Wednesday, November 5, 2008

"Almost everything else is off the table right now, with Obama having little financial room to do very much."

Paul Kedrosky with an excellent post:

"There are many things on here, including a healthy industry distrust of lying politicians and their promises. But it is mostly something else: Wall Street doesn't believe Obama, and it didn't believe McCain either. While Wall Street worried for a little while about Obama's tax increase promise, his pro union leanings, and his regulatory fervor, it now doesn't really care. Why? Because Wall Street knows that everything has changed, as happens with any battle plan after the first skirmish. President Obama can't raise taxes right now. A tax increase during the most severe U.S. economic downturn in modern memory would be a Depression-class error, the sort of thing guaranteed to get you in the history books, albeit for all the wrong reasons. So it's not going to happen. And it's not just tax increases that markets have discounted from Obama, it's pretty much everything, except for more bank bailouts, some regulatory reform, and one or two major financial stimulus packages. Almost everything else is off the table right now, with Obama having little financial room to do very much.

The same would have been true, of course, of President McCain, had he been the voters' choice. Either way, however, Wall Street has now given the presidential election a good close look and decided that it matters less than ever this time around. The financial services industry's recent collapse has turned to a smoking ruin the U.S.'s already burnt balance sheet, putting President Obama square into fire-fighting with a straw and no money for water. All he can do is try to survive in the face of massive deficits, a teetering economy and a looming social security nightmare. Wall Street has neatly managed to half-way marginalize President Obama, even if it had to gut itself and the economy to do it."

This is pretty much Peston's view and my view.

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