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Follow on Google News | The global recession, who is accountable? Asks Rory Gallagher of Rooney Gallagher's Dublin.The real problems in the global economies are down to one thing...Policy!!! Governments worldwide continue to get it wrong. The reason this continues is simple. No accountability that is the real problem. Says Joint owner Rory of Rooney Gallaghers
By: Elaine Moore Battle #1 Began in Thailand in 1997 when global investors suddenly ran from its currency, dumped its stocks and abandoned its real estate. Within weeks, the contagion spread to neighboring countries; within months, the fallout forced Russia to default on its sovereign debts. Long Term Capital Management, a major player in the high-risk derivatives market, went under. Wall Street was on the verge of an unprecedented meltdown. The Dow plunged. But the U.S. Federal Reserve responded swiftly, opening the money spigots full throttle and temporarily putting out the fires. Soon, the pundits came out of hiding. They said the crisis was over. They swore up and down that the Fed had won the war. However, any appearance of victory was deceptive in the extreme. All the Fed had really accomplished was to win a single battle, postpone the inevitable collapse, and in the process, help create another, far larger problem: the Tech Bubble of 1998-1999. Investors, flush with cheap cash, rushed headlong into worthless IPOs. Harebrained business models prevailed. The Nasdaq DOUBLED in just one year. Battle #2 began when the Tech Bubble turned into the Tech Wreck of 2000-2002. Investors dumped their grossly overvalued dot-com stocks. Within weeks, the contagion of selling spread to other technology companies; within months, it spilled over into the entire economy. Publicly available data from the fed will show that , before it was over, U.S. households had suffered ... and GREATLY!!! • Losses of $3.6 trillion in stocks • Losses of $997 billion losses in mutual funds, plus • Losses of $1.9 trillion in life insurance and pension fund reserves Total Tech Wreck losses: $6.6 trillion. This time, the Fed responded with even bigger guns: To avert an all-out deflation, Chairman Alan Greenspan not only dropped interest rates to their lowest level since World War II, but he kept them at those extraordinary low levels for the longest period since the Great Depression. He pumped cheap money into the economy like never before. He virtually banished the fear of risk. And, as a direct result, tens of trillions in borrowed dollars rushed into the U.S. housing market. Again, the pundits swore the worst of the crisis had passed. Again, the government claimed it had scored a victory. Again, they were dead wrong. Battle #3 was the monster born from the ashes of Battle #2: The Fed's response to the Tech Wreck created the Housing Bubble, which, in turn, spawned the Housing Bust. And alas, the losses resulting from the Housing Bust of 2007-2009 were 2.4 times greater than the losses from the Tech Wreck of 2000-2002. According to recently released Fed data, even excluding the early real estate losses of 2007, the Housing Bust caused U.S households huge loses I list these below. • Losses of $6.0 trillion in real estate • Losses of $4.4 trillion in stocks • Losses of $1.5 trillion in mutual funds, and • Losses of $3.6 trillion in life insurance and pension fund reserves Total Housing Bust losses: $15.5 trillion. Combined losses suffered during the Tech Wreck and the Housing Bust: $22.1 trillion. Yet now, under a new administration, the bailout brigades are up to their old tricks. For a third time, they've retaliated with easy-money fire hoses, this time driving short-term interest rates to practically ZERO. For a third time, they've deployed bigger guns. This time, with bailouts and stimulus that add up to 30 percent of GDP TEN times more than the average of all prior postwar recessions. And again, they've had the audacity to declare "victory" ... to say that the "crisis is over" ... and proclaim that the "recovery is sustainable." Inevitable result: Another gigantic bubble, another bust, and another round of devastating losses this time in sovereign government debt (e.g., Treasury bonds). This is why the collapses of sovereign debt markets in Greece, Spain, Ireland and Portugal are so alarming. And this is why the Obama budget including an astonishing $1.6 trillion deficit in the current fiscal year is so dangerous. My recommendations are unchanged: Avoid all long-term bonds, whether issued by federal governments, private corporations, or municipalities. Approach all stock investments with great CAUTION tight stop losses, plenty of cash, and solid hedges. Above all, do not fall for this new deception. Keep your money safe. Make sure you're not engulfed in the next round of collateral damage. I have seen this country, Ireland go from what was essentially third world, to one of the wealthiest nations in the world. This happened in the space of a decade or so, every home had 2 cars, and all of sudden people it was 2 houses was the fashion. But the unfortunate part of this story is the victims of this countries Government and the banking systems negligence had their lives destroyed. But who is accountable? # # # Rooney Gallagher offer the highest quality support and have strong relationships with corporates, institutions, financial intermediaries, trust companies and their clients and sophisticated investors of all sizes and types. End
Page Updated Last on: Jan 19, 2011
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