Thursday, October 9, 2008

What Are The Assumptions Being Acted Upon?

Via Greg Mankiw, this story from the Washington Post:

"Global markets have not been reassured by the coordinated interest rate cuts of several central banks or by recent congressional action, but they should be. Our bet is that financial markets will return to normal in short order and that the U.S. economy will squeak by with a moderate recession. Recapitalizing the banks and working out mortgages will take time, but the financial system will not collapse -- the government won't let it.

The markets, of course, seem to be factoring in some probability of collapse. Why is this wrong? "

I disagree with this. I think that the markets are waiting for concerted and total government intervention.

Further on:

"In short, Uncle Sam is becoming our new bank. He has also become our new insurance company with his effective purchase of the world's largest insurer -- AIG."

Bingo! That's what the markets, that is investors, have been counting on. Not recognizing this is a terrible misunderstanding of the assumptions actually underlying the markets.

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