The Financial Crisis Fires That Blind Investors
Stock-Markets / Financial Markets 2009 Oct 09, 2009 - 06:58 AM GMTBy: Brady_Willett
 “Past performance does not   guarantee future results.” Wall Street   Mantra
“Past performance does not   guarantee future results.” Wall Street   Mantra
  
While easily grasped, the above adage is not as easily respected.   Rather, investors have a tendency to herd into what has performed well in the   past.  And in today’s financial world where asset class correlations are tied   remarkably tight and the monetary powers that be are remarkably loose, this is   an ominous contradiction.  
In fact, the argument can be made that this   contradiction threatens (and perhaps already has) to recast the liquidity driven   mania days that coalesced with increasing intensity from 2003-2007.  Buy   equities, real estate, commodities, or art because their future fortunes are   inevitably rosy!?  The herd seems to think so…
  
  Not exactly against the   idea of asset classes rising in unison, central bankers have been playing the   role of the insane plumber threatening to throw the kitchen sink onto the heads   of those contemplating flushing their investment losses down the pipes.   Willingly oblivious to the fact that excessive risk taking and regulatory   neglect helped spawn the financial crisis, the contradictions astonish: In order   to rectify the financial crisis central banks must adopt zero bound interest   rates and quantitative easing policies, banks must lend money more freely,   investors must take on more risk, and regulators must embark upon another   prolonged period of nothingness. If fiction these events would make for an   enthralling albeit utterly ridiculous read. But as reality, the acts of central   bankers and policy makers are, well, just sad. 
   
  As for Mr. Central   Banker – Ben Bernanke – rather than heap scorn on his many failings he has   actually been heralded by many as a hero.  So what if Bernanke missed   forecasting any part of the crisis beforehand and he simply followed Greenspan’s   unsound post-bubble bailout script with unbridled fanaticism.  We are told that   because he was academically acquainted with the Great Depression Bernanke was   best prepared to deal with the financial crisis and that his unique steps to   unlock markets are the reason why economic ‘recovery’ is afoot.  Bernanke has   greeted his semi-hero status by offering a small nod, recently   stating:  
  
  “History is full of   examples in which the policy responses to financial crises have been slow and   inadequate, often resulting ultimately in greater economic damage and increased   fiscal costs. In this episode, by contrast, policymakers in the United States   and around the globe responded with speed and force to arrest a rapidly   deteriorating and dangerous situation.”
  
  History is also replete with   examples of how overzealous central bankers have printed their currency into   oblivion and caused untold damage to the economy and financial markets, but we   digress. Bernanke adds: 
  
  “Without these speedy and   forceful actions, last October's panic would likely have continued to intensify,   more major financial firms would have failed, and the entire global financial   system would have been at serious risk.”
  
  The very suggestion that the   ‘speedy and forceful’ actions of central banks have detached ‘serious risk’ from   the global financial system equation is, of course, amusing.  After all, wasn’t   it the Fed’s madly misguided [anti]regulatory approach and asset bubble   [mis]management that created many of the ‘serious risks’ that sparked the   crisis? Again, we digress.
  
Needless to say, the centerpiece of the   Bernanke platform is that of speed and indoctrination. We have been incessantly   reminded that Japan failed to purge the deflationary forces at work because   policy makers were too slow to act, and that the Great Depression was caused by   policy makers taking their foot off of the pedal.  These simplistic comparisons   to two very specific periods (while ignoring completely say Zimbabwe, 1970s   stagflation, Weimar, Rome, etc.), neglects to shed light on exactly why the   success/failure rate of monetary stimulus activities are lashed onto this   particular historic comparison. 
To wit, could Japan’s lost decade really have   been avoided simply by the central bank hacking interest rates more   aggressively? Could the bad loans weighing down Japan’s institutions really have   been remedied via a simple transfer to the BOJ’s coffers? Similarly, would the   Great Depression have simply been an ordinary downturn if Bernankism was in   fashion? We have our doubts.  Yet in the land where speed thrills and nearly all   asset classes cast similar shadows, it is the banality of ungrounded   speculations that makes good reading. In other words, the financial world didn’t   completely collapse so somebody must have done something right. And even though   we know he did everything wrong leading into the crisis, why not simply shower   praise on Mr. Bernanke?
  
  Nothing Changes And No One   Seems To Care
  
  The financial press has   interrogated Wall Street compensation levels, and the U.S. public – at least   those not still overjoyed by the ‘cash for clunkers’ program – have quietly   complained about the parade of bailouts over the last 18-months.  These are two   of the positives to be taken from the financial crisis.  Unfortunately, with   regards to the outrageous inconsistencies running wild in policy-land, an eerily   widespread reticence still largely prevails.  To use the most obvious example,   politicians, Fed members, and countless regulators continue to vocally rage   against the ‘too-big to fail’ philosophy that has come to dominate American   capitalism, and yet at the same time nearly all of their policies continue to   promote this very culture. Why the public and press are not incensed by this and   other policy contradictions is not entirely understood. It can perhaps best be   explained by the effects of effective spin - countless calls from policy makers   to ‘put the [financial crisis] fires out!’ before any attempt is made to   investigate the cause of the blaze.  Keep the public’s attention on the fire,   not on the fuel.
     
  For the record, the off balance sheet mess polluting   corporate America persists, countless trillions still slosh around in dark   marketplaces, hedge fund regulations are about as welcomed as a Pap smear, and   the U.S. is basically taunting the world to challenge the U.S. dollar’s reserve   currency status.  In a financial world whose fate is increasingly intertwined   fear should indeed be on the rise.  To be sure, there should be alarm bells   ringing out that important regulatory changes must be undertaken, secretive   marketplaces and market practices must be unveiled, fraud must be policed, and   the nation’s currency must be put on a stable path.  Instead it is complacency   that is rising, and in amusing fashion.  For example, completely bereft of the   concept of systemic change, the mob would like to see Wall Street compensation   levels come down. The greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression and   the sole unifying solution is to limit Wall Street pay? If only this was   fiction…  
  
  “In a crisis you need to   make a choice. You can choose to solve the problem and protect the innocent from   the results of the firestorm. Or you can try to teach them a lesson. You can't   solve the problem by teaching people a lesson. That's not a strategy for solving   the crisis. It's a strategy for inflicting a lot of damage.”Treasury Secretary Tim   Geithner
   
Arguably more   outlandish than President Bush’s “I've abandoned free-market principles to save   the free-market system”, Mr. Geithner’s convolutions are truly impressive. The   money of the ‘innocent’ has been stolen to prop up a financial system on fire; a   system that has and continues to reward those guilty of allowing arsonists to   run amuck! And in this system hard lessons are not learned and the damage is   always contained because people like Tim Geithner are confident that even as   they lay the groundwork for an even larger firestorm tomorrow some different   outcome will mysteriously transpire? 
At risk of straying, let us hope that U.S.   policy makers have drafted the appropriate contingency playbooks for when real   change is voted in by foreign lenders, or the day when either the dollar is   somehow stabilized, devalued, or completely obliterated. After all, the fable of   omnipotent policymakers perpetually dictating safety and risk across   marketplaces, while simplistically alluring, is a fable nonetheless.  The real   story remains that of an unsound, unregulated, and unsafe financial system that   only remains vibrant due to the somewhat artificial mechanism of U.S. dollar   hegemony.   
  
  In short, from the annals of Buffettology rests the adage   ‘buy when others are fearful’. If you believe fear still exists in any major   asset class you have been conned; swindled into the newly indoctrinated mantra   known as ‘past performance may not guarantee future results but it sure as hell   beats being in cash.’  And while fear [of missing out on rising asset prices]   can indeed make investors do incredibly dangerous things for extended periods of   time, we should not lose sight of the fact that salvation today has perhaps only   been temporarily realized.  Quite frankly, there is but one question: How long   can U.S. policymakers continue to spin U.S. paper into gold?
  
  For the   record, ultra-safe variants of ‘cash’ have outperformed risky U.S. equities over   the last decade...and yet no one seems to care. Buy equities, real estate,   commodities, or art because their future fortunes are inevitably rosy!? 
By Brady Willett   and Dr. Todd Alway
  FallStreet.com 
FallStreet.com was launched in January of 2000 with the mandate of providing an alternative opinion on the U.S. equity markets. In the context of an uncritical herd euphoria that characterizes the mainstream media, Fallstreet strives to provide investors with the information they need to make informed investment decisions. To that end, we provide a clearinghouse for bearish and value-oriented investment information, independent research, and an investment newsletter containing specific company selections.
|  Brady Willett Archive | 
© 2005-2022 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.
	

 
  
 
	