Listen to the people who predicted this: No bailouts, no New Deal, no serfdom.

Here is a list of popular personages who predicted this credit implosion and depression while the bubble was still being blown:

  • Robert Prechter. In 2002, he published Conquer the Crash, How to survive and prosper in a deflationary depression. So far right on the money except gold hasn’t fallen hard (yet).
  • Jim Rogers. The man has good timing when it counts. He bought a NYC townhouse for 107k in 1977 and sold it for 16 million last year and got the heck out of Dodge. He moved his family, business and money to Singapore and shorted the US market. Missed the turn in commodities, though, and refused to sell China out of some kind of principle.
  • Peter Schiff. Published Crash Proof in 2006, which has been pretty accurate other than Schiff’s missing the deflation stage and holding commodities and foreign stocks too long. The results of the New Deal and bailouts are likely end with the currency failure he predicts.
  • Mish Shedlock. Publisher of a popular blog, Mish has been warning of a deflationary depression since 2005 or 2006, and now has the best record of predicting its course (deflation, bailouts, gold and the dollar doing well).
  • David Tice. Manager of the Prudent Bear Fund, BEARX, which is performing spectacularly.
  • Doug Casey, the original international speculator, and publisher of the Casey Research newsletters. Missed the deflation part, also burned by commodities, but spot on about fascism.

There are countless others who saw this coming, including Congressman Ron Paul, who’s own studies of monetary policy inspired him to first run for office.

What do all of these men have in common that allowed them to see around the corner? They understand money and the credit cycle. How did they learn it? Not in college, that’s for sure, because colleges teach perverse Keynesian claptrap. They have all read the Austrian economists, in particular Ludwig von Mises and his American pupil Murray Rothbard. Their explanation of the business cycle as the credit cycle is both elegant and extremely powerful.

And what do all of these followers of the Austrian School think we (meaning our governments) should do, now that their worst fears are coming true? In a word, to a man, nothing.

Don’t fear the crash. Fear fascism.

You see, the very worst fear of Austrians is not a crash or a depression, which is actually the healthy restoration of sanity after a credit-fueled mania, but the expansion of government that seems to follow these events like day follows night. Frederic Hayek laid out these fears in The Road to Serfdom, and that is exactly where we are going: utter economic collapse. The government is going to hamstring the markets and drain our resources for its pet projects and wars, all for our own good. Their aim is to stave off a proper accounting of the losses that have already taken place, and to preserve the power of those who inflated our way into this mess.

The damage from the bubble is already done. Government adds new damage.

What not one person in 10,000 understands is that the losses have already taken place. The losses were the waste of resources and labor for doomed endeavors that never made sense: think McMansions in the desert, and the roads, power plants and strip malls that served them. The price declines that we are now experiencing are necessary to restore valuations that reflect true values, because proper pricing clears markets — it allows people to accurately assess the worth of certain items against that of others.

A 5000 sqaure foot house on a dry hillside 20 miles outside of Phoenix is a money pit, not a million dollars. It was never properly valued in terms of the labor and raw materials that went into it. But because bankers, backed up by the Fed and various government programs and guarantees, would lend $1 million to buy it, those resources were drawn out into the desert instead of to sustainable productive uses.

An honest, gold-backed monetary system and a free-market banking system with no government support would never have allowed bankers to misprice assets so greatly. Any that did would face severe difficulties inducing the public to trust them with deposits. But with FDIC, who cares what your bank does with your money? And bankers say, “with the Fed to bail me out, who cares if all my loans blow up?”

What will happen if government doesn’t lift a finger?

The owners of McMansions will lose them to the banks or other mortgage holders, and those mortgage holders, if they bought the paper with loans of their own, will lose them to others, and so on. Almost every bank in the world will fail. They have all come to depend on deposit insurance and central banks to cover for the fact that they have been reckless and insolvent from nearly day one. There will be no bank lending at all.

What will happen to the depositors? Well, almost all of their money will be lost.

So, that is what we are looking at: every bank failing, zero bank lending, almost all the money in the world going to heaven. How is that not the end of the world? Simple: It is a reverse split. In 2006, let’s say, there was a million dollars in total bank deposits. Then in 2008 all the banks go under. All that is left is the cold cash in people’s pockets, let’s say $100,000 in all.

That remaining cash becomes extremely valuable. It has to work where one million did before. If you had $10 in your pocket and $90 in the bank, you now treat each dollar as if it were ten. The key is that so does everyone else. The world still has its unit of account and medium of exchange, we have just moved the decimal point over on all prices. (Note: gold and silver would rapidly re-enter circulation and quickly become the preferred money, as they always do until government outlaws them).

Of course, deflation on this scale makes debts unpayable, so essentially all debt is defaulted upon, but of course most creditors are bankrupt too. Contracts have to be renegotiated or annulled. No big deal, really. The assets are all still there, just the same as before. Nothing has burned down. A car bought on credit still gets the same mileage as before its loan went bad, a house keeps you just as dry.

Trust the prudent and smart, not bankers and politicians.

Such an event brings about a massive transfer of wealth from the reckless to the prudent and farsighted, who are exactly the people you want making the decisions about what to do with money and assets after the crash. They are statistically and philosophically the best equipped to decide what will generate the highest returns with the lowest risk. Life goes on. There is nothing to rebuild because nothing was destroyed. It is all just reordered in a more sensible fashion. The house in the desert is scrapped for materials. The Lehman mortgage traders find something productive to do, like drive cabs.

But that outcome is so quaint, so 1800s, so gold standard. We’re more scientific today. Bernanke is a wise economist. Congress is benevolent. War is peace, and lies are truth.

My screen is still cluttered with overpriced stocks.

This bubble was so extreme by any standard but Tulip Mania, that even after a 40% fall, the exchanges are full of junk stocks priced to go down another 40-100%. Where are the earnings? Where are the dividends?

Here are some prime examples:

  • Home Depot. How on earth is this company supposed to make money in the future? It is still priced at 10X last year’s earnings, and we were just entering a recession then. What will they do in the depression?
  • Blue Nile. It’s a great business concept, but how many diamonds are going to sell at retail next year, and the year after that, and after that? How do you put a 38-handle on last year’s earnings when the business is toast and they don’t even pay a dividend? Also take a look at Zales and Tiffany while you’re at it.
  • REITs, poor REITs. Kind of hurts to have to service all that debt with tenants dropping like flies. Expect zero equity to bring zero bids on a few of these before 2009 is out. Many are still down less than 50% from the crazy prices of 2006.
  • FedEx. Still a trailing PE of 20 and dividend yield at 0.6%! That’s a long ways from value. The stock ought to be priced at 5X last year’s earnings, because they will be lucky to see any next year.

I could go on and on. Stocks are still ridiculously overpriced. If you have Buffett-esque skills, you might be able to find the needle in the haystack that will hold up from here, but why swim against the tide? Your cash goes up in value every day.

Brave New World

The world from 2008 forward will be completely different than the last 60 years. Enormous shifts are taking place that will disrupt every business model and interrupt earnings in a major way. That has only begun to be discounted. This is not 1929, which was just a setback in the growth of western civilization. The utter economic cluelessness of the elite and middle class alike is paving our road to serfdom. My advice to anyone who doesn’t want to live in a Huxley or Orwell novel is to make like Jim Rogers and head east.

Fire Sales to Come as Mining Juniors go Broke

Jim Rogers admitted today on Bloomberg TV today that he thought the dollar could rally for a year. From him, this came as quite a surprise, even though he has been calling for a bounce for several months. He also admitted that he was losing money in foreign currencies and commodities, and said that the best play right now was on the short side of the stock market. I respect his ultra-long view, but he has just been asking for trouble by holding Chinese stocks and commodities right through manic tops and now down the backside.

Hard Assets Less Bad than Financial Assets

One other take-away from Roger’s comments is that if you believe this will be a “never-ending global recession” you will be better off with commodities than stocks. Of course, I think they are both going down a lot more, but the fact is that the world will always need raw materials. Zinc ingots will always have a bid, but you can’t be express such certainty about GE common.

Fire Sales to come as Juniors go Bust

That is not to say commodity stocks will weather the storm — I suspect that many miners and exploration companies will go under in the next couple of years if they cannot finance themselves with cash flows (same goes for non-earners of all stripes, which is why the NASDAQ is toast). Just as JP Morgan picked up a nice brokerage when Bear Stearns went bust, BHP BIlliton and other big boys will salvage some fine properties as outside funding dries up for juniors. That may not be so long from now, as recent buyers of private placements are getting burned.

To get an idea of the pain being experienced, take a peak at GDX, a gold stock ETF laden with formerly high-flying juniors (I was fortunate to have some puts on this):

Click image for sharper view. Source: Yahoo! Finance

Be Extra-Choosy about Geography

I wouldn’t touch anything in Latin America or Africa anymore, as the political gangsters in those countries have even more disregard for property rights than those in North America, and in economic downturns the trend is toward more populism and theft. As foreign owners of properties cut back on expenses and can’t hire as many locals or spend on public projects like schools and roads (thereby legally greasing the palms of politicians with contractor businesses), those politicos may decide to use the courts and police to snatch up the properties for themselves. They will either mothball them or make a mess of them, but either way the equity holders will be left with bupkis.

For the cautious, there will be some great buys in good jurisdictions (Australia and Canada should be ok), preferably of producing mines that can self-finance. That is, unless you are playing with bigger bucks and can buy whole exploration or development stage properties outright for pennies on the dollar compared their current owners’ market caps. Just mothball them and wait for the market to come back, which it should if China picks up humanity’s civilization project where the West left off.