At the moment their houses may be worth less.. Who
knows 5 years down the road?? They weren't suppose to be ATM
machines..
Of course if one NEEDS to sell now,
they are screwed...
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, October 19, 2008 5:54
PM
Subject: RE: [EquisMetaStock Group]
Monetary History of the US
The problem
with abrupt inflation of say 25% of our currency, is that it can easily
become runaway inflation.
Our world
economy is not a simple entity that can be stopped and started like turning on
a switch. Any intervention will take months to show whether it is doing what
the regulators want. There will be muddling through before our
world economy can regain is strength.
It is easy to
feel revengeful towards those who seem to be most responsible, but it will be
better to concentrate on the problems of restarting our economies. Anyone who
doubts this should read ?The Economic Consequences Of the Peace? by
Keynes 1920, in which Keynes warned that the onerous reparations being forced
on Germany would lead to runaway inflation and an extremist military
government. Then compare this to the treatment of post WW 2 Germany and the
results.
The problem
of homeowners being stuck with homes that are worth less than their mortgage
is a real one. It could be dealt with by compensating the owners for their
lost equity.
Lionel
Cameron: Canada does some things
better than we do. One example is your recent national elections which took a
month from dissolution of Parliament and new national
elections.
Much cheaper and faster than the current US elections.
From: equismetastock@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:equismetastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxcom] On Behalf Of Cameron
Reid Sent: Sunday, October 19, 2008 12:39 PM To:
equismetastock@yahoogroups.com Subject: RE:
[EquisMetaStock Group] Monetary History of the
US
Good morning Super, I read and enjoyed the WSJ article you
recommended. My summary is that their can be two generic problems within
banks: A lack of liquidity and a lack of equity ( insolvency ). At this
present time, I believe there is a crisis of insolvency which has cause almost
all inter-bank lending to cease and thus removed the FED's ability to
manipulate the credit cycle and by extension, the real
economy. Now we have to issues to deal with: 1) the FED has lost
a good portion of its ability to regulate economic demand and 2) Many of the
major financial institutions are insolvent. As far as I know, the
last time the banking system in America was insolvent was in the early
1980s. At this time many of the Latin America and other 3rd world loans
were in default. A formal recognition of this fact would have caused
write downs that would have bankrupted most of Europe's, America's and
Canada's banks. The solution at that time was to allow the Banks to
collectively hold these loans on their books at par value until they had built
up enough equity to weather the write downs. This happened for the first
time in 1986, when Citi Bank announced that they were writing down a portion
of their loans; other banks followed Citi's lead. What, in part,
enabled this strategy to work was the continue profitability of each banks
domestic franchise. All of the European, American and Canadian banks
enjoyed robust levels of growth and profitability in their home markets and a
steep yield curve. Today, the profitability of each bank's
domestic franchise, in most cases, is materially compromised in America and
Europe; Canadian banks are remarkably profitable at home. In my
view, if the US and Europeans continue on their current path, the solution
will be painful. When equity is injected, banks regain the ability to
sustain write downs and remain technically solvent. But, the opposite
side of a Bank's write down is either a consumer of commercial default.
These continued defaults discourage consumers and businesses from taking any
risks or additional debt; thereby removing the prospect of any economic growth
outside of increased government spending. This process can be successful
if enough equity is injected and all of the bad loans are written off and the
assets behind them liquidated, but the cost is incredible. The
other option is to manufacture equity. This can be done through
inflation. If the US and Europe were to devalue their currencies by 25%
of so, then wages would rise between 20% and 33% on both continents.
With hire incomes, families could begin to afford the mortgages on their homes
again and businesses would see their balance sheets improve.
Additionally, with fewer loans going into default, there would be less need to
inject equity into the balance sheets of banks and because of this counter
party risk would diminish. Each scenario will have its own
winners and losers. In the first scenario, the wealthy make out better
as their prudent investments will retain their value through time. In
the second scenario, we are bailing out many of the imprudent speculators;
those who are the most indebted and who can avoid being liquidated will come
out the best. I don't know what will happen. But with the
prospect of 1 in 5 US home ( and probably a similar number in Spain, the
UK, Ireland and some parts of Italy ) worth less than their mortgage
the political pressure to 'save the voter' will
be substantial. There is certainly the sense of panic in the
air. Looking down from Canada, the US electorate is desperate for
change. But, it also appears to have lost much of its frontier self
reliance in what appears to be a jump to the left. A larger government
is certainly the most prospective outcome at this time. In my
opinion, much of the economic freedom I enjoy today in Canada is the result of
Canadians being forced to remain competitive with the massive US economy to
the South. I suspect that this constructive pressure is about to
diminish
considerably. Cheers, Cameron
To: equismetastock@yahoogroups.com From:
no_reply@xxxxxxxxxxs.com Date: Sat, 18 Oct 2008 19:29:15
+0000 Subject: [EquisMetaStock Group] Monetary History of the
US
If you like to read clear and concise economic theory and
what's wrong with what is happening now, the Wall Street Journal had an
interview with in the Saturday Oct 18 edition with Anna Schwartz, co
author with Milton Friedman of A Monetary History of the United States.
Here's the link.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122428279231046053.html
The
Journal allows non-subscribers to read opinions for a few days before they
take them down.
This is an exceptional look at economic theory from
someone who was alive during the depression and through all of the
recessions. She understand economic policy as well as any Fed executive.
As traders, we all need to prepare for a return to the oppressive
tax policies of the 1930's through the 1980's. Implied tax rates hit
70 plus percent in those days. If you want a read an article
that illustrates how someone with a small amount of historical
knowledge and misapplied statistics can make a case for higher taxation as
a way to grow, here's a link to an article written by such a
person.
http://www.oregonlive.com/opinion/index.ssf/2008/10/bailout_instead_double_the_top.html
I
also found it interesting how many comments were supportive. Wow, does this
speak to the level of education, or lack of it, in our society. There is a
huge difference between implied rates and effective rates. In those days
there were a zillion ways to tax shelter income. Back then the IRS even
allowed income averaging. Those deductions are gone. No mention of that. No
mention of the effective tax rate back then and why rates were brought
down.
In addition, America was not a global economy then, the economy
was nationalized. We bought what we consumed! so we h ad a huge post
war expansion because of the population growth. Of course the standard
of living was much lower then than it is today. In addition, credit
was hard to come by. No one was leveraged up to their teeth in credit
card debt. Opps. Was that all conveniently left out, forgotten, or
maybe the author just didn't know about those economic
factors--that's called ignorance. This is what happens when GDP is
looked at as an isolated number. Back then the government accounted for
less than 10% of the GDP. As we've moved toward socialism, the government
now accounts for 28% of the GDP. And it's going to grow in the next
8 years to something over 35%.
I also noticed that the economic
history writer left out the fact that when Europe raised taxes,
particularly the UK, to those levels upto 90% business investment dropped
and the wealthy left. (If that's incorrect, the UK members my age should
correct my argument.)
Anyway the point is when all these new tax
policies hit, it's going to change trading strategy. TA isn't going to help
with that. When a trader is keeping $0.40 on the dollar from successful
trading rather than $0.67 on the dollar, it changes the risk/reward ratios.
Remember the government is our partner only when we win. If we have
a net loss, the government only allows us to deduct up to $3000 a
year in losses. That's a great partnership. If you win I get 35% (moving
up to 50% or more shortly) and if you lose, my share of your losses
is limited to $3000. Sweat!
A large part of the population is
yelling for change. They might want to be careful what they wish
for!
Enjoy those articles. Your trading life is going to change in
the years to come. Well, only the ones of you who survive.
Super
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