Impacts Of Deflation
The Daily Reckoning Presents: A guest essay in which the 
author suggests that – for the first time in more than 
half a century – an old but ever-powerful economic foe 
is about to pound the American economy with the fury of 
a hundred hurricanes. Oh… and predicts the Nasdaq will 
see 500 before we’re through. 
IMPACTS OF DEFLATION
by Dr. Martin Weiss
Just a few months ago, I went to Brazil to visit my in- 
laws. On the drive from the airport, we stopped at a red 
light. A woman approached me on the passenger side, 
handing me a full-color pamphlet for brand new VWs on 
sale. Their cheapest model was under $5,000! 
At the next light, another woman gave me still another 
pamphlet – luxury condominiums, once worth up to 
$150,000, on sale for under $60,000. I sat in the car in 
utter amazement. I always remembered Brazil as the 
country of inflation. Now, deflation was rampant. 
On the other side of the world, in Japan, the deflation 
is even more incredible. 
The last time I was there, prices were still outrageous, 
and the experts said they’d “never” come down. “The 
network of wholesalers and retailers is too convoluted, 
too deeply ingrained,” they argued. “Deflation in Japan 
is impossible,” they insisted. 
Now, Japanese consumer prices have been tumbling 
virtually nonstop for two years. A hamburger costs half 
of what it did a year ago. Cotton polo shirts are 60% 
cheaper. Real estate is down 50%, 60%, even 80% in key 
areas. 
You have not seen that kind of deflation here in America 
yet. 
But you will.
The deflation is not only coming here from abroad. It’s 
also spreading from within – from the bust in 
technology. The going price for registering an Internet 
domain name has fallen from $70 to $7. 
You can now buy almost-new computer servers made by IBM, 
Compaq, or Sun for 30 cents on the dollar. The price of 
a 128-megabyte dynamic random access memory chip, or 
DRAM, used in virtually all personal computers, has 
plunged from $14 in February to under $2 right now. Can 
you imagine that? An 86% plunge in just 10 months!? 
No wonder companies that make them are losing money hand 
over fist! 
In the world commodity markets, prices are also 
collapsing. Crude oil plunged 24% in a mere 10 days in 
October. Since the beginning of this year, copper is 
down over 12%; zinc, down 28%; and nickel down 14%. 
Natural gas hit $11 per million BTUs back in December of 
last year. Now it lingers a hair above $2. 
Until recently, deflation had been mostly overseas or 
limited to certain sectors. Now, it’s lapping at our 
shores and beginning to spread rapidly. 
Like the ups and downs of the stock market, the tide of 
deflation does not flow forward in one straight line. It 
come in waves that ebb and flow. 
You will see massive deflation one month, and then a 
temporary flare-up of inflation the next. You will see 
the same zig-zag decline in corporate profits, consumer 
confidence, the economy, and the psychology of millions 
of Americans. But the die has been cast. There is no 
turning back to the old era of non-stop growth or nearly 
endless inflation. 
In October, U.S. wholesale prices suffered the sharpest 
decline since the government began keeping records in 
1947. In just one month, vegetables fell 11.4%, 
passenger cars fell 4.7%, and gasoline prices fell a 
whopping 21%. 
Yet, there are many sectors that have yet to be touched 
by deflation. The housing market is still a bubble 
waiting to burst. The cost of furniture is still holding 
near its peak. Your electric bills, medical costs, and 
other basics have not yet come down. 
While at The New Orleans 2001 Investment Conference a 
week ago, I picked up the New York Times. Right there on 
the front page, it said exactly what I’ve been warning 
you about: “As the number of bankruptcy filings by 
public companies surges to a record, companies are 
increasingly being forced to liquidate instead of 
reorganizing…to sell pieces of their business to the 
highest bidder.” 
Do you realize how dangerous this is? Already this year, 
a record 230 public companies, with more than $182 
billion in assets, have filed for bankruptcy – more than 
double the assets for all of last year. And that’s 
excluding Enron, with an additional $62 billion in 
assets! 
Imagine the kind of price declines that’s causing!
Why? Because more so than ever before, rather than using 
bankruptcy as a way to fix their balance sheets, many 
companies are simply closing shop and selling off their 
inventories, receivables, real estate, equipment, 
furniture, technology, customer lists – anything for 
almost any price. 
Do you see the consequences? This kind of selling 
inevitably produces deflation of the meanest variety – 
the kind of deflation that spreads with amazing speed 
and fury, taking even the savviest of investors by 
surprise. Consider just a few of the unstoppable 
impacts… 
* We’ve just seen the worst collapse in corporate 
profits since the Great Depression. Every penny of the 
total profits earned by the 4,000-plus Nasdaq companies 
since mid-1994 has been wiped out. 
* Just one company, JDS Uniphase, has recorded the 
largest single loss in the history of civilization. 
* Enron, the seventh largest US company in revenues, has 
gone belly-up. Its stock has collapsed from $90 to a low 
of 25 cents – wiping out more than $65 billion in 
invested capital, almost every single penny invested by 
58,920 investors. 
* Junk bond issuers are defaulting in record numbers. 
Even excluding Enron, US companies have defaulted on 
$75.2 billion in junk bonds – more than 57% above the 
record $47.8 billon recorded last year. Examples: 
Bethlehem Steel defaulted on $179 million in bonds and 
has now filed for bankruptcy, gutting the portfolios of 
thousands of investors…Swiss Air defaulted on 1.5 
billion, destroying the wealth of thousands more…in 
the second week of November, US banana producer Chiquita 
defaulted on $700 million in debt…wireless data 
provider Metricom defaulted on $300 million in high- 
yielding 13% bonds that were due in 2010. (Apparently 
13% sounded great to thousands of investors. But what 
good is it if they never get paid?)…Comdisco, a 
leading information technology leasing and venture 
capital company just filed for bankruptcy, leaving 
holders of its $2.82 billion in public debt out in the 
cold. 
All of these had been downgraded to junk before they 
defaulted. Who’s next? 
Rather…you might ask: what’s next?
When the techs wrecked last year, real estate prices in 
high-tech areas of the country nose-dived. Austin, New 
York City, and other silicon cities felt the shock 
waves. The San Francisco Bay area was especially hard 
hit. 
Now, with a recession officially here – and spreading – 
real estate deflation is beginning to spill over the 
Rockies, across the plains, and into the South. 
You may not have felt it yet in your area. But the 
national stats don’t lie: The median existing home price 
dropped 4.1% in September and another 1.4% in October. 
Average home prices in the Midwest, the one region that 
had been spared from the tech wreck fallout, suffered 
the biggest decline of all – a whopping 4.5% in just one 
month. If they continued to decline at that pace, home 
values would plunge by more than half in less than a 
year! 
Homes have been the Rock of Gibraltar of household 
wealth in America…the ultimate source of collateral 
for more credit…the last bastion of stability in the 
US economy. 
Now, housing, too, is beginning to slip into a serious 
deflationary decline. 
Deflation has been the nightmare of the tech industry 
for nearly two years. Now, it is on the way to becoming 
a nightmare for other industries as well. 
The same exact deflation-driven profit squeeze you saw 
at the computer server company will repeat itself for 
autos, appliances, housing, and even services. It’s no 
different than the selling frenzies you’ve seen in the 
stock market: Prices fall because people are selling … 
and people sell more because prices are falling. 
They sell for all kinds of reasons – because they’re 
driven by their inner psyche, because they’re shoved by 
external pressure, or simply because everyone else is 
doing it. 
And the irony of our market economy is that almost every 
product and service is traded freely. 
Electric power. Water. Temporary workers. All this may 
be good for a steadily growing economy, but it’s 
potentially very painful in deflation. So, stay the 
course. Don’t let market rallies or upticks in the 
economy distract you from the big trend – down. 
Recession, deflation, and a new wave of bankruptcies 
will drive the Dow to 5000 and the Nasdaq to 800. In the 
meantime, accept the latest stock market rally as a 
gift. Use it as your convenient exit door…before that 
door slams shut. 
Even in this environment, Wall Street pundits will pound 
the table, put a positive spin on every tidbit of good 
news, and help generate stock market rallies. 
Don’t let them fool you,
Martin Weiss
December 19, 2001
for The Daily Reckoning
P.S. Deflation is flattening foreign economies and 
promises to drive credit addicts into painful 
withdrawal. For more on these and other deleterious 
trends afoot please see: 
Deflation Flattening Foreign Economies
Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D., the nation’s leading advocate 
for financial safety, has helped millions of Americans 
with his ratings of stocks, mutual funds, insurance 
companies, banks, brokerage firms and HMOs. Martin has 
testified before Congress repeatedly, advocating full 
disclosure of risk to investors. 
The Wall Street Journal says Weiss runs a “feisty firm,” 
and Esquire noted that his is “the only company…that 
provides financial grades free of any possible conflict 
of interest.” Forbes calls Dr. Weiss “Mr. Independence.” 
Is there anyone in America who doubts that a 
recovery is coming early next year? Is that person 
awake? Compus mentis? Literate? Vertebrate? 
As Eric reports below, stocks rallied again 
yesterday. Investors expect Congress to leave a present 
under the tree before leaving town on Friday – a 
“stimulus package” that is supposed to rev up the 
economy. This, combined with victory in Afghanistan, 11 
rate cuts, and double digit money growth is supposed to 
give the economy the vitality it has so recently lacked. 
At least, everyone says so. 
“As night follows day,” observes Morgan Stanley 
economist, Stephen Roach, “recovery follows recessions.” 
But when we look out our window at today’s 
economy, we see don’t see the pitch of night. As 
mentioned in this space yesterday – consumers are still 
spending, cars and houses are still selling, stocks are 
still at very high prices. If this is as bad as a 
recession gets…well, heck, what was all the fuss 
about? 
Instead of the dark of night, we see tenebrous 
skies and a half-light that could be the dawn of a 
recovery. Then again, it could be the fading, 
crepuscular light of evening. The sun could be going 
down as well as up. Here at the Daily Reckoning, we bet 
it’s sinking into recession, not rising out of one, 
meaning that the dark of night is still ahead of us: 
“After the Fed’s most aggressive interest-rate 
cutting ever, the news on the U.S. economy and corporate 
earnings [is] becoming ever gloomier,” writes Dr. 
Richebacher. 
“The International Monetary Fund warned on 
Tuesday,” adds the Financial Times, that “there was a 
significant possibility of a worse outcome” than its 
central forecast of a recovery in the world economy next 
year. 
“The IMF said the U.S. current account deficit and 
the historically high level of stock markets were the 
most serious threats to its prediction that the world 
economy would grow by 2.4 per cent next year. 
“In the U.S., the IMF said the overhang created by 
past over-investment and high levels of consumer debt 
might depress demand and lead to growth being even lower 
than its 0.7 per cent forecast for next year.” 
And Dr. Martin Weiss suggests, “emerging economies 
were falling in the wake of the global tech wreck. Now, 
add the events of September 11, the fallout from global 
deflation, and the plunge in worldwide exports…and you 
have a deadly poison with no anecdote.” More from Dr. 
Weiss below… 
Eric, what’s the latest from Wall Street?
*****
Eric Fry in Manhattan…
– The Santa Claus rally continued yesterday as the Dow 
gained 106 points to 9,998. The Nasdaq reclaimed 2,000 
by advancing 17 points to 2004. 
– The stocking-stuffer most delightful to investors was 
General Electric’s upbeat earnings forecast. The 
industrial conglomerate wowed investors by forecasting 
operating earnings growth of at least 13% next year. GE 
stock charged ahead 4%. 
– An unexpectedly large jump in housing starts added to 
the Yuletide mirth. Housing starts rose at an annualized 
rate of 8.2% in November, reinforcing the view that the 
economy is quickly getting back on track. 
– To be sure, a festive mood has returned to Wall 
Street. But not everyone is celebrating. “Luxury hotels 
have been hit hard by corporate-travel cutbacks,” the 
Wall Street Journal reports. “After sharp declines that 
began even before Sept. 11th, U.S. hotel occupancy rates 
and prices have stabilized…at nearly record low 
levels.” Ernst & Young predicts that national hotel 
occupancy rates in 2002 will be at the lowest level in 
decades. 
– And then there is Gap Inc., the beleaguered clothing 
retailer who ought to be enjoying the fruits of another 
Christmas shopping season. But there will be little joy 
in “Khaki-ville” this year. 
– Last week, the analytical team over at 
Grantsinvestor.com called attention to Gap’s falling 
profitability and rising debt burden. The financial 
website issued a fresh analysis on Monday that seemed to 
touch a nerve, both at Gap headquarters and within the 
paneled corridors of Wall Street. Daily Reckoning 
readers might find it illuminating to see a glimpse of 
how public companies and Wall Street firms respond to 
bearish analysis. 
(For the record – when I’m not busy writing my part of 
the Daily Reckoning or taking out the trash in Agora’s 
offices – I pitch in a bit over at Grantsinvestor.com, 
helping to guide its investment research effort). 
– Last weekend, while Grant’s Investor analyst Robert 
Tracy was sifting through Gap’s latest quarterly filing 
with the SEC (known as the 10-Q), he found some 
troubling disclosures. Tracy writes, “Gap warns in the 
10-Q that fiscal fourth-quarter earnings will be worse 
than the third quarter’s: ‘Looking at the remainder of 
the fourth quarter, it is reasonable to expect that the 
negative trends in comparable store sales and gross 
margins could continue. On that basis, fourth quarter 
earnings per share would be considerably worse than the 
six cent loss reported in the third quarter…’ 
– “Given that [Gap’s] same-store sales in November fell 
by 25%, ‘considerably worse’ seems like a strong 
possibility,” Tracy warns. “Gap’s balance-sheet 
liquidity is clearly deteriorating. While we would not 
yet wheel this equity into ICU, the vital signs are not 
encouraging.” 
– Within hours of its release, the report had spread 
through the financial press like a computer virus. The 
Wall Street Journal jumped on the story first, followed 
by CNN, Bloomberg News and the Financial Times. Gap was 
not pleased. That was to be expected. Two Wall Street 
firms were not pleased. That was also to be expected. 
– At first, when queried by Wall Street Journal 
reporter, Amy Merrick, the company refused comment. But 
then, around about 1:30 AM Eastern Standard Time, Gap 
issued a press release asserting that Grant’s Investor 
“misestimated” its debt levels. The company provided its 
own, more-pleasing estimates. 
– However, Gap was mute regarding the most essential 
issue raised by Grant’s Investor: that Gap’s cash flow 
is falling rapidly. The company said merely, “Gap Inc. 
does not confirm or deny any other statements made in 
the Grant’s Investor Inc. report.” 
– UBS Warburg retail analyst Richard Jaffe rushed to 
Gap’s defense. He told CNN.com that a serious debt 
problem at the Gap was “a huge stretch of the 
imagination.” Jaffe did acknowledge, “There’s no 
question things are stinky at Gap…” Nevertheless, he 
maintained his “buy” rating on the stock with an $18 
price target. 
– “It seems a new rating has been invented – ‘Stinky 
Buy’,” quipped Grant’s Investor writer, Andrew Kashdan. 
About midday, a very angry bond analyst from Goldman 
Sachs telephoned Robert Tracy directly and voiced his 
displeasure with Grant’s Investor’s bearish conclusions. 
– More than likely, the analyst’s displeasure stemmed 
from the fact that Gap’s publicly traded bonds had 
plunged about 5% in response to the Grant’s Investor 
report.
– The established Wall Street players don’t like bearish 
views, plain and simple – especially when the views are 
on target. It makes their jobs a lot harder and costs 
them money. Bullish research is far more lucrative for 
Wall Street…even when it isn’t true. 
*****
Back in Paris…
*** Recently, I had breakfast in London with Martin 
Weiss. I discovered, to my delight, that we share 
remarkably similar views about the economy, the stock 
market, politics, Alan Greenspan, the future, education, 
English breakfast, the Chunnel. I asked him to edify us 
with his views on deflation. 
Leaving no stone unturned, Dr. Weiss comments: “Most 
politicians and regulators don’t understand deflation. 
They don’t know what’s hitting them – let alone what to 
do about it. Even Alan Greenspan will be helpless to 
stop the onslaught. Sure, he has the power to pump 
billions of dollars into the economy. But unless 
businesses and consumers spend or invest those dollars, 
it goes dead – like a blood transfusion without a 
heartbeat. Right now… 
Businesses are hell bent on cutting back – not spending 
more. Since October 2000, they’ve fired a jaw-dropping 
2.2 million people. They’ve cut down their help wanted 
ads to the lowest level since 1982. They’ve slashed 
expenditures on new technologies to the bone; outlays on 
travel, almost to zero. 
Some consumers are spending again – but only if the 
prices are slashed or the credit is free. That’s why GM 
has extended its zero-interest financing until January 2 
…why Best Buy stores placed 75% of their computers on 
sale…and why virtually no store in the nation could 
avoid massive price-cutting even on the very first day 
of the Christmas shopping season. 
Now, as soon as these special deals run out, you’re 
going to hear the clicking sound of millions of 
pocketbooks slamming shut once again. How do I know? 
Because consumer confidence has continued to plunge – to 
the lowest level since February 1994. 
That’s why the Fed’s money pumping will NOT end the 
decline. At best, it will only generate temporary lulls 
and upticks. At worst, it will just raise expectations 
and cause even greater disappointments – and more panic 
– for investors. 
The Fed can pump in another trillion dollars and drop 
the Fed funds rate to zero…and it still wouldn’t be 
enough to spark a real recovery in the economy.” 
Still more below…

                            	        
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