Damn Achilles, thx for the well thought out response enjoyed reading it.
This is the part that has caused confusion for me, cause the one argument is that a rich U.S. consumer will have more money to buy stuff from the emerging markets, so while, blocking trade will inevitably be good for the U.S. worker, it will be bad for the chinese/mexican/indian worker, So it seems like it will be good for the U.S. market but bad for emerging markets. Globalization has obviously hurt U.S. workers.
But here is where the confusion lies, and where this thing gets complicated, if the U.S. consumer is doing better doesnt that mean that emerging markets will do better given the fact they rely on us in order to buy their shit? Thats the Keynesian argument, and thats where it gets confusing.
IMO there is no such thing as a free lunch, we learned that with Obamacare, but where it gets confusing is this,
If the U.S. worker has more purchasing power technically it means they are going to buy more foreign shit, so at the same time the chinese and mexican worker will make less based on the U.S. worker making more, it also means the chinese and mexican worker will make more cause we are spending more in mexico and china.
This is the paradox that clouds my mind, and this is the reason i still dont know what to make of it.
The thought in my mind is that a strong U.S. is good for the world, The U.S. is basically the index that drives the rest of the world which are stocks tracking us.
On the one hand There could be massive continuity here, as the U.S. consumer makes more money and thus has more to spend, and thus drives emerging markets up, but the pessimist in me knows there is no such thing as a free lunch, so if the U.S. consumer is doing good how can the emerging markets be doing good.
This is where the confusion lies in this, and this has been the single biggest paradox in my eyes.
Good post Max. I get the confusion. It's a totally different paradigm now. The market doesn't even know which end is up, really = keying off Trump tweets. So lots of confused traders out there. Myself included.
As far as international trade goes, it's zero sum. Much like futures. Our loss is Japans gain. Or, Mexico's loss is our gain. It's really that simple. Offshoring coincided with a surging US economy, over the better part of 3 decades. I think this is where the confusion lies. We exported jobs....and got richer? So it seems the Libertarian/Keynesian principles hold true = free trade creates wealth.
Unfortunately, when the onion is peeled back, the real picture becomes clear. As jobs were offshored, America began operating a "structural deficit". Meaning, with exceptional regularity, the Federal Government began running large and growing deficits. This patch was a hole to fill the gap from offshoring. As more jobs left America, more dollars had to be borrowed and/or printed to keep the economy going at a normal level.
Fast forward 30 years later, and we're Greece. Much of America's prosperity over the last 20 years - especially last 8 with Obama - was borrowed prosperity. We can calculate almost exactly how much the US economy is deficient by through the size of the federal deficit = anywhere between 500 Billion to 1 Trillion dollars. Not coincidentally, this is roughly the same size as the US Trade Deficit.
Imagine tomorrow, China ran a 400 Billion trade deficit with America. So that's 400 Billion to even it out and another 400 Billion in the pockets of Americans + spin off effect = ~1.3 Trillion in new wealth, YOY. The economy would absolutely boom. This is the power of export-driven economies / aka mercantile economies. It's all beggar thy neighbor.
So the free traders, Libertarians, Keynesians and Ricardians were wrong. While America *appeared* to enjoy a new level of prosperity with offshoring (more bullshit propaganda fed to us by mainstream media who push the agenda of their advertisers = Fortune 500 (who want offshoring)...), in reality, America was becoming far poorer, and putting the difference on the credit card. That's all that happened.
That's why I, and some others around here, kept crying about the national debt like a little bitch. Can't continue. Trump recognizes that. Sooner or later, international capital markets will balk, dump Treasuries, then we get to find out how great all this offshoring really was without 700 Billion a year to "fill in" those "missing gaps" left by all the factories who moved to China.
Look at the Chinese Yuan. Currency and capital controls in China now. The Chinese are panicking and desperate to get money out of Yuan. The Yuan/Bitcoin rate is almost a perfect correlation. Bloomberg had a decent article - the Chinese are scared. Half their economy is BS (ghost cities), the numbers are lies, and the Chinese are scared of Trump. They know their export-dependent economy is highly precarious...
What I mean to say.....the Chinese economy is fundamentally much WEAKER then people think. Their livelihood are exports. That goes, and it's a house of cards. We're fed BS all day by media. The China 'miracle'. China leading the global economy etc. No, they're not. Without the current existing trade relationship, China is headed for a major downturn. Market ain't lying, as the Yuan is crashing pretty good = vote of no confidence by international capital markets...
So to summarize, China, Japan, Germany and Mexico about to get the gears, in that order..... Their loss will be America's gain. Still waiting for a big correction = 10-20%. Then heavy long. Keeping a close eye on Fed Funds and Fed balance sheet. FED balance sheet is static. They indicated willingness to unwind shortly. That plus higher rates = trouble for S&P going ahead. Until then, it's up up and away.
My 2 cents.
