Tsar Of Arabie
King Fahd rarely speaks. He is 82 years old and suffered 
a severe stroke in late 1995 that has left him 
incapacitated ever since. 
Many presidents, kings, and emperors have lacked 
capacity, of course. Many have been mentally impaired, 
delusional, unreasonable or merely profoundly stupid. 
The world would not be a worse place if they spoke less 
often…but Fahd’s condition is the sort that would 
normally disqualify even a Republican from elective 
office. 
“The King,” reports an article by Seymour Hersch in The 
New Yorker, “with round-the-clock medical treatment, is 
able to sit in a chair and open his eyes, but is usually 
unable to recognize even his oldest friends.” 
Fahd is being kept alive and on the throne so that 
Prince Abdullah does not get the job. There is a 
delicate balance in Saudi Arabia…between oil revenue 
and Muslim fundamentalism. And Abdullah, 75, is a man 
with fundamentalist tendencies who doesn’t mind throwing 
his weight around. The royal family is hoping that Fahd 
can continue breathing until Abdullah is out of the way. 
We turn our eyes towards the desert this morning, dear 
reader. We recall that it was WWI that brought down the 
Hohenzollerns, the Hapsburgs and the Romanoffs – the 
three great royal families of Europe. We have a hunch 
that the war on terrorism will bring down the house of 
Saud. 
The fall of the European dynasties left an empty space – 
an opening for terrorists in Russia and Germany. The 
Bolsheviks quickly moved into the void left by the Tsar 
in Russia. And Hitler’s Nazis soon squatted the vacant 
lodgings left by the Kaiser in Germany. Both succeeded 
by being more ruthless and single-minded than their 
opponents…murdering and bullying the social democrats 
out of the way. 
If something similar were to happen in Saudi Arabia, no 
matter what befalls him personally, Osama bin Laden’s 
trap will have served its purpose. 
Even small, inept groups of terrorists can have huge, 
long-lasting effects on the world. Thirty years before 
the Bolsheviks, Russian terrorists killed Tsar Alexander 
II, in 1881. Alexander II was a reformer. It was he who 
had freed the serfs. Yet, the terrorists who tossed the 
bomb “got what they wanted,” writes Gary North, “the 
ruthless oppression of Alexander III. He stamped out 
terrorist groups with a vengeance. Six years later, 
there was an attempt on his life. The government hanged 
the six conspirators. One of them was Lenin’s older 
brother. This led to the overthrow of Czarist Russia 
thirty years later. The tactic worked. It just took 
time.” 
Saudi Arabia, writes Christopher Byron in an MSNBC 
article, “teeters at the edge of economic and political 
chaos, imperiling the economic and geopolitical 
interests of not just the U.S., but of the entire 
world.” 
“Saudi Arabia, which is roughly one-fifth the size of 
the U.S., sits atop 25% of all known oil reserves on 
Earth,” Byron explains. “It is currently pumping roughly 
9.2 million barrels of crude per day, which account for 
about 10% of all oil consumed on the planet every day. 
“It isn’t an overstatement to say that the economic fate 
of the world revolves around the reliable and unimpeded 
flow of oil from the fields of Saudi Arabia. Indeed, 
that has been the case for more than 40 years.” 
If Saudi oil were suddenly taken off the world market, 
the world price of oil would soar – probably to $100 a 
barrel or more. The entire world economy – already 
barely growing – would be struck with a long, deep 
recession. 
And it wouldn’t be difficult for terrorists to shut off 
Saudi oil. Gary North cites a confidential study showing 
just how remarkably vulnerable the Saudi oilfields are. 
Yet, instead of going after an easy target close to 
home…the terrorists of September 11 chose a harder one 
far away. Why? Probably because some of the oil revenue 
ends up in the terrorists’ hands. 
There are about 6,000 Saudi princes, scattered all over 
the world, who have a keen interest in making sure the 
oil revenues continue to flow. Over the years, they’ve 
become as expert as the U.S. Corps of Engineers at 
diverting little streams of income in their directions. 
Thus do their corrupt viaducts of cash transport 
billions and billions of dollars worth of oil revenue 
flow out of the Saudi sands to various fancy apartments 
in L.A., Mayfair, Manhattan and the avenue Foch…as 
well as to caves in Afghanistan… 
Abdullah could be the Alexander II of Saudi Arabia, 
threatening reform. But things may have already gone too 
far for reform. Revolution is in the air. 
Living standards in the kingdom are going down. Per 
capital GDP peaked out at $28,600 in 1981. Today, the 
figure is less than $7,000. 
Much of the reason for this remarkable decline is a huge 
increase in population. Most of the country is barren, 
but its people are among the most fertile on earth. 
“Nearly half the country’s population is younger than 
15,” reports Christopher Byron. “Public health services 
are poor, with the result that the nation’s infant 
mortality rate of 51 deaths per 1,000 live births is not 
much better than Iraq’s – 60 per 1,000 – and close to 
five times that of Kuwait.” 
According to a NY Times report, continues Byron, “all 
public high schools in Saudi Arabia teach mandatory 
classes in anti-Christian, anti-Western religious 
fundamentalism, with nearly 30% of all class time 
devoted to such instruction.” 
“It is compulsory for the Muslims to be loyal to each 
other,” the Times’ piece quotes a textbook, “and 
consider the infidels their enemy.” 
“Not surprisingly,” Byron concludes, “the country has 
become a breeding ground for terrorists. An estimated 
50,000 boys leave high school every year only to find it 
impossible to land jobs. They become easy recruits for 
Osama bin Laden’s Saudi-dominated al-Qaida network.” 
Sooner, rather than later, the Tsar of Arabie will sink 
into the sand. Then, many of these idealists may make 
their way back to the Saudi sands from whence they came 
and find themselves in control of much of the world’s 
oil. Plus, they would come into possession of what Byron 
calls “a huge arsenal of some of the most advanced 
military weaponry in the world…” 
“In the years since Desert Storm,” Byron explains, 
“Washington and its NATO allies have armed Saudi Arabia 
with a staggering array of ultra-advanced weaponry,” 
including hundreds of fighter planes and helicopters… 
and thousands of tanks, missiles and other hardware. 
But that is a story for another day…
Your correspondent…
Bill Bonner
October 29, 2001 
The war on two fronts continued last week…as U.S. 
troops were drawn further into Bin Laden’s trap in 
Afghanistan…and U.S. investors were drawn further into 
Mr. Bear’s trap on the home front. 
The Dow rose 3.71%, with average stock selling at 27 
times earnings…or about 100% more than the long term 
trend. 
As stocks go up in price…earnings are coming down. 
There are not many things certain in life, but it is 
sure that this trend won’t last long. Either earnings 
must turn around and head up…or stocks must go down. 
We don’t see any reason for earnings to rise…so our 
bet is that stocks will fall. 
The National Association of Business Economics reported 
“the weakest economic performance and outlook in 22 
years.” Of NABE’s “industry panelists,” 90% said they 
had revised their forecasts for the 2nd half of 2001 
downwards. 
Xerox had its credit rating reduced to junk status after 
its 5th consecutive quarterly loss. Sales of existing 
homes and other big ticket items are off substantially. 
And unemployment continues to creep upwards. 
Of course, not every trap proves effective. In 1953, 
General Henri Navarre, commanding French forces in 
Indochina, decided to lure Ho Chi Minh into a trap at 
Dien Bien Phu. It was a superb, time-honored idea: he 
would set up a big, defensive position that the Viet 
Minh could not resist attacking. Navarre expected the 
Viet Minh to exhaust themselves against his 
fortifications…just as Clausewitz had described. 
There was one small problem…Navarre chose his ground 
badly: in a valley, where the Viet Minh were able to 
draw up artillery to the surrounding hills and blast him 
to bits. 
But that was a long time ago…in such a remote place. 
We Americans had little interest in what happened to the 
French…just as, today, we have little interest in what 
happened to the Russians or Japanese… 
Eric, what happened on Wall Street Friday?
*****
Eric Fry in the big city…
– Just like former heavyweight champ Joe Frazier, Mr. 
Market is showing himself to be one tough hombre – a guy 
who can “take a punch.” To be sure, the September 11th 
attack knocked him to the mat. But he picked himself 
right back up and came out slugging. 
– Thanks to that indomitable spirit – or maybe thanks to 
the irrational exuberance of investors – the NASDAQ and 
S&P 500 have recouped all of their losses since the 
attack. The robust trading action is rapidly restoring 
faith in “stocks for the long term.” Even though the 
news is mostly bad on Main Street, everything is plus 
signs and smiles on Wall Street. 
– “Today, Americans believe in the S&P 500, but fear an 
epidemic,” observes Jim Grant. “Forty-one times trailing 
net income holds no terrors for them, yet they live in 
dread of anthrax. Perhaps we [at Grant’s] are missing 
the point, but our anxieties are reversed.” Grant 
considers U.S. stocks frightfully overvalued – clearly a 
minority view at the moment. 
see: Bear Distinctions
– But while Americans are busy buying stocks, they 
aren’t buying much of anything else, especially not 
houses. September new home sales fell to their lowest 
rate since August 2000. 
– “There is reason to believe that the housing boom is 
over for now,” says Northern Trust economist Paul 
Kasriel. “Rock-bottom mortgage interest rates no longer 
are pumping up mortgage applications for home 
purchases…Perhaps it has something to do with the 
labor market…Even under the most generous underwriting 
standards, no job, no mortgage. 
– “Another indication that the bloom is off the housing 
rose,” continues Kasriel, “is that new home prices are 
starting to fall. The median price of new home sales is 
down 5.3% this September vs. one year ago.” 
– Because “equity extraction” from home values has – 
almost single-handedly – kept consumer spending afloat, 
Kasriel suspects that falling house prices is about the 
last thing Alan Greenspan wants to see. Tapping into 
those home equity “reserves” becomes quite a bit 
trickier when the equity is disappearing. 
– “Another problem with declining home prices is that it 
increases the probability that folks will leave the keys 
to their house with their bank as they walk away from 
it,” Kasriel observes. Already, both foreclosure and 
delinquency rates for mortgages are jumping higher. As 
banks liquidate the housing collateral they hold against 
foreclosed mortgages, home prices might fall even more. 
“It could turn into a vicious cycle,” Kasriel predicts. 
– Like the mortgage lending industry, the credit card 
sector is also showing signs of distress. “There are two 
types of companies in specialty finance,” quips William 
Ryan, managing director of equity research at Ventana 
Capital, “those that have taken charges, and those that 
will.” 
– The joke has more than a kernel of truth in it. Two 
weeks ago, credit card lender Providian Financial 
stunned investors with a miserable third-quarter 
earnings report. Not only are its earnings falling, but 
its delinquent and uncollectible accounts are both 
rising rapidly. 
– Ventana’s Ryan is particularly concerned about the 
shaky labor situation and its impact on the sub-prime 
lending market. Many of the newly unemployed are sub- 
prime credit card holders, and, as Ryan explained, 
“these people live paycheck to paycheck, and any 
interruption can send [their finances] spiraling out of 
control.” 
– “It seems safe to assume that Providian is not the 
only fish floundering in the murky depths of credit-card 
lending,” says Grantsinvestor.com’s Andy Kashdan. 
“Providian may serve as an early warning of what to 
expect from other companies in the industry. The market 
understands that to some extent and has thus punished 
the whole sector – but the flogging probably isn’t 
over.” 
– Even as many average Joes and Janes struggle to keep 
their insolvent heads above water, New York’s most 
expensive restaurant, Alain Ducasse, boasts that its 
reservations have been “healthy” in recent weeks, and 
adds that no staff cuts are in the works. “Our guests 
are ordering just as they did before the tragedy of 
Sept. 11,” a Ducasse spokeswoman tells Crain’s. 
– Unfortunately, over-indebted credit card holders 
greatly outnumber seven-figure-net-worth Ducasse diners. 
*****
Back to Bill, down on the farm…
*** It’s the All Saints holiday week for schoolchildren 
in Paris. We’re taking advantage of it by spending the 
week in the country. 
*** What gorgeous weather we’re having in Europe. It 
couldn’t be nicer: cool mornings, bright sunny days… 
and long evenings… 
*** Mr. Deshais and I went out to the garden to bring in 
firewood. In the evening haze, the sun had lit the 
surface of the pond and turned it shades of pink and 
yellow, like the surrounding trees. We could scarcely do 
our work, so distracted were we by the beauty of it… 
*** What else? “In a minor coup of our own,” Addison 
tells me, “The Daily Reckoning and the Oxford Club are 
co-hosting the annual speakers reception at the New 
Orleans Investment Conference in November.” Barbara Bush 
will be there…John Stossel and Chris Matthews, too. 
The Oxford Club’s C.A. Green and Porter Stansberry will 
be conducting workshops for investors. I recommend the 
seafood gumbo… 

                            	        
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