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Via ZachStocks:
While these programs have been terribly inefficient and mismanaged, they did in fact push consumer spending into a positive trend. The government has taken capital from current and future taxpayers, allocated it to encourage two specific types of transactions, and then used these transactions as “proof” that the economy is recovering. Meanwhile, unemployment continues to increase, and an asset bubble has begun to inflate around risk related assets.
At the same time the Fed is stating verbally that the economic picture is improving, the posturing states that they are scared to death of the underlying economic situation. Keep in mind that a zero to 0.25% interest rate is basically unprecedented in modern economic history. The decision to cut rates to zero was born in the days of full-fledged panic when it looked as if our entire global financial system would fall apart. Even a 1.5% or 2% fed-funds interest rate is considered “accommodative.” But our rate structure implies that we are still at DEFCON 1. The difficult pill to swallow in this situation is that fiscally conservative individuals are being unfairly treated in an attempt to create more risk taking. Interest rates on deposit accounts are at all time lows. Retirees with more than a million in net worth cannot possibly live on the interest they receive on their capital. Not unless they put that capital at risk in a shaky economic environment where they could easily lose a substantial portion of their nest egg. It seems the government is content to offer incentives to encourage the very same risky behavior that got us into this mess in the first place. A prominent money manager has been quoted (and this is admittedly a poor paraphrase) as saying that the tragedy of this recession is that we will emerge having learned absolutely nothing. I fear that this may be true for our society in general, but does not have to be true for us individually as investors. Some of the takeaways I have gleaned from the last 24 months include:
<form>Other Articles of Interest Mortgage Crisis, Part Deux FDIC – A New Concern for Bank Liquidity Naked Capitalism: More Signs of Consumer Retrenchment Ritholtz: Fed and Unemployment Rate </form> We’ve got a ways to go before the economy and our markets are out of the woods. If you have participated in the run up since March, count your blessings but make sure you have an exit strategy in place. The markets gave up nearly all gains in the wake of the “positive” FOMC announcement which may be indicative of a sharply lower move in the next few weeks. So keep your defense on the field and consider raising cash or initiating short positions. There’s no reason to lose all of the gains from the last eight months. Enjoy this article? Sign up for the ZachStocks Newsletter,
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