Judging from the stock market, Republicans should keep doing
exactly what they’re doing when it comes to the sequester. Well,
almost exactly: it would be better if they didn’t implicitly buy
into any of the Obama administration’s sky-is-falling rhetoric by
calling, in near-panicked tones, for meetings with the president or
for the Senate to do something.
But still, based on people putting their money where their
brains are, what’s happening now is basically fine, which is more
than enough for a Republican Party that has been routinely
outmaneuvered by this president and that often shows less
confidence than a 40-year-old virgin visiting the Chicken
Ranch.
In the 11 months since the failure of the Simpson-Bowles
Commission in March, 2012, the S&P 500 index is up
approximately 7%. More interesting, over that same time period, the
defense and aerospace industry (as represented by the Exchange
Traded Fund,
PPA, which holds many of these names) — those companies which
the administration is putting forward as likely to suffer
pestilence, famine, and huge job losses — is up the same
percentage as the broader market.

One might wonder why the market has done so well over recent
months, rallying into the election and quickly making up the
post-election sell-off. In my view, there are two reasons:
First, as I’ve
argued on these pages previously, American businessmen and
women are the cockroaches of economics: it takes a nearly
unimaginable obstacle, much more economic poison than even this
administration has delivered so far, to kill their entrepreneurial
spirit. Just as water finds a way around a boulder that falls into
a river, American capitalists find a way to navigate the foul river
of over-regulation and over-taxation created mostly by Democrats
and too often tolerated by Republicans.
Second, just as the first substantial improvement in the recent
recession’s unemployment data came the month after Republicans won
control of the House of Representatives in the 2010 election,
Republicans are standing on principle, even if not as firmly as
we’d like, despite being demonized by Obama and his media lackeys
as “obstructionists.” They are the only impediment keeping
near-lethal doses of Democratic venom from being injected into our
economy. Whether you are looking for a job, or whether you own
stocks in your retirement account, you should be grateful every
time the GOP finds enough backbone to stand up to the most
anti-business president in our nation’s history.

US Unemployment Rate (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
While I hope not to have the opportunity to test this theory, I
suspect that if Democrats took back control of the House in 2014,
the stock market would suffer a severe sell-off and along with it
the economic opportunities of many Americans.
To be sure, markets can be wrong. They are, after all, the
dominion of human beings (despite breathless news reports about the
impact of computerized trading) and are the result not only of
sober analysis but also of emotion, trend-following, speculation,
and even the occasional fraud. But over reasonably long periods of
time, the market remains one of the best forecasting and
discounting mechanisms we have.
Despite the various aspects of the human character that can
cause pricing errors, the fact that transactions are made
voluntarily by people risking their own money or with an incentive
to do well with other people’s money tends to mean that (other than
during true bubble markets when greed completely dominates fear) a
“wisdom
of crowds” effect dominates stock prices.
During the course of months of hand-wringing about the
over-hyped impact of the small reduction in the rate of growth of
government spending known as the sequester, investors’ improved
fortunes have been largely due to Republicans stopping Barack Obama
from replacing it with tax hikes and promises of never-to-happen
cuts. Apparently, Republicans have seen that movie so many times
now that even they remember it.
The big money in the stock market is run by pension funds, hedge
funds, university endowments, and other institutions whose leaders
tend to read the Wall Street Journal more than the New
York Times and therefore understand what’s going on in the
world, and the financial implications of current events, better
than the average voter or Democratic member of Congress does.
For those who aren’t financial market professionals, you might
be surprised to know that the
total value of the U.S. stock market is a little more than half
the value of the U.S. bond market, and the value of global stocks
is only one third the value of global bonds. In the past, I would
have argued that the bond market is an even better macroeconomic
forecaster than the stock market. But with Ben Bernanke running the
single largest, most dangerous market manipulation in the history
of mankind — buying a stunning and frightening
90 percent of newly issued U.S. Treasury debt — it is very
difficult to put much stock, if you’ll pardon the pun, in today’s
bond market.
No doubt some of Ben’s funny money is also making its way into
stocks. But still, stock markets are much closer to a true, free,
competitive market than today’s government bond market is.
So my advice to John Boehner, to Republicans who act as if they
really think sequestration is a problem: relax, watch the market
(without putting too much emphasis on any one day), and know that
while the sequester isn’t great policy, it is a real victory to
have even a modest reduction in the growth of government spending
under this president.
The harder part, especially for a messaging-challenged GOP, is
to explain to the wider electorate what stock prices are already
saying: that things are not as bad as they feel, but that they
would indeed be that bad and worse if Republicans were not keeping
Barack Obama and Harry Reid from injecting greater doses of
anti-free enterprise poison into the slowly-recovering body
politic.
Photo: UPI