Macroeconomia Usa-Europa Jeremy Grantham : "la Notte dei FED Viventi" e Bernanke

alingtonsky

Forumer storico
E' uscita la lettera trimestrale di Jeremy Grantham
is out.

Oct. 26, 2010, 4:31 PM

You can tell just from it exactly what he thinks about Bernanke and his gang and what they're doing to the economy.
But in case it's not obvious, he summarizes his case against the Fed into 18 easy-to-digest points that start with the myth of lower rates, and end with massive bubbles that destroy he economy.
1) Long-term data suggests that higher debt levels are not correlated with higher GDP growth rates.
2) Therefore, lowering rates to encourage more debt is useless at the second derivative level.
3) Lower rates, however, certainly do encourage speculation in markets and produce higher-priced and therefore less rewarding investments, which tilt markets toward the speculative end. Sustained higher prices mislead consumers and budgets alike.
4) Our new Presidential Cycle data also shows no measurable economic benefits in Year 3, yet point to a striking market and speculative stock effect. This effect goes back to FDR, and is felt all around the world.
5) It seems certain that the Fed is aware that low rates and moral hazard encourage higher asset prices and increased speculation, and that higher asset prices have a beneficial short-term impact on the economy, mainly through the wealth effect. It is also probable that the Fed knows that the other direct effects of monetary policy on the economy are negligible.
6) It seems certain that the Fed uses this type of stimulus to help the recovery from even mild recessions, which might be healthier in the long-term for the economy to accept.
7) The Fed, both now and under Greenspan, expressed no concern with the later stages of investment bubbles. This sets up a much-increased probability of bubbles forming and breaking, always dangerous events. Even as much of the rest of the world expresses concern with asset bubbles, Bernanke expresses none. (Yellen to the rescue?)
8) The economic stimulus of higher asset prices, mild in the case of stocks and intense in the case of houses, is in any case all given back with interest as bubbles break and even overcorrect, causing intense financial and economic pain.
9) Persistently over-stimulated asset prices seduce states, municipalities, endowments, and pension funds into assuming unrealistic return assumptions, which can and have caused financial crises as asset prices revert back to replacement cost or below.
10) Artificially high asset prices also encourage misallocation of resources, as epitomized in thedotcom and fiber optic cable booms of 1999, and the overbuilding of houses from 2005 through 2007.
11) Housing is much more dangerous to mess with than stocks, as houses are more broadly owned, more easily borrowed against, and seen as a more stable asset. Consequently, the wealth effect is greater.
12) More importantly, house prices, unlike equities, have a direct effect on the economy by stimulating overbuilding. By 2007, overbuilding employed about 1 million additional, mostly lightly skilled, people, not counting the associated stimulus from housing- related purchases.
13) This increment of employment probably masked a structural increase in unemployment between 2002 and 2007, which was likely caused by global trade developments. With the housing bust, construction fell below normal and revealed this large increment in structural unemployment. Since these particular jobs may not come back, even in 10 years, this problem may call for retraining or special incentives.
14) Housing busts also help to partly freeze the movement of labor; people are reluctant to move if they have negative house equity. The lesson here is: Do not mess with housing!
15) Lower rates always transfer wealth from retirees (debt owners) to corporations (debt for expansion, theoretically) and the financial industry. This time, there are more retirees and the pain is greater, and corporations are notably avoiding capital spending and, therefore, the benefits are reduced. It is likely that there is no net benefit to artificially low rates.
16) Quantitative easing is likely to turn out to be an even more desperate maneuver than the typical low rate policy. Importantly, by increasing inflation fears, this easing has sent the dollar down and commodity prices up.
17) Weakening the dollar and being seen as certain to do that increases the chances of currency friction, which could spiral out of control.
18) In almost every respect, adhering to a policy of low rates, employing quantitative easing, deliberately stimulating asset prices, ignoring the consequences of bubbles breaking, and displaying a complete refusal to learn from experience has left Fed policy as a large net negative to the production of a healthy, stable economy with strong employment.


Read more: Jeremy Grantham "Night Of The Living Fed"



chart.png





Jeremy Grantham "Night Of The Living Fed"

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Jeremy Grantham's quarterly letters are amongst the most read pieces of prose on the Street. He says what much of Wall Street knows, but is happy to ignore as long as the Ponzi scheme is working on their behalf - a man I am happy to parallel. Always excellent comments; but this one is a doozy. If you have been reading FMMF for the past 2-3-4 years you will have heard everything in this letter. Many of these line items could be ripped verbatim from multiple posts I've written - to a relatively sparse audience of thousands. If you are new to the site or have lived (until recently) attached to the Matrix, this might come to a shock.

As you read consider the Fed as the nexus of why we have increasing bubble/busts. We have always had these cycles but they used to happen every 30-40 years... now they are coming in 6-8 year cycles. Why? Because the self absorbed "firemen" who show up to the scene to douse the flames don't acknowledge that they were the ones who were the arsonists years earlier. And as each fire gets bigger, they come with more water, but more matches for the next fire. Just imagine a world without arsonists? My gosh, we'd have cleansing recessions (which are never fun) but relatively mild in nature .... instead of a constant bubble/bust situation that causes a huge wealth transfer from the middle to the 'elite' - who essentially are backstopped and supported by the Fed. Hmmm.... I love when people not named me start to speak the truth ....


http://www.fundmymutualfund.com/2010/10/jeremy-grantham-gmo-october-2010-letter.html


Yahoo! Babel Fish - Traduttore on line | Tradurre testi e pagine web

Google Traduttore
 
Nov 5, 2010 4:55 PM

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke’s decision to purchase Treasuries to boost the U.S. economy was “absolutely right,” hedge-fund manager Barton Biggs said.
“We still are in a very precarious situation,” Biggs, the managing partner of New York-based Traxis Partners LLC and former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asset Management, said in an interview today on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop” with Betty Liu. “The economy could easily tip back into a double dip, and Bernanke did what he had to do.”
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index broke through its April peak yesterday, rising to the highest level since September 2008 after the Fed said it will buy an additional $600 billion of Treasuries through June, expanding record stimulus and risking its credibility in a bid to reduce unemployment and avert deflation. Policy makers, setting a pace of about $75 billion of purchases a month, “will adjust the program as needed,” the Fed’s Open Market Committee said two days ago.
“We’re going to have higher stock prices for a while,” Biggs said. Bernanke has “gotten the stock market up, which is what he wants to do. The stock market is an important symbol of confidence.”
S&P Rally
The S&P 500 has rallied 17 percent since Bernanke indicated in August that he had the tools to prevent another recession. This week, The central bank left unchanged its pledge to keep interest rates low for an “extended period” after Bernanke said it could be modified in some way. While Bernanke’s near- zero rates policy and $1.7 trillion in asset purchases helped end the recession, the Fed said progress was “disappointingly slow” in bringing down joblessness close to a 26-year high.
Biggs said last month that U.S. stocks may gain 10 percent after the Fed announcement and that a bubble, or unsustainable rally, is occurring in emerging markets.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Index of equities in 21 nations has gained 35 percent since its 2010 low in May, and surged more than 150 percent since October 2008, when it reached the weakest level in four years. The Shanghai Composite Index has rallied 32 percent since reaching its 2010 low on July 5, while Brazil’s Bovespa index has jumped 25 percent since May 20.
“We probably are going to have a bigger bubble because of what Bernanke has done,” Biggs said today. “But it’s not my job to try to correct the past. I’m just saying what he’s done is the right thing now and it’s fueling liquidity.”
..

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-...ght-amid-precarious-situation-biggs-says.html


http://translation2.paralink.com/
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Alto