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From: | "Oliver Shapleski" <oliver.shapleski@vuw.ac.nz> |
Date: | Mon, 17 Apr 2000 10:59:17 +1200 |
Jesse - i fully agree that Greenspan will be
chuckling (or at least wryly smiling) at the events of wednesday through
Friday. However, I do think that if the selling continues through to
Wednesday he may be rethinking strategy having pushed things one step too
far. The gradual increasing of interest rates since last July has done
very little to stem the surging markets, yet now the markets have corrected
themselves! My thought is that this downward plunge will be enough to
bring consumer spending to a major halt (what little fraction of the CPI numbers
there is beyond the oil contribution...) so as to require a softening of
interest rates lest the US consumers do lose ALL confidence and indeed do bring
on a severe economic depression. No doubt a recession has started.
It has started very quickly too, and Greenspan will not be looking to spend his
last term in office stuck in a depression. Pity they lost wassis name -
Rubens? Quite sure he'd be following my philosophy on this one.
Government intervention is only useful to correct market failures, and a lack of
confidence in the US market is, IMVHO, a very obv market failure.
If the market does plateau by Wednesday (and I
think it will plateau by then much lower than it is now, for what that's worth)
Greenspan should do nothing - maybe another rise after next month's figures come
out. Frankly you'd be somewhat rash to act on this months figure given the
obvious weighting from one particular sector. And jeez, if Brash announces
a rate rise here on Wednesday I'll have a good mind to go down The Terrace and
tell him where he should be putting his interest rate rises.
I think I'll turn off the computer for a while -
all this red is making me queasy...
Jungen.
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