A quick look at the numbers:Yesterday, the Dow fell more than 200 points. Oil, up $1.69, hit a newrecord. The dollar rose to $1.53 per euro. And gold lost ground...droppingdown to $871.Up, down...up, down...whats going on? Is the economy recovering? Is thestock market giving us the all clear? Is the smart money buying theUnited States of America again?No. No. And no. At least, not in our humble, timid,looking-over-our-shoulder and keeping-our-fingers-crossed opinion.Yes, dear reader, here at The Daily Reckoning headquarters we aresometimes right...sometimes wrong...and always in doubt. What are we indoubt about today? Practically everything. Still, that doesnt stop usfrom having opinions.But lets begin by looking at Consumeris Americanus, a species that hasbeen having its share of trouble lately. Its habitat is threatened byfalling house prices...its food supply has become more expensive. Whatsthe outlook?First, this report from Bloomberg:U.S. consumer borrowing jumped more than double the amount economistsforecast in March, indicating a slowing economy is forcing Americans toaccumulate credit-card and other forms of debt. Consumer credit increased by $15.3 billion for the month to $2.56trillion, the biggest monthly rise since November, the Federal Reservesaid today in Washington. In February, credit rose by $6.5 billion,previously reported as an increase of $5.2 billion. The Feds reportdoesnt cover borrowing secured by real estate, such as home-equity loans.Consumers are turning to credit cards after banks tightened standards forhome-equity loans and other borrowing. The March figures brought U.S.consumer borrowing in the first quarter to $34 billion, the most since thefirst three months of 2001, when the economy entered its last officialrecession. Consumers are strapped as incomes are not keeping up with inflation andthis is leading them to rely increasingly on credit to see them throughthe worst housing downturn since the Great Depression, said Chris Rupkey,chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi in New York. Thedays of extracting cash from ones home to spend on goods and services arelong gone. But wait? The feds clearly want to protect this endangered species. Thesedinosaurs vote! So, theyre sending out rebate checks...theyre cuttingrates...theyre spoon feeding the banks so theyll be able to help theconsumer out with more credit on easier terms. Richard Benson comments:For the average American, this rebate check represents only one car,credit card, or partial mortgage payment. When you consider it cost wellover $60 now to fill up the gas tank for a mid-sized car, and a lot moreto go out to eat, it wont go very far. On the household front, millions of homeowners havent even finishedpaying their heating bills from last winter, and over six millionAmericans asked for energy assistance funds so their power wouldnt beshut off. (In California alone, 1.7 million households are behind on theirutility payments.) Signs of the stretched consumer include the following stunning facts:- Home equity loans have a seven percent delinquency;- Subprime mortgages, past due over 60 days, are pushing 14 percent;- Over one million homes are in foreclosure and three million more areempty, and up for sale; - Ten million homes have mortgage balances greater than their value. (Nowonder some homeowners are walking away from them);- In the auto market, 25 percent of all car loans are higher than the caris worth. (The average balance these cars are underwater for is $4,300!)Jobs are also falling off a cliff. If it hadnt been for the Birth Deathcomputer model at the BLS creating service jobs out of thin air, thepayroll data would have shown over 280,000 people actually lost their jobsin April. Currently, 2.7 million workers have exhausted their unemploymentbenefits, and with no job prospects or income, hello collector!Meanwhile, the rising price of food has forced a record 28 millionAmericans onto food stamps. Trouble is, says the bleeding heart press, thegiveaways dont go as far as they used to. Many are still hungry,according to a CNN report. Its true that we havent lived in the United States for more than 10years. But we used to live right in the heart of the Baltimore ghetto.There, almost everyone got food stamps and other taxpayer-financedfreebies. What we recall is that people tended to be overfed...not hungry.But, back to our doubts and opinions...Consumeris Americanus isnt looking his best. But so what? The newspaperstell us that the worst is behind us. The credit crunch is over, saysBuffett. The housing crisis is over, says the Wall Street Journal. Andjust look at the stock market...The stock market is said to look ahead. It is thought to see through theheadlines...through the noise and opinions...and through the theories...totell us what is really going on. Look, say the bulls, the stock market is doing well; theres nothing toworry about. The chartists say the next move is up. The Dow Theory folkssay were still in a bull market. The dreamers are hoping for Dow 15,000.Of course, theyre right about one thing; theres nothing to worry about.Were just talking about money. But anyone who thinks the stock marketreally predicts future money trends hasnt been paying close attention. Inearly January 1990, the key Japanese stock index was over 39,000. It hadrisen like a rocket for the preceding five years. Surely, it saw moregrowth and prosperity ahead, right?But that very same month, Japan, Inc. ran into a serious problem. Thestock market crashed...and the economy went into a long slump from whichit still hasnt recovered. In the United States 10 years later, again the stock market had registeredsteady, impressive gains over the preceding five years. The NASDAQ wasgoing almost straight up. Surely, stock prices signaled more growth andprosperity ahead, right?Nope. The NASDAQ crashed...the Dow sank...and in real terms, after adecade, even in the Dow stockholders are still down 20% to 30%.No, dear readers, the stock market is often blind, deaf and dumb. It cantsee ahead. It cant hear the warning whispers. And it cant put 2 and 2together.*** What beautiful weather... we said to a colleague yesterday. Itlooks like the beginning of summer in London, doesnt it.The beginning? You better enjoy it. This might be the end of summertoo.London is not known for its great weather. Sometimes, a few lovely weeksin May or June may be all the summer Londoners get.*** You may be able to print your way out of a recession, said anothercolleague this morning, but you cant mint your way out.What?In the U.S., he explained, because of price increases in the metalsmarkets, it now costs more than 5 cents to make a new nickel. And here inEngland, if you melt down two pennies, you get 3 pennies worth ofcopper.*** And heres more, from the Washington Post, on Japans selfextinction:Japan celebrated a national holiday on Monday in honor of its children.But Childrens Day might just as easily have been a national day ofmourning. For this is the land of disappearing children and a slow-motiondemographic catastrophe that is without precedent in the developed world.The number of children has declined for 27 consecutive years, agovernment report said over the weekend. Japan now has fewer children whoare 14 or younger than at any time since 1908. The proportion of children in the population fell to an all-time low of13.5 percent. That number has been falling for 34 straight years and isthe lowest among 31 major countries, according to the report. In theUnited States, children account for about 20 percent of the population. Japan also has a surfeit of the elderly. About 22 percent of thepopulation is 65 or older, the highest proportion in the world. And thatnumber is on the rise. By 2020, the elderly will outnumber children bynearly 3 to 1, the government report predicted. By 2040, they willoutnumber them by nearly 4 to 1. The economic and social consequences of these trends are difficult tooverstate.Japan, now the worlds second-largest economy, will lose 70 percent ofits workforce by 2050 and economic growth will slow to zero, according toa report this year by the nonprofit Japan Center for Economic Research.Population shrinkage began three years ago and is gathering pace. Within50 years, the population, now 127 million, will fall by a third, thegovernment projects. Within a century, two-thirds of the population willbe gone.In what is now being called a super-aging society, department andgrocery stores have recorded declining sales for a decade...*** Food riots have broken out in several countries...including severaloil producers. The oil exporters find they need to spend more and more oftheir loot feeding their own growing populations. Several have tried toinvest in more local food production, but have been stopped by a lack ofwater.*** Heres something interesting. Our Buenos Aires correspondent, HoracioPozzo, tells us that U.S. company, Amyris, has gotten together with aBrazilian company, Crystalsev, to produce a sugar-caned based bio-dieselfuel which is equal or better than diesel from petroleum. Several largecompanies from Europe and America are moving to Brazil to take part in thedevelopment of bio-diesel fuels. And Fiat Powertrain Technologies says itwill launch a motor designed to run on ethanol also in Brazil, in 2010.*** Finally, more than a million Americans are being fed and housed,courtesy of state, local and federal governments. Theyre the luckyones...paying no mortgages...losing no jobs; they dont even have to buybread. Still, life in U.S. prisons is probably no picnic.Until tomorrow,Bill BonnerThe Daily Reckoning