Saturday, October 18, 2008

"The bear market is truly a value restoration project."

Via Crunchy Con, James Grant in the WSJ:

"Not only can't you predict them, but you can't even recognize them after they've swollen to grotesque maturity. "

In this they were wrong, but it is still a question if the Fed will be allowed to slow growth when people are still making money on a theory that things are about to sour.

"Artificially low interest rates, imposed by the Federal Reserve itself, were one cause of the trouble."

This is much easier to see in hindsight.

"But it was a drug on the market for years before. "

Yes, but blaming the Fed is like blaming the dealer, and you need to decide whether you want to attack supply or demand.

"Perhaps the world has gone so far down the path of socialized finance that there's no turning back."

This won't happen.

"For a start, the Fed might foreswear the Greenspan-inspired conceit that it can put the economy back together again after a debt bomb explodes."

Fair enough, as long as the public and politicians and investors are not expecting it to and investing as if it will.

"And the opportunities? For the first time in a long time, stocks, tradable bank loans and mortgages are becoming cheap. The bear market is truly a value restoration project."

This is true.

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