocked inâ to low-interest mortgages. They canât sell; they canât moveâ¦or they will have to face much bigger down payments and much higher mortgage payments. This has left the pool of houses available for sale nearly 30% smaller than in 2019. More amazingly, there are approximately 50 million more people in the US than there were in January 2000. But there are 37% fewer existing houses for sale today than there were then. Think of the poor real estate agents! Nothing to sell. No one to sell it to. Spiders build their webs in real estate office doorways, confident that they will be unmolested. Banks close their accounts for lack of activity. The volume of sales declined again last year, the 22nd year in a row of falling sales. Relative to the population, never have so few houses have been available to buyers. But donât worry. You canât afford one anyway. Considering todayâs 7% mortgage rates, never have they been so expensive. Regards, Bill Bonner, For The Daily Reckoning Australia The post Degenerate, Decline and Distort appeared first on Daily Reckoning Australia. [Image] Here are Some More Investing Tips and Resources. Enjoy! Sponsored [Click here to get your FREE Trade to Win Playbook now!]( [Degenerate, Decline and Distort]( From a 40-year period of falling interest rates and rising asset pricesâ¦it is moving towards a long trend of higher real rates and lower real asset prices. Most likely, the movements will be distorted by inflation. That is, the dollar is likely to decline in value making the actual price trends hard to decipher. Meanwhile, the great Empire rolls overâ¦degenerates, declinesâ¦the genders get reassignedâ¦the pronouns get scrambledâ¦reparations get passed out, or notâ¦the deficits get biggerâ¦growth gets weakerâ¦free speech is suppressedâ¦the military/industrial/spook/university/pharmaceutical/medical/press complex gets richerâ¦the middle class gets poorerâ¦the new digital money replaces the dollarâ¦the Federal government goes brokeâ¦and everything is distorted by fraudulent money and the fake media. But wait. Itâs not that simple! Familiar faces Yesterday, Guy came over to dig a trench for an electric line for a new apartment. Guy is short, muscular, tannedâ¦.in his 60s. Weâve known him for at least a quarter of a century. But weâve never seen him without a small cigar in his mouth and a slightly rakish look. âBonjour Monsieur Bonner,â he greets us rather formally. But when he sees Elizabeth, his arms stretch out. He embraces her and addresses her with the informal âtuââ¦which is shockingly familiar. âYou are looking as âmignoneâ as ever,â he continues, giving her a big hug. âYou might need to get your eyes checked,â Elizabeth was quick with a comeback. There is always a bit of flirtiness in the French countryside. Perhaps it comes from the lack of other distractions. Without it, men feel less manlyâ¦and women are disappointed. As for todayâs non-binary farmhandsâ¦we donât know how they roll. Weâre here in France where weâve spent summers for the last 28 years. According to the news, southern Europe is roasting. But here in central France, we wear sweatersâ¦it is rainy and chilly. Do reports on the summer weather patterns give us an accurate view? Or do they distort it? We live in a house that was once the centre of a large farm. The house is bigâ¦if a bit ramshackle. And there are many outbuildings that once served as barns, workshops, storage areas, living quarters, stables, poultry houses, a bakery â everything that a farm community needed in the 19th century. Once there were many families living here. Now there is only ours. And our family too has been greatly reduced. The children have grown up. They have their own careers and children of their own. And our aged relatives â who lived with us â have passed away. A confusing mix of signals Often, Elizabeth and your editor are here alone dwarfed by history, the house itself and its surroundings. But in the summer, we encourage the whole family to come for a vacation. And so, they come â childrenâ¦grandchildrenâ¦niecesâ¦nephewsâ¦friendsâ¦friends of friendsâ¦and sometimes a few people of uncertain provenance. Suddenly, the place comes alive againâ¦as it was when our own children were little. And then we discover â we donât have enough space for them all! So, your editor has set to work, turning a loft in one of the empty outbuildings into an apartment. (More about that anon.) And that too brings back the old days with all the noise and commotion of renovating an old house. Guy with his diggerâ¦an electrician with his drillâ¦hammers hammeringâ¦plumbers a-plumbingâ¦and six geese a-laying. What a delight! But enough idle chit-chat. Returning to the US economy⦠We are looking at distortions â a confusing mix of signals. Some tell us that the old economy, 1982â2022, is still doing its thing. Others tell us that things have changed. And some donât know what they are trying to say. A teary ending Letâs begin by looking at those that signal trouble ahead. Charlie Bilello: âThe Leading Economic Index declined in June for the 15th month in a row, the longest down streak since 2007â08. The Conference Board is still forecasting a recession from Q3 2023 to Q1 2024 driven by âelevated prices, tighter monetary policy, harder-to-get credit, and reduced government spending.â âUS Industrial Production is already seeing a slowdown, with growth turning negative on a YoY basis for the first time since February 2021. âAdditionally, US Retail Sales have increased less than 1% over the last year and after adjusting for inflation have declined on a YoY basis for eight consecutive months.â Yahoo Finance reports that⦠âJohn Hussman is doubling down on his dire outlook for US stocks⦠âStretched equity valuations suggest that the S&P 500 index would be required to plunge by as much as 64% for the market to return to more balanced conditions, according to the asset-bubble expert who successfully predicted the stock routs of 2000 and 2008. ââThe present combination of historically rich valuations, unfavourable internals, and extreme overextension places our market return/risk estimates â near term, intermediate, full-cycle, and even 10â12 year, at the most negative extremes we define,â Hussman, president of the Hussman Investment Trust, wrote in a note. âYes, this is a bubble in my view. Yes, I believe it will end in tears.ââ On the other hand, yesterday brought another (barely) positive day of trading. If there is trouble ahead, the stock market doesnât see it. But then, it never does. It is always at the very peak of the day that the evening begins. Overall, the stock market indexes are now within whiskers of setting new highs â in nominal terms. We add that âin nominal termsâ because already, the price structure has changed a lot over the last couple of years, distorting real values. Let us say Americans pay about 10% more for consumer goods and services than they did in 2021 when the Dow boomed over 36,000. In order to stay even with inflation, the Dow would have to go to nearly 40,000. Thatâs what inflation does to everything; it distorts the truth. It lies. It prevaricates. Investors think they are making money, but they are just keeping up with rising prices. Unmolested spiders Our guess is that whatever else is happening, the distortions will become more complex in the years ahead. The much-anticipated recession hasnât happened yet. But keep your shirts on â please! Most likely, the economy will begin to walk backwards later this year. And most likely, the recession will be deeperâ¦and longerâ¦than people expect. This will prompt the Fed to begin cutting rates rather than raising them. And that is where the real distortions and confusions begin. Prices will go up. But real values will fall. It will be hard to know if youâre getting richer or poorerâ¦coming or going. Probably the most confusing market right now is the US housing market. While other prices are coming down, housing prices are still near an all-time high. But the number of houses for sale has plummeted. People are âlocked inâ to low-interest mortgages. They canât sell; they canât moveâ¦or they will have to face much bigger down payments and much higher mortgage payments. This has left the pool of houses available for sale nearly 30% smaller than in 2019. More amazingly, there are approximately 50 million more people in the US than there were in January 2000. But there are 37% fewer existing houses for sale today than there were then. Think of the poor real estate agents! Nothing to sell. No one to sell it to. Spiders build their webs in real estate office doorways, confident that they will be unmolested. Banks close their accounts for lack of activity. The volume of sales declined again last year, the 22nd year in a row of falling sales. Relative to the population, never have so few houses have been available to buyers. But donât worry. You canât afford one anyway. Considering todayâs 7% mortgage rates, never have they been so expensive. Regards, Bill Bonner, For The Daily Reckoning Australia The post Degenerate, Decline and Distort appeared first on Daily Reckoning Australia. 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