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A Nightmare on Wall Street - Why the credit crunch has lasted so long - The Economist
This Link is located in the Public Channel Housing Bubble and Bear Links.
Posted by ian 1 year 194 days ago (economist.com).  Views: 66
Tags: housing bubble  credit crisi
Related Tags: credit crisis  gold  wall street  peter schiff  economics  inflation  banks  
I have always believed the crisis would last for years, if not a decade; pundits and the mainstream media keep calling for bottoms and reversals, but they have yet to happen. The true crisis has only just begun.

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LIKE a Hollywood monster that is impervious to bullets, the credit crisis refuses to lie down and die. The authorities have bombarded it with interest-rate reductions, tax cuts, special liquidity schemes and bank bail-outs, but still the creature lumbers forward, threatening new victims with every step. Global stockmarkets are suffering double-digit losses this year, and credit markets are once again gummed up.

For investors who cut their teeth in the 1980s and 1990s, the persistence of the crisis must be a surprise. Prompt action by central banks, after Black Monday in 1987 (when America’s stockmarket fell by almost 23%), or following the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management, a hedge fund, in 1998, suggested it was always worthwhile to “buy on the dips”.

One reason why things are different this time is that there has been a double shock. On top of the decline in house prices and the associated drop in the prices of asset-backed securities, the markets have also had to face a surge in commodity prices. That has constrained central banks from easing monetary policy as much as they might have done, particularly in Britain and the euro zone. Even in America, rates might now perhaps be 1% (as they were in 2003) without the commodity boom.

In addition, the combination of the two shocks has created uncertainty about the direction of monetary and regulatory policy. Will the central banks be forced to “do a Turkey” and adjust their inflation targets upward (implicitly or explicitly) to reflect reality? Alternatively, will they crack down so hard on inflation that they force their economies into recession? And will the price of investment-bank rescues be a harsh new regulatory regime that restricts the scope for future credit (and economic) growth? In the face of all this uncertainty, investors can hardly be blamed for being cautious.

The way that the crisis has centred on the banking industry also explains its duration. Stephen King, an economist at HSBC, points out that the financial crises of the 1990s were also prolonged, from the savings and loan collapses in America through the Swedish banking rescues to the extremes of Japan’s debt deflation. As Mr King says, “if banks are unable or unwilling to lend, monetary policy doesn’t work so well.”

Worse still, bank problems create a feedback loop with the rest of the economy. When banks get into difficulty, they restrict their lending. That in turn makes life more difficult for companies and consumers, causing them to cut their spending and making it harder for them to repay their debts. That forces further caution on the banks.

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Housing Bubble and Bear Links (1,486 Links)
Created by ian 2 years 345 days ago in Finance. Views: 12,629. Link Views: 417,991
Tags: housing bubble  investing  real estate  subprime  mortgage  finance  economics
Related Tags: wall street  stocks  business  video  politics  infesting  economy  financial  
This channel was created on April 10, 2007, during the peak of the housing mania, to warn investors of the coming collapse in home prices. For quite some time we have warned investors to get out of U.S. stocks. This channel represents the best of the [More...]

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