October 11, 2008 Archives
2008/10/11 05:07:10
roubini on: investing in shotgun shells and sacks
of rice
From. (
via)
This
disconnect between more and more aggressive policy actions and
easings, and greater and greater strains in the financial market is
scary.
When Bear Stearns’ creditors were bailed out to the tune of $30 bn
in March, the rally in equity, money and credit markets lasted
eight weeks; when in July the U.S. Treasury announced legislation
to bail out the mortgage giants Fannie and Freddie, the rally
lasted four weeks; when the actual $200 billion rescue of these
firms was undertaken and their $6 trillion liabilities taken over
by the U.S. government, the rally lasted one day, and by the next
day the panic had moved to Lehman’s collapse; when AIG was bailed
out to the tune of $85 billion, the market did not even rally for a
day and instead fell 5%. Next when the $700 billion U.S. rescue
package was passed by the U.S. Senate and House, markets fell
another 7% in two days [due to a lack of] confidence in [the] plan
and the authorities.
Next, as authorities in the U.S. and abroad took even more radical
policy actions between October 6th and October 9th (payment of
interest on reserves, doubling of the liquidity support of banks,
extension of credit to the seized corporate sector, guarantees of
bank deposits, plans to recapitalize banks, coordinated monetary
policy easing, etc.), the stock markets and the credit markets and
the money markets fell further and further and at accelerated rates
day after day all week, including another 7% fall in U.S. equities
today.
When in markets that are clearly way oversold, even the most
radical policy actions don’t provide rallies or relief to market
participants. You know that you are one step away from a market
crash and a systemic financial sector and corporate sector
collapse. A vicious circle of deleveraging, asset collapses, margin
calls, and cascading falls in asset prices well below falling
fundamentals, and panic is now underway.
At this point severe damage is done and one cannot rule out a
systemic collapse and a global depression. It will take a
significant change in leadership of economic policy and very
radical, coordinated policy actions among all advanced and emerging
market economies to avoid this economic and financial
disaster.
(Edited for clarity.)
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