
Great Depression Online
Long Beach, CA
March 12, 2010
Inside This Issue You Will Discover…
*** Nothing Gold Can Stay
*** Is Bowling Popular in
*** Entropy – Why the World as We Know It Is Dying
*** And More
Nature’s first green is gold
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.
-- Nothing Gold Can Stay, Robert Frost
Is Bowling Popular in
Today we pause from the markets in contemplation. Why
does the world work the way it does? How come there’s a two
party government? Why do new
Discover all this – and more – in today’s guest essay by
David Galland, Managing Editor, The Casey Report.
Sincerely,
M.N. Gordon
Great Depression Online
---
Entropy – Why the World as We Know It Is Dying
By David Galland, Managing Editor, The Casey Report
The concept of entropy is one of the most useful terms for
understanding just about everything. While it has its origins in
natural law – thermodynamics, specifically – the concept holds true
pretty much across all closed systems.
In the simplest of terms, every closed system will
ultimately degrade toward a state of maximum entropy.
I’ll use the current political system of the
Before the ink dried on the Constitution, however, the
degradation began. From the beginning, the country’s political
operations fell into the hands of a strictly limited number of
parties, which quickly coalesced into just two. Since then, they
have essentially shared power, with only minor differences in
policies between the two. Simply, absent a disruptive external
force, the closed political system quickly matured into an
institutionalized “sameness” that all but assures no serious
challenges – leading, ultimately, to the certainty it will degrade
to only a shell of its former self.
It was, perhaps, because of his own understanding of
natural law that Thomas Jefferson was heard to remark, “The tree of
liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of
patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.”
That doesn’t mean I am advocating revolution – just
pointing out the fact that any closed system, no matter how well
constructed, will degrade. To expect the
~~~~~~Fortunes From Crisis~~~~~~
The general consensus is that in severe economic downturns
like the one we’re currently in, investors lose their shirts. But
what few realize is that the very same crises – recessions,
depressions – are also those periods in history when the foundations
for great fortunes are laid.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Switching to a corporate example, I used to be a regular
buyer of
In 2008, when the time had come to lease a new car, I
reflexively headed over to the local dealer fully expecting to drive
off with yet another
Surprising even myself, I walked out and ended up leasing
from another company. I remember vividly at the time saying to my
wife that we should short
As I said at the onset, you can see entropy at work in
virtually every closed system. Consider the U.S. dollar, which
became the world’s de facto reserve currency as a result of Bretton
Woods. What an amazing advantage for the
It was, of course, damned to entropy, with Nixon’s ending
the dollar’s gold backing just being part of the natural
progression. And if he hadn’t done it, one of his successors would
have – due to some “emergency” or as a “temporary” measure, or some
other flimsy political cover. Regardless, the degradation of the
currency gained speed and, systematically, it’s been all downhill
since.
You may also want to think about entropy when pondering the
Chinese miracle. No question,
“Unstoppable!” cheers the punditry. The Chinese
leadership, whose capable hands are very much on the levers of the
macro-economy, are cut from special cloth, they add.
In answer to that, Quinn points out that despite
I’m not sure if bowling is popular with the Chinese, but
with all that spare space, some enterprising individual might want
to consider promoting it as the coming thing. Roller rinks? Indoor
laser tag centers?
Meanwhile, back in the
On that point, a recent article in the Wall Street Journal
titled “No Exit in Sight for
Fannie and Freddie, for their part, remain at the core of a
housing-finance system that inflated a dangerous housing bubble.
After prices collapsed, sending shock waves around the world, the
federal government put
On Dec. 24, Treasury said there would be no limit to the
taxpayer money it was willing to deploy over the next three years to
keep the two companies afloat, doing away with the previous limit of
$200 billion per company. So far, the government has handed the two
companies a total of about $111 billion.
Can’t you just smell the entropy? The results are not just
predictable, they are evident – just look around.
As investors, it is, I would contend, important to
understand the notion of entropy – and to watch for it in your
portfolio companies, in your bureaucracies, and, on a more personal
level, your relationships and your health. On that last point, the
human body is very much a closed system and so, as we all are too
painfully aware, will degrade until it ceases to exist.
You can slow the degradation by taking care of yourself.
But it’s also worth remembering that it’s a one-way slope, so enjoy
yourself while you are fit and able to.
Sincerely,
David Galland
Managing Editor,
The Casey Report
P.S. While it’s impossible to halt entropy, what you can do is take action to protect yourself and your assets from its effects. That’s what the editors of The Casey Report do best: recognize and examine emerging trends in the economy and markets, and help investors take advantage of the opportunities that arise from them. And profits are everywhere if you know what to look for – even in the worst economic crises. Click here for more.
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