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We
are clearly starting to get some better data points here and there. But as I
pointed out this summer, it is going to be a recovery in the statistics and not
in the things that count, such as income and employment. This week we look at
the nascent recovery (which could be at 3% this quarter) and try to peer out
into the future to see what it means. We look at how recoveries come about, and
why I am concerned that we will see a double-dip recession. Plus, I learned
some new tricks courtesy of my new granddaughter, to whom Tiffani gave birth this
week1 There is a lot to cover, but it should be interesting. But
first, a quick commercial nod to my subscription service, "Conversations with
John." It was one year ago this week we launched the service, and we are
pleased that so many of you have subscribed. As a bonus for renewing or
subscribing, I am going to be doing a special predictions issue, where I will
interview at least six analysts who have been right the past few years and ask for
their specific predictions for the coming year. For
new readers, this is where I sit down with some of my friends and hold an
in-depth conversation, generally 45 minutes to an hour, and post it on our web
site, along with a transcript. We have had some fairly well-known names over the
past year, and the reviews from subscribers have been excellent. As
a Holiday Special, we are offering a subscription at the special price of $129.
Just click on the link and type in the code JM09 when asked to do so in the
subscription process (at the conclusion of the process, not the beginning, but we're
working on that.) This is a big savings over the regular $199 price. Just click
on the link to learn more and see what subscribers are saying.
http://www.johnmauldin.com/newsletters2.html Plus,
when you subscribe you get access to the Conversation archives. That is worth
the price of admission itself. And now, let's jump into The Statistical
Recovery. Thoughts on the Statistical Recovery In
the '50s through the early '80s, recessions were typified by large layoffs at
manufacturing businesses, as they had built up too much inventory. Businesses
had increased capacity and often borrowed a little too much. Rising prices in
the '70s, along with extremely high interest-rate costs, led to the two severe
recessions of the early '80s, which Paul Volcker had to essentially force into
existence, in order to begin the process of wringing inflation out of the
economy. But,
and this is important, as the economy improved, inventories were eventually
worked through and employees were brought back to work. Things returned to
normal. The economy would once again grow at a robust rate. Then, in the last
two recessions, in the early '90s and early '00s, it took longer for employment
to rise. A great part of this was because the manufacturing sector of national
employment was becoming an ever smaller part of the economic pie. We were, and still
are, turning into an economy driven by services. I should note that, on an absolute
basis, manufacturing in the US has grown (going back to before this recession
started.) We just produced more "stuff" with fewer employees. We became more
productive. But this means that there are fewer jobs that will be brought
"back" to make up for increasing sales than in past recessions. There are
estimates out that as many as 2 million of the 8 million jobs lost are
permanent job losses. We
know that businesses have made large cuts in numbers of employees in order to
address lower sales and to increase their profits. Increasing profits by
cutting costs even as the "top-line" sales number is shrinking is not a growth
strategy that can be sustained. It also eats into research and development and
postpones growth. How
likely are businesses to bring back employees if they have found they can
produce more with less? This is a prescription for the mother of all jobless
recoveries. A few weeks back, I went into some detail outlining why employment
is likely to be uncomfortably high for a number of years, and that assumes we
do not go back into recession. The graph below is the most likely scenario. You
can see the entire piece, which goes into detail on this and other scenarios
(developed with Mike Shedlock), by
clicking here.

Quoting
from that letter: "In August, I did an interview with CNBC from Leen's Fishing
Lodge in Maine (http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?video=1207956774&play=1).
The unemployment numbers had just come out. I did a back-of-the-napkin estimate
that we would need about 15 million new jobs over the next five years just to
get back to where we were when the recession started." It rather startled some
of the hosts - "Where can we get that many
jobs?" Again, quoting from that letter:
"That works out to a need for about 125,000 new jobs each month to handle new
workers coming into the market (which comes to a total of 7.5 million over five
years), plus the 8 million and rising jobs we've lost. That is a daunting
number. It amounts to 250,000 new jobs a month every month for five years." As
it turns out, Princeton Professor Paul Krugman agrees. He writes in today's New York Times
(http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/):
"I don't
think many people grasp just how much job creation we need to climb out of the
hole we're in. You can't just look at the eight million jobs that America has
lost since the recession began, because the nation needs to keep adding jobs
- more than 100,000 a month - to keep up with a growing population.
And that means that we need really big job gains, month after month, if we want
to see America return to anything that feels like full employment. How big? My
back of the envelope calculation says that we need to add around 18 million
jobs over the next five years, or 300,000 a month. This puts last week's
employment report, which showed job losses of "only" 11,000 in November, in
perspective. It was basically a terrible report, which was reported as good
news only because we've been down so long that it looks like up to the
financial press." That just
goes to show you that I am an optimist. His back-of-the-napkin number is 20%
larger. He is probably right, as he has a Nobel Prize and I don't, and I didn't
actually use a napkin. I did the math in my head on camera while we were
getting ready to go fishing. Krugman
uses this to suggest the Fed should double their balance sheet by another $2
trillion (seriously). That would not be very helpful to the dollar, I would
think. (Aside:
we are in a balance-sheet recession. We overleveraged our banks and consumers.
Now they are having to retrench. We are watching consumer and business loans
fall. Putting $2 trillion more into the system is not going to make consumers
want to borrow more. I can't quite see where you deal with the problem of too
much leverage by trying to create more leverage somewhere else. But that's a topic
for another day.) And just
to demonstrate that I am not being too pessimistic, you can go to a study the
Bureau of Labor Statistics put out yesterday. They estimate that the economy
will create 15.3 million more jobs in the next ten years, which is an average
of about 1.5 million a year, or 125,000 a month. That is not a robust number,
and suggests that the continued high unemployment projected in the graph above
may not be far off target, as the employment assumptions are not that
dissimilar. If you have no social life, you can read it yourself at
http://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecopro.nr0.htm. Lies, Damn Lies, and Government Statistics We
are going to look at the unemployment numbers of last week, along with the
unemployment claims that came out yesterday. But first, I want to quote a
section from Dennis Gartman's letter this morning. It illustrates why we have
to be very careful how we use government data. Too often, we think the data is
straightforward math and simply draws on the underlying data sources. The
reality is that it is anything but. To wit: "A PROBLEM AT THE
VERY HEART OF DATA GATHERING: Recently in Washington a rather large
number of economists from academia and from government met to try to hash out a
problem with data gathering that has become more and more serious here in the
US and has more and more distorted how we value the American economy itself. At
heart is how imports into the US are accounted for. "For example, when a part for
perhaps $100 is imported from China and is used in an American automobile ...
something that happens more and more and more often these days ... the stats show
that the finished car is American-made because it was assembled here in the US
and in the process the US GDP is raised by that same $100 when in fact it
should have been deflated by that figure instead. In the process, American
workers who might in the past have made the part in question are no longer
doing so and are obviously made redundant, hence a job or jobs is lost. "The unemployment data then 'finds'
that unemployed worker and accounts for him or her, but the car that is
assembled does not, and when it is produced and sold and its value makes its
way through the system, it appears that productivity has risen ... and rather
dramatically so, when in fact it has not. As one of the economists attending
that meeting said, " 'We don't have the data collection structure to capture
what is happening in a real-time way, or what is being traded and how it is
affecting workers. We have no idea how to measure the occupations being
'offshored' or what is being 'inshore.' "Or as the Assistant Commissioner
for International Prices at the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (and how
"politburo-like" is a title like that?!!) Mr. William Alterman, said regarding
this problem " 'What we are measuring as productivity gains may in
fact be nothing more than changes in trade instead.' "This is not an insignificant
problem, for as the US has become more and more international in its trading
scope the data has become more and more important. Back in the 1975, imports
into the US were only 5% of our total economic activity, but in recent years
that has swelled to 12%, excluding imports of energy. Thus, many imports into
the US are being, and have been, and will continue to be, valued as though they
were manufactured here in the US, when indeed they were manufactured abroad and
merely assembled here in the US. "In autos, in computers, in
appliances, this is a large and growing problem, but this is a problem too in
the areas of services. For example, when an accounting firm out-sources some of
its number-crunching to an accounting firm in India, for example, and then
bills a client here in the US in US dollar terms, the work is done abroad but
billed here and the work is recorded as having been done in the US, adding to
US GDP when clearly that is not the case. It happens too, these days, more and
more often in medicine, when patient files are sent to India or somewhere else
abroad for diagnosis and the patient is billed here in the US as if the 'work'
had been done here. GDP rises here in the US when it really should have been accounted for in India;
productivity goes up; GDP goes up, when in reality neither has happened. ' Tis
a conundrum." The Problem of Seasonal Adjustments Yesterday
we were told that initial unemployment claims were up slightly to 474,000 on a
seasonally adjusted basis. That is down 78,000 from the same week last year.
The four-week moving average is almost exactly the same. On a four-week-average
basis, initial claims are down about 10% from last year. Let's
look under the hood. The non-seasonally adjusted number (NSA) is 665,000, down
almost 95,000 from last year, which is good, but still a very large number. The
actual average had been over 550,000 for the last three weeks. Everywhere the headlines said
continuing claims are plunging. And they did. But what really happened is that
the drop was not from people getting jobs but from people rolling over to the
extended benefits programs. The states by and large pay for the first 26 weeks,
and that is where we get the continuing-claim reported number from. (In some
parts of the US hosever, you can get unemployment insurance for up to 99
months, paid for by the federal government. There are 5.16 million on the
continuing-claim rolls. But when you add in the extended benefits rolls, it
increases to over 10 million. Average length of unemployment is now over 26
weeks, and the median length is over 33 weeks! 
It was reported that the
unemployment rate dropped to 10% from 10.2%. To get that number, they had to
shrink the number of people looking for work by 98,000. Basically, if you have
not looked for work in the last four weeks, you are said to be "discouraged"
and are taken out of the unemployment statistics. If you add back in the
discouraged workers, the rate goes up to 10.5%. And it is worse than that. If
you have not looked for a job in 12 months, you are taken off the rolls
altogether. Here is one of the reasons that the
unemployment number is going to remain stubbornly high through 2010. Let's
assume a modest recovery of 3%, which is maybe enough to get jobs back into the
150,000 range. As people go back to work, that 0.5% of discouraged workers
starts to look for jobs and they are now counted as unemployed. That small
number of 0.5% is 750,000 people that will be (should be) added back into the
unemployment numbers! Let's use Krugman's 100,000 jobs a
month needed to keep up with population growth. (Studies are all over the place
on this. 100,000 is the low estimate and 150,000 is the high.) That means we
need 1.2 million new jobs next year just to keep the unemployment rate at 10%.
And another 750,000 jobs to go to the discouraged workers who will want to
start looking. Close to 2 million jobs will be needed to keep the unemployment
rate from rising. And the current business climate
says that is not going to happen. The Job Creation Engine Small
businesses employ 85% (or thereabouts) of American workers. That is always
where the employment growth comes from. So when we see the ISM surveys, which
are mainly of large businesses, that suggest they may start employing more people
in the next few months, we need to see how their smaller brethren are doing.
Fortunately, we have a very reliable survey by the National Federation of
Independent Businesses, which does a lengthy monthly survey to give us the
temperature in the small-business world. You can review it at
http://www.nfib.com/Portals/0/PDF/sbet/SBET200912.pdf.
(My friend and Maine fishing buddy Bill Dunkelberg puts out the report.) It
is a mixed bag, as some of the scores of questions in the survey indicate that
small businesses are feeling better than a year ago. On the whole, though, they
are not very upbeat. 72% of small businesses say their earnings are down over
the last three months, and that has been the case for over a year. The most
important reason for lower earnings is listed as poor sales volume. Sales
expectations, however, are much better than earlier this year, with almost half
of those surveyed thinking things will get better. 
While the number of businesses that
are not planning to hire any more employees in the next three months is still
slightly negative, it is improving. 54% have job openings. There is not much in
the way of wage pressure, as wage levels are dropping; and actual prices of the
goods and services they are selling and the materials and services they are
buying are falling (on average). Inventory levels have dropped precipitously,
and that bodes well for hiring, as inventories at some point are going to have
to be built back up However, as
Bill points out, "In November small business owners reported a decline in
average employment per firm of 0.58 workers reported during the prior three months, a big improvement from
May's record loss of 1.26 workers per firm - but still a loss of jobs.
Nine percent of the owners increased employment by an average of 2.3 workers
per firm, but 21 percent reduced employment an average of 4.2 workers per firm
(seasonally adjusted). The "job generating machine" is still in reverse. Sales
are not picking up, so survival requires continuous attention to costs -
and labor costs loom large. But, job reductions are fading and job creation
could cross the "0" line by the end of the year. "Owner
optimism remains stuck at recession levels. The proximate cause is very weak
consumer spending, better than a year ago, but that was pretty bad. Fifteen
(15) percent reported gains, while 43 percent reported weakness. With weak
consumer spending, there is little need to invest in inventory (and borrow
money to support inventory investment). Inventory investment plans are at
historically very low levels. Similarly capital spending is on hold, with
actual outlays and planned outlays at record low levels along with the demand
for loans to finance the outlays. More firms still plan on reducing employment
than plan on adding to their payrolls. Inventory reductions are still
widespread, eight percent reported accumulation, 33 percent reported
reductions. This sets the stage for new orders in future periods, but does not
help much now." The
survey kept highlighting the concerns and uncertainty about government plans
for new taxes and regulations. It is hard to make plans to expand when you are
not certain what your costs will be for health care, taxes, cap and trade, etc.
This
is a survey we need to watch, because when it turns up we can start to feel
confident about the recovery (which is still stimulus-driven). We will look
back at it in a few months. A Double-Dip Recession? Finally,
this highlights my concern about a double-dip recession. I think we could see
one in 2011, as a result of the massive increases in taxes as the Bush tax cuts
expire and the Pelosi-Reid-Obama crowd want to raise taxes on the "rich." Their
assumption is that if we could grow quite well in the Clinton years with higher
taxes, then we can do it again. First,
if there are no changes to the proposed tax increases, this will be a massive
middle-class tax hike. Make no mistake, the Bush tax cuts resulted in a huge
cut in the taxes of the middle class. The data clearly shows the wealthiest 20%
are paying significantly more of the total taxes paid. If
you combine a large middle-class tax increase with an even larger new wealth
tax (75% of which will affect the very small businesses we just highlighted),
it will be a one-two punch to the economic body, when unemployment is already
at 10%. You can't take out well over 2% (and maybe 3%) of GDP from the consumer
without it having significant consequences. Obama mentioned minor tax credits
for small businesses in his plan, but then proposes to raise their taxes and health-care
costs. It doesn't work that way. But it is time to hit the send button, so I
will close. Dad Gets a Lively Lesson A
few friends noted that there was no Outside the Box this week. I plead a
distraction. I got back from New York Sunday night and left my phone in my home
office. I wandered in the next morning and got a call from Melissa (#2
daughter). "Dad, are you going to the hospital now?" Hospital, what hospital? "Didn't you get Ryan's text?
Tiffani has gone into labor." Almost three weeks early. That was not on my
radar screen. I shot a text off to Ryan and then we talked. Seems things were
progressing slowly. I would have the morning before I needed to go to the
hospital. I
settled down and then got a text that Tiffani was starting to push. Oops, that
happened faster than we thought. I got to the hospital and went to the waiting
room, where some of Tiffani and Ryan's friends were also waiting. Did
I know what was going on? No, but they did. Seems Tiffani's best friend is now
in Belgium, where she was watching the whole process over the MacBook set up in
the delivery room! She was posting (G-rated, I was assured) pictures to
Tiffani's Facebook page, where all their friends were keeping up. And of
course, blow-by-blow accounts and pictures on Twitter. As we sat there, one of
the young men told me my granddaughter, named Lively Bella-Grace Frederick had
been born. Did I want to see a picture? And of course the in-laws, who are
missionaries in Cyprus, saw the whole thing relayed by the girlfriend in
Belgium. Mom,
Dad, and Lively were here this afternoon, and doing well. But I am seriously
going to have to update my communication skills if I am going to keep up with
my kids and grandkids. I feel so, well, out of it. Oh well. I am sure Lively
will give Papa John a lesson or three over the years. And
finally, I am very excited about my special live webinar next week with Jon
Sundt, President and CEO of Altegris Investments. Many of you have already
registered, and I look forward to fielding your tough questions. There is still
space available for this live event, so please join us!
Click here to register It's happening next week on
Thursday, December 17th, at 9:00 am PST / 12:00 noon EST. If that
time doesn't work in your calendar, simply register and you will be able to
listen to the replay at your convenience. We will be discussing some of the
critical macroeconomic forces at work today and how these factors influence
your investing decisions. Jon, an expert on alternative investing, will
provide his assessment of alternative strategies during these challenging
times. Our goal is to support you to better position your portfolio for the
year ahead. Click here for the first step in the
registration process: my Accredited Investor website. From there, you'll be
automatically directed to the webinar signup page. Due to regulatory issues,
this online event is limited to US investors who qualify as "accredited
investors" (generally, net worth of $1.5 million or more). If you have
already registered on my Accredited Investor site, please contact your Altegris
account executive for a streamlined registration process. (In this regard I am
president and a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC,
member FINRA.) Have a great week. I know I am
going to! Your going to get this brave new world figured out analyst,
 John Mauldin
John@FrontlineThoughts.com
Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
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