In a recent post -
Gold Price Crash Confirms Conjuncture
– I wrote that the gold price crash confirmed the conjuncture as
being that between the Spring and Summer Phase of the Long Wave, as
I'd previously set out –
The Long Wave Summer Has Begun.
Yesterday's results from
Apple
further confirm that analysis.
For the first time in ten
years, Apple has recorded a fall in profits. Its profits remain
huge, however, and it has a massive balance sheet, containing about
$140 billion of cash, some of which it has used to bolster its share
price by announcing a 15% increase in its dividend payout, and a
large buy back of its shares. Despite that, its shares have fallen
now below $400, having been over $700 last year.
The problem for Apple is
precisely that I set out in the posts above. What signifies the turn
to the Long Wave Summer, is that although the increase in the price
of primary products falls, or may even go into reverse, because new
supply catches up with and then outstrips demand, the firms that use
those inputs, suffer a decline in their productivity gains. That is
because this far into the boom, the main advantages obtained from the
new technologies and techniques introduced during the Winter and
Spring Phases of the Cycle, have been had. Productivity continues to
rise, but at a slower pace – what is called the second derivative.
As a result, unit costs
reductions slow down. At the same time, the reserve army of labour
has relatively been used up, by this stage, so competition for
labour-power between capitals raises the price of labour, wages rise.
Moreover, for the same reasons as cited above in relation to the
slow down in productivity growth, the reduction in the Value of
Labour-Power, also slows down, so the growth of Relative Surplus
Value slows down with it. The volume of profit generally continues
to rise, but at a slowing pace.
But, the other thing that
occurs at this point, and which Apple's and other company results
have shown, is the other aspect of this change in conjuncture. That
is that company's are caught in a typical vice. They can choose to
maintain high profit margins, by maintaining high prices for their
products, or they can choose to increase their revenues by reducing
their prices, and therefore their profit margins. They cannot do
both at the same time. The figures for Apple are a classic example
of that. Their profit margin has fallen from 47.4% to 37.5%, a 20%
reduction.
The reason is again typical
of the Summer Phase of the cycle, and Apple has been emblematic of
that cycle. During the Spring Phase, a plethora of new products are
developed, around the new base technologies brought forward during
the Innovation Cycle. There could hardly be a better example of that
than Apple. From the late 90's, it brought forward new products one
after another, that captured consumers imagination, not to mention
their money. These new products were able to sate consumer demand at
prices that ensured high profits, in total contrast to all those
products that had become mature in the previous phases of the cycle.
But, although, Apple
continues to innovate, and new products are forecast to be introduced
in the next few months, its clear that the pace of innovation has
slowed. But, more than that, of the new products that have been
introduced, more recently, instead of adding net new revenue for the
company, they have to an extent cannibalised their own demand. Where
consumers have not been prepared to pay the higher price for one
product, another similar but cheaper product has been launched. But,
then many consumers simply decide to buy the cheaper product rather
than the more expensive.
Moreover, rather than being
totally new products, innovation becomes more a matter of simply a
new version of an existing product, or a product that provides much
of the same functionality of some other. In order to maintain
revenues, prices have to be cut, or not raised so much. That is
particularly the case when other large competitors like Samsung are
there to steal market share if you get it wrong. That is why profit
margins have fallen.
Very large companies like
Apple, do not have to expand production, if they do not believe that
demand is there to justify it. That is one of the things that
distinguishes modern capitalism, from the kind of market driven
capitalism analysed by Marx 150 years ago. Indeed, its partly
because of that that Apple has $140 billion of cash on its balance
sheet, as it has simply hoarded the cash rather than invest it
foolishly. Its why, today its using that cash to give to
shareholders rather than invest in increased production. But, having
geared production to a certain level, such companies are also loathe
to cut it back significantly, because that means that billions of
dollars of investment would have been wasted.
So, they are caught between
two sets of converging forces. To maintain sales and revenues they
have to reduce prices, which means cutting profit margins, and at the
same time, they face relatively rising costs for labour, and slowing
gains from productivity. Profits can continue to grow, but at a
slowing pace, and yet, in order to continue to grow the business,
which is necessary to avoid losing market share, they have to
continue to invest in research and development, and in new production
methods to reduce costs and so on.
The consequence is that
although the volume of profit rises, the cost of producing that
profit rises faster, and so the rate of profit falls. The further
consequence at this phase of the cycle is also then that a larger
proportion of the profit has to go to cover those costs, and a
smaller part is available to be hoarded as cash, paid out as
dividends and so on. In short, the demand for capital rises, as the
supply of capital falls (relatively). The consequence of that is
rising interest rates.
That cannot be altered by
central banks printing money, as I will demonstrate in a future post.
Banks can print money tokens, but they cannot print capital.
Capital has to be created, and the whole point here is that more
capital is relatively being demanded, whilst a smaller amount is
relatively being supplied. All printing money tokens does under
these conditions is to create inflation, which in turn drives nominal
interest rates higher.
In fact, if we look back
over the last 20 years, what we have seen is precisely that. The
prices of commodities have not generally risen. But, that does not
mean there has not been inflation. The reason those prices have not
risen is because their Values have fallen massively. It is only
their Exchange Value against fiat currencies that has not fallen,
because the value of those currencies has fallen massively too! In
other words, without the money printing commodity prices would have
fallen significantly. Some still have.
You can buy a cheap suit
made in China today, for the same nominal price I paid for my wedding
suit in the 1970's. I bought my first computer in 1985, for £500.
It had 512k of RAM. Were it possible to buy the same computer today,
it would probably cost something like £50. Put another way, I can
buy a computer, 100 times as powerful today, for the same or less
nominal price as I paid in 1985. The reason that commodity prices
did not rise is because productivity gains, reduced their values, and
the increased money tokens were soaked up in a huge increase in the
volume of commodities being circulated in the market. In other
words, a huge amount of new capital was created.
But, look elsewhere, and you
can see that the money printing did cause massive inflation. The
property market, the bond market, the share market all rose
astronomically. But unlike the real economy, these sectors do not
produce any new capital. The rise in prices of these assets its
purely fictitious.
No amount of money printing
will, therefore, stop interest rates moving higher as this new phase
of the cycle progresses, and along with those higher interest rates,
will go the bursting of the asset bubbles.
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