• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Fat Tail Daily

Investment Ideas From the Edge of the Bell Curve

  • Menu
    • Commodities
      • Resources and Mining
      • Copper
      • Gold
      • Iron Ore
      • Lithium
      • Silver
      • Graphite
      • Rare Earths
    • Technology
      • AI
      • Bitcoin
      • Cryptocurrency
      • Energy
      • Financial Technology
      • Bio Technology
    • Market Analysis
      • Latest ASX News
      • Dividend Shares
      • ETFs
      • Stocks and Bonds
    • Macro
      • Australian Economy
      • Central Banks
      • World Markets
    • Small Caps
    • More
      • Investment Guides
      • Premium Research
      • Editors
      • About
      • Contact Us
  • Latest
  • Fat Tail Series
  • About Us
Macro Central Banks

Look Out Below!

Like 0

By Bill Bonner, Thursday, 14 July 2022

Autos, commodities, stocks, bonds — almost everything is going down. Real estate is so ‘local’, it’s harder to tell what is going on. But the likelihood is that it will go down with everything else.

We’ve been bitten by ticks so often, more than 73 years on a Maryland farm, we thought we were immune to Lyme disease.

And maybe we are.

But there are other tick-borne bacteria. A friend warned us:

‘I thought I was dying. I lost the use of my right arm. Then, I began to mix up words. Whatever it was, it had gotten into my brain. Doctors didn’t know what was going on. But I was so alarmed I researched which states had “right to die” laws; I didn’t want to be a burden to my family.

‘And then…a guy I knew told me he thought it sounded like Lyme Disease…so I had some additional tests. And it turned out it was not Lyme…but some other disease you get from ticks.

‘My advice…stay out of the woods in the summertime.’

In the ‘50s and ‘60s, ‘check yourself for ticks’, was every mother’s command when children came in from playing or working outside. But ticks weren’t so dangerous back then, just obnoxious. They bury their heads in your flesh. You don’t notice until the area begins to swell and itch. But then, they’re almost impossible to dislodge. You pull out the body, but the head stays anchored. You have to dab on alcohol, scratch and claw until you can dig the head out…usually with a big clump of your own skin still in its jaws.

But children get fewer ticks today. They no longer play outside. They need wires attached, batteries, and air conditioning to have a good time.

Ticks are a non-sequitur. Our subject is money. And today, we look at how it dies.

Down, down, down…

Personal computer sales are in a downturn, says. The Wall Street Journal:

‘The waning appetite for personal-computer purchases is accelerating amid economic turbulence, hitting a near-decade low following two years of boom in pandemic-driven purchases.’

But it’s not just computers. Here’s TradingEconomics:

‘Retail sales in the US unexpectedly fell 0.3% mom [month-on-month] in May of 2022, the first decline so far this year and compared to market forecasts of a 0.2% rise. It follows a downwardly revised 0.7% increase in April, as high inflation, gasoline prices and borrowing costs hurt spending on non-essential goods. Auto sales recorded the biggest decline (-4%) and sales also fell at electronics & appliance stores (-1.3%); miscellaneous store retailers (-1.1%); nonstore retailers (-1%); furniture stores (-0.9%); and health & personal care stores (-0.2%).’

What’s going on? Dollars are dying.

At some level, it’s simply normal and natural…a part of the life cycle. Everybody smiles when new dollars are born. Sales go up. It’s when they pass away — at the other end of the cycle — that sales go down and the wailing and gnashing of teeth begin.

Repo man callin’

Stocks are down about 20% so far this year. That is the worst performance since 1970.

Bonds are down about 10% — the worst performance, well, since George Washington was president.

A 60/40 portfolio — 60% equities/40% treasury bonds — is down 16%…which is the worst performance ever.

‘Doctor Copper’, reputed to be the ‘metal with a PhD in Economics’, supposedly because of its ability to predict where an economy is headed, is down 33%.

Corn, wheat, and soybeans are down about 25%.

Even used cars are down 7% since the beginning of the year. This is despite a growing inventory of used cars. The repo men are busy. Here’s Autoblog: ‘Car repossessions on the rise, as average price hits $47,000’:

‘It’s hard to read automotive news without hearing stories on rising car prices and gouging car dealers. That’s one side of the story, and while it’s important, there’s a whole other thing happening on the financial side of the market that has experts worried. Vehicle repossessions are on the rise, Barron’s reports, meaning many people who bought cars in the past two years are running out of ways to pay for them.

‘According to Kelley Blue Book, the average price of a new vehicle rose 13.5% year over year to $47,148 in May. Combined with record-high monthly payments, it’s easy to start piecing together the story. Edmunds data showed that a whopping 12.7% of new car buyers are on the hook for payments of $1,000 or more per month.’

Autos, commodities, stocks, bonds — almost everything is going down. Real estate is so ‘local’, it’s harder to tell what is going on. But the likelihood is that it will go down with everything else.

Putting numbers to the damage, the total net worth of American households — including their holdings of stocks and bonds, and adjusted for liabilities — is about US$140 trillion. If, overall, asset prices are off 15%, this represents the death of US$24 trillion dollars’ worth.

Hang the black crepe. Light a candle. And kiss the dead dollars goodbye.

Regards,

Dan Denning Signature

Bill Bonner,
For The Daily Reckoning Australia

All advice is general advice and has not taken into account your personal circumstances.

Please seek independent financial advice regarding your own situation, or if in doubt about the suitability of an investment.

Bill Bonner

Bill’s Premium Subscriptions

Publication logo
Fat Tail Investment Research

Latest Articles

  • Don’t Get Swept Up By the Herd: Bulls & Bears in an Age of Social Media
    By Charlie Ormond

    Markets have always reflected this chaotic behaviour, but today’s markets operate in an environment fundamentally transformed by social media.

  • The latest Closing Bell is available now
    By Callum Newman

    Tune in today to watch the latest Closing Bell podcast with Murray Dawes. We discuss gold, oil, real estate…plus a stock to watch. Tune in now!

  • Thorium: One Step Closer to China’s Energy Fortress
    By James Cooper

    Forget AI, the biggest breakthrough of this century will revolve around ENERGY. And the commercialisation of Thorium reactors could be at the heart. Read on to find out why China could be about to make history.

Primary Sidebar

Latest Articles

  • Don’t Get Swept Up By the Herd: Bulls & Bears in an Age of Social Media
  • The latest Closing Bell is available now
  • Thorium: One Step Closer to China’s Energy Fortress
  • The famous yield curve: buy or sell signal? You decide…
  • How Australians voted for a great wealth redistribution

Footer

Fat Tail Daily Logo
YouTube
Facebook
x (formally twitter)
LinkedIn

About

Investment ideas from the edge of the bell curve.

Go beyond conventional investing strategies with unique ideas and actionable opportunities. Our expert editors deliver conviction-led insights to guide your financial journey.

Quick Links

Subscribe

About

FAQ

Terms and Conditions

Financial Services Guide

Privacy Policy

Get in Touch

Contact Us

Email: support@fattail.com.au

Phone: 1300 667 481

All advice is general in nature and has not taken into account your personal circumstances. Please seek independent financial advice regarding your own situation, or if in doubt about the suitability of an investment.

The value of any investment and the income derived from it can go down as well as up. Never invest more than you can afford to lose and keep in mind the ultimate risk is that you can lose whatever you’ve invested. While useful for detecting patterns, the past is not a guide to future performance. Some figures contained in our reports are forecasts and may not be a reliable indicator of future results. Any actual or potential gains in these reports may not include taxes, brokerage commissions, or associated fees.

Fat Tail Logo

Fat Tail Daily is brought to you by the team at Fat Tail Investment Research

Copyright © 2025 Fat Tail Daily | ACN: 117 765 009 / ABN: 33 117 765 009 / ASFL: 323 988