Wolf
Richter www.testosteronepit.com
www.amazon.com/author/wolfrichter
A
new era has dawned: there is now a consensus that
this is a stock market bubble. We’re back where we were during the
last bubble, or the one before it, though the jury is still out if
this is February 2000 or October 1999 or sometime in 2007. How do I
know it’s not just some intrepid souls on the bleeding edge who are
claiming this, but a consensus?
Bubble
data keep piling up relentlessly. IPOs so far this year amounted to
$51 billion, the highest for the period since bubble-bust year 2000,
the Wall
Street Journal reported. Of them, 62% were for companies
that have been losing money, the highest rate on record. Follow-on
offerings by companies that already had their IPO but dumped more
stock on the market amounted to $155 billion, the highest in
Dealogic’s book, going back to 1995. And throughout, the DOW and
the S&P 500 have been jumping from one new high to the next.
It’s even crazier in the land of bonds, where
issuers are dreading the arrival of higher interest rates – which
have already arrived. And they’re pushing everything possible out
the door while prices are still high. So far this year, $911 billion
in bonds were issued, also a Dealogic record. Emerging-market bond
issuance hit $802 billion, a notch below their all-time record last
year, but emerging-market bonds went into tailspin during the summer
taper-talk, which slowed things down temporarily.
These ominous clouds have been billowing up on
the horizon for a while, but nothing is a bubble until enough people
say it’s a bubble. And today, shortly before 10 a.m. Pacific Time,
it officially became one.
I
heard it on the last place where you normally hear this kind of
thing, on KQED Public Radio in San Francisco, on Forum,
a local show. Host Michael Krasny was chatting with New
York Times writer
Nick Bilton about Twitter as part of Bilton’s book tour. This isn’t
exactly Max Keiser’s whiplash-inducing
Keiser Report. This is soft-spoken public radio.
Twitter’s IPO shook up San Francisco. People
are waiting for the tsunami of money. Everyone talks about it. And
everyone talks about their gift to Twitter. Like all good corporate
citizens, Twitter got a huge tax break from San Francisco, and that
money is currently being extracted from everyone’s pockets.
In April 2011, the Board of Supervisors voted
to give Twitter and other companies that would relocate to Central
Market Street or the Tenderloin – not the most polished areas of
town – a six-year exemption from San Francisco’s 1.5% employment
tax. Twitter had threatened to leave and do whatever, if it didn’t
get it. Voilà. Corporate extortion works every time. Only new hires
would be impacted. At the time, the gift was estimated to be worth
$22 million.
So Twitter moved into its new digs, and the
headcount jumped, and salaries went up, and there has been some
turnover, and now the gift has grown to $56 million – and continues
to grow. Twitter too has become a corporate welfare queen.
But
not everyone is happy, given the hoopla of the IPO, the billions
involved, and the soaring rents in San Francisco as newly hired
employees of startups with no revenues stand in line to rent whatever
is available, rent not being much of an issue with their inflated
salaries. Like Twitter, these companies are under no pressure to make
money. So evictions jumped 38% between March 2010 and February 2013,
the last period for which data is available; “Ellis
Act” evictions – named after the state law that allows
landlords to evict tenants when they want to sell their property –
jumped 170%. Housing has been booming!
And
people are being pushed out of the city. So on Thursday, as Twitter’s
valuation settled on $31.7 billion, residents of San Francisco, who
not only have to pay for Twitter’s gift, but are now facing
ballooning rents or eviction, demonstrated in
front of Twitter’s headquarters. “People over profit,” a sign
said. “No to evictions,” another said. Or “$56 million in tax
breaks – Are you Twittin’ me?”
This conflict too – between the fake money
that pushes up prices, and long-term residents who can no longer
afford to live here – is a sign of a bubble. San Francisco has been
there before: in the late 1990s. It popped spectacularly.
“Why is Twitter not a total fad perpetuated
by yet another financial bubble in speculative tech stocks?” a
caller asked Bilton toward the end of the radio show. This sent
Bilton off on a tangent, away from promoting his book. There were
“bubble companies” that made you wonder “how on earth” they
would be “worth so much,” he said.
Pinterest
in San Francisco, an internet message board for images with 50
million monthly users, got $225 million in a round of funding that
valued the company at $3.8 billion – though it has zero revenues.
That a big chunk of the funding came from mutual fund company
Fidelity, instead of venture capital funds, raised even more
eyebrows. Or messaging app developer Snapchat in LA is stewing over
an investment that would value it at $3.5 billion, and it doesn’t
have any revenues either.
“I absolutely”
– emphasis his – “believe that we’re in another bubble,”
Bilton explained. “And it is going to pop,”
Companies like Pinterest with sky-high
valuations and no business model or revenues – what are they going
to do? Well, they either would have to be sold, which you can’t do
easily at these valuations, he said, “or they’re gonna pop.”
That, on KQED, made it official.
I
remember very well: in late 1999, everyone knew it
was a bubble, and the word “bubble” had become a common term,
though strenuously denied by Chairman Greenspan and others at the
Fed, and by other official mouthpieces of Wall Street, but those in
the marketknew.
They were just riding the wave, and the wave was too magnificent to
get off. Money was being fabricated. IPOs were flying off the shelf,
doubling and redoubling. Everyone was planning to get off the wave in
the nick of time, ahead of the rest of them. And everyone was happy.
Well not everyone. Not the poor souls who were
driven out of San Francisco because they couldn’t afford to live
here anymore. Not the folks who lost fortunes when it all blew up.
Not the Fed that claimed afterwards that you can’t see bubbles when
they’re inflating – which made the Fed look really stupid.
But
this time it’s different. Money is being fabricated. Investors are
riding the magnificent wave for as long as possible. And
they’re all planning
to get off the wave in the nick of time, ahead of the rest of them.
After
five years of QE, and $3 trillion in new money floating around, risk
is no longer priced into anything. In fact, it has disappeared as a
factor. And the Fed is publicly fretting about it. Read….. Watching
The Fed Marinate In Its Own Artfully Concocted Pickle
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