We’re in a death spiral

The DOW is down about 600 about 700 about 370 right now. Yahoo Finance has the bad news. UPDATE: what a bumpy ride. At one point it was down 748 on my screen and ended up down “only” (Yahoo Finance’s headline) 370.

Here’s the deal: many of us are afraid. That fear is changing our behavior (I’m hoarding, aren’t you?). That causes the market to go down.

How does the market stop going down? The death spiral will have to hit the bottom of our fears.

Where do you see the market hitting bottom? I think we’ll test 8,000 by end of the year (some people say probably by the end of the week if it keeps going down line this).

As they say, we have only to fear fear itself. Hope you’re doing OK. This is looking like one heck of a nasty storm on the horizon, isn’t it? 2009 is looking like a pretty tough year.

Anyone have any positive news to get us off of our fears?

128 thoughts on “We’re in a death spiral

  1. The dollar.

    I think the positive to take out of this is the resurgence of the dollar in the currency markets. I think it says that the world’s investors see what is going on and are putting their faith in the USD rather than other currencies, in large part because the US is acting a somewhat concerted fashion and trying to work their way out of this crisis, as compared to Europe which is more of a patchwork of band aids than ever.

    As someone said, yea, we’re going down, but the next web3.0 is being drawn out on cocktail napkins at dinner meetings with VCs.

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  2. The dollar.

    I think the positive to take out of this is the resurgence of the dollar in the currency markets. I think it says that the world’s investors see what is going on and are putting their faith in the USD rather than other currencies, in large part because the US is acting a somewhat concerted fashion and trying to work their way out of this crisis, as compared to Europe which is more of a patchwork of band aids than ever.

    As someone said, yea, we’re going down, but the next web3.0 is being drawn out on cocktail napkins at dinner meetings with VCs.

    Like

  3. Yeah, hoarding a little no doubt – but i always do. But Robert, we need people like you to keep people positive…titles like: “we’re in a death spiral” will just antagonise the situation…bringing more fear – particularly people like us that read your blog – startups & entrepreneurs. I know you mean no harm by it and you are only trying to stay realistic & on topic – but a little positivity will ya! 🙂 We’ve all got something to contribute and as long as that is the case we’ll get through the next couple of years.

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  4. Yeah, hoarding a little no doubt – but i always do. But Robert, we need people like you to keep people positive…titles like: “we’re in a death spiral” will just antagonise the situation…bringing more fear – particularly people like us that read your blog – startups & entrepreneurs. I know you mean no harm by it and you are only trying to stay realistic & on topic – but a little positivity will ya! 🙂 We’ve all got something to contribute and as long as that is the case we’ll get through the next couple of years.

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  5. Zee: I don’t believe in sugar coating it. Plus, if you think I really have that much power to turn people’s emotions around (not to mention trillion dollar banks) then you are ascribing too much power to me. I’d rather my readers face the truth and face it head on. The sooner we hit the bottoms of our fears the better off we’ll all be and that means getting them out here too, not hiding from them.

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  6. Zee: I don’t believe in sugar coating it. Plus, if you think I really have that much power to turn people’s emotions around (not to mention trillion dollar banks) then you are ascribing too much power to me. I’d rather my readers face the truth and face it head on. The sooner we hit the bottoms of our fears the better off we’ll all be and that means getting them out here too, not hiding from them.

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  7. Robert, sugar coating – i agree, no sugar coating allowed. But “death spiral”… come on now… 🙂
    Also, regarding the amount of power i ascribe to you – you may have a point there – but rest assured, a lot of young startups look to folks like you for thoughts on where the internet startup is going over the next few months. “Death Spiral” sounds like the scariest theme park ride ever – so if that’s what you were implying then you hit the nail on the head.

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  8. Robert, sugar coating – i agree, no sugar coating allowed. But “death spiral”… come on now… 🙂
    Also, regarding the amount of power i ascribe to you – you may have a point there – but rest assured, a lot of young startups look to folks like you for thoughts on where the internet startup is going over the next few months. “Death Spiral” sounds like the scariest theme park ride ever – so if that’s what you were implying then you hit the nail on the head.

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  9. LOL Bombastic 🙂 Yeah, i gotcha – don’t worry, i do understand the power of headlines. I just think there’s a little responsibility that comes with putting some of them out there, like this one which is scary sh*t! 🙂

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  10. LOL Bombastic 🙂 Yeah, i gotcha – don’t worry, i do understand the power of headlines. I just think there’s a little responsibility that comes with putting some of them out there, like this one which is scary sh*t! 🙂

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  11. Robert – the positive is simply this. People and societies don’t change often unless we’re confronted with a fundamental need to shift. This is an opportunity to change things for the better, to make a dramatic shift because people are hungry for it and will support it. When things are good, people are comfortable having things slowly erode if they don’t feel the impact personally. Now we’re all feeling it; now we’re all in the position to change business as usual…

    People don’t care about an earthquake or a flood or a hurricane until it impacts them…

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  12. Robert – the positive is simply this. People and societies don’t change often unless we’re confronted with a fundamental need to shift. This is an opportunity to change things for the better, to make a dramatic shift because people are hungry for it and will support it. When things are good, people are comfortable having things slowly erode if they don’t feel the impact personally. Now we’re all feeling it; now we’re all in the position to change business as usual…

    People don’t care about an earthquake or a flood or a hurricane until it impacts them…

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  13. Well on one hand I’m not saddled with any debt yet since I got lucky and my parents paid for college and I haven’t hit the point yet where I’ll be consuming a lot of debt as I get going completely unassisted. So I’ll have nothing outstanding when things hit the bottom.

    On the downside I’m working for a small web development firm that’s barely a stable startup and if the economy really tanks I can see us going under with it. Hopefully the tech industry reasonably weathers the storm.

    I guess the only hope is that we are so consumer minded that “buy buy buy” has been ingrained in our brains. I really don’t think we’ll hit the sheer depths of the Great Depression given that we are far more loose with our money than those during that time ever were. That is, of course, assuming things don’t finally completely unravel.

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  14. Well on one hand I’m not saddled with any debt yet since I got lucky and my parents paid for college and I haven’t hit the point yet where I’ll be consuming a lot of debt as I get going completely unassisted. So I’ll have nothing outstanding when things hit the bottom.

    On the downside I’m working for a small web development firm that’s barely a stable startup and if the economy really tanks I can see us going under with it. Hopefully the tech industry reasonably weathers the storm.

    I guess the only hope is that we are so consumer minded that “buy buy buy” has been ingrained in our brains. I really don’t think we’ll hit the sheer depths of the Great Depression given that we are far more loose with our money than those during that time ever were. That is, of course, assuming things don’t finally completely unravel.

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  15. Folks,

    We are looking at the movement of America being a democracy… toward a socialist society.

    Soon, the economy will be so bad, that the only real choice will be to join the North American Union with the Amero currency.

    This is the path they are leading us down…

    The problem is created, wait for the reaction, then offer a solution. We are still in problem creation mode.

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  16. Folks,

    We are looking at the movement of America being a democracy… toward a socialist society.

    Soon, the economy will be so bad, that the only real choice will be to join the North American Union with the Amero currency.

    This is the path they are leading us down…

    The problem is created, wait for the reaction, then offer a solution. We are still in problem creation mode.

    Like

  17. The first thing to remember is that things are rarely as bad as the MSM portrays. With all of the constant: crisis, outrage, trans-fats etc, it’s easy to get down. Heck, if I were to take the last weeks news at face value, I’d be shocked to realize that not only is mass hysteria not happening, but the power is still on, the ATM still works, stores have food and besides the Bengals – football still gets played.

    A correction it is, a death spiral it’s not. See Commodore Business Machines for a death spiral.

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  18. Zee: this headline is only scary because the market is down 700. That’s the real scary shit. Are we at the bottom of our fears yet? The comments I’m seeing here tell me “no.”

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  19. The first thing to remember is that things are rarely as bad as the MSM portrays. With all of the constant: crisis, outrage, trans-fats etc, it’s easy to get down. Heck, if I were to take the last weeks news at face value, I’d be shocked to realize that not only is mass hysteria not happening, but the power is still on, the ATM still works, stores have food and besides the Bengals – football still gets played.

    A correction it is, a death spiral it’s not. See Commodore Business Machines for a death spiral.

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  20. Zee: this headline is only scary because the market is down 700. That’s the real scary shit. Are we at the bottom of our fears yet? The comments I’m seeing here tell me “no.”

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  21. Good news for me !! – I have no money invested in stocks – all my money is in property… oh crap!
    Wait a few years – prices will have recovered and all this will be a distant memory.

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  22. The market is down but the sky is not falling. Many economic factors have converged to be fueled by greed and an election year.

    2009 will be great. There is no reason for despair. Undervalued, undervalued, undervalued. Things will go back up. Our future is bright and our economy is resilient.

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  23. Good news for me !! – I have no money invested in stocks – all my money is in property… oh crap!
    Wait a few years – prices will have recovered and all this will be a distant memory.

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  24. The market is down but the sky is not falling. Many economic factors have converged to be fueled by greed and an election year.

    2009 will be great. There is no reason for despair. Undervalued, undervalued, undervalued. Things will go back up. Our future is bright and our economy is resilient.

    Like

  25. Another thing to keep in mind. For every negative there is a positive – sort of the equal and opposite reaction principle. As stocks get pushed down, it becomes more likely that people can invest. I’ve wanted to get into AAPL for quite some time, but it’s just too expensive. It might be manageable soon.

    Take housing. Sure it’s a difficult time to be a seller, but a superb time to be a buyer.

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  26. Another thing to keep in mind. For every negative there is a positive – sort of the equal and opposite reaction principle. As stocks get pushed down, it becomes more likely that people can invest. I’ve wanted to get into AAPL for quite some time, but it’s just too expensive. It might be manageable soon.

    Take housing. Sure it’s a difficult time to be a seller, but a superb time to be a buyer.

    Like

  27. The fears are commonly blasted as irrational, but let’s just remember all the speculation on the upside (irrational exuberance) – hardly anybody complained about, since everyone was making paper money. Now we have fears pulling in the opposite direction which will reinforce as we go down. I’m a believer in returning to the mean. Since we had the biggest boom since the depression, I would not be at all surprised to see the biggest recession since the depression on the downside. This will be over when people largely give up on stocks as an investment strategy as was the case during the late 1970s, after 10 years of sideways movement.

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  28. The fears are commonly blasted as irrational, but let’s just remember all the speculation on the upside (irrational exuberance) – hardly anybody complained about, since everyone was making paper money. Now we have fears pulling in the opposite direction which will reinforce as we go down. I’m a believer in returning to the mean. Since we had the biggest boom since the depression, I would not be at all surprised to see the biggest recession since the depression on the downside. This will be over when people largely give up on stocks as an investment strategy as was the case during the late 1970s, after 10 years of sideways movement.

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  29. Well, depending on how you see things, there’s an election in a few weeks. Go vote your conscience.

    I’ve been a Republican since I understood the issues as a teen. I’m now in my forties and I doubt I’ll vote Republican again any time soon.

    We need change and rather fast.

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  30. Well, depending on how you see things, there’s an election in a few weeks. Go vote your conscience.

    I’ve been a Republican since I understood the issues as a teen. I’m now in my forties and I doubt I’ll vote Republican again any time soon.

    We need change and rather fast.

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  31. Good news? Well, I’ve saved a ton of money using Geico!

    Just kidding! I don’t have Geico. I realize this is serious, but the more serious it becomes the more serious it will become. :o)

    If people with good, stable jobs chill out and stop panicking, we might come out of this okay. I have virtually no 401K left, but I still plan to give my kids Christmas! Hey, I could die next year anyway. It could always be worse.

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  32. Good news? Well, I’ve saved a ton of money using Geico!

    Just kidding! I don’t have Geico. I realize this is serious, but the more serious it becomes the more serious it will become. :o)

    If people with good, stable jobs chill out and stop panicking, we might come out of this okay. I have virtually no 401K left, but I still plan to give my kids Christmas! Hey, I could die next year anyway. It could always be worse.

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  33. Here’s some positive news.

    Joblessness is somewhere in the single digits 6%(?), vs 10.8% in 1982, inflation is essentially non-existent, vs. over 10% in 1982 and home mortgages are still around 5%, vs. 16% in 1982. And they were harder to get then than now.

    How’s that for perspective? We’re ending the longest period without a recession in U.S. history (14 years) propped up by various artificial bubbles. First the internet bubble, followed by the housing bubble, with a war bubble thrown in for good measure. We’re due for a correction. The longer it’s put off, the worse it’ll be.

    When we recover from the correction, we’ll be stronger for it, unless we do too many stupid things to try to prevent a downturn.

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  34. Here’s some positive news.

    Joblessness is somewhere in the single digits 6%(?), vs 10.8% in 1982, inflation is essentially non-existent, vs. over 10% in 1982 and home mortgages are still around 5%, vs. 16% in 1982. And they were harder to get then than now.

    How’s that for perspective? We’re ending the longest period without a recession in U.S. history (14 years) propped up by various artificial bubbles. First the internet bubble, followed by the housing bubble, with a war bubble thrown in for good measure. We’re due for a correction. The longer it’s put off, the worse it’ll be.

    When we recover from the correction, we’ll be stronger for it, unless we do too many stupid things to try to prevent a downturn.

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  35. I’m an entrepreneur and I fear Obama getting elected….if taxes go up at all (for my business), not only am I going to feel it, I’ll have to let a couple people go.

    I hope in this economic crisis that we (small businesses) don’t get labeled as “Rich” and they don’t take more of our money (the companies) to be “fair”…that is what I fear…

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  36. I’m an entrepreneur and I fear Obama getting elected….if taxes go up at all (for my business), not only am I going to feel it, I’ll have to let a couple people go.

    I hope in this economic crisis that we (small businesses) don’t get labeled as “Rich” and they don’t take more of our money (the companies) to be “fair”…that is what I fear…

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  37. Positive news: we’re not even in a recession yet. “Recession” is based on negative GDP. Our current GDP is +3, meaning we’re not in a recession. The FUD of the media could put us in a recession though if we’re not careful.

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  38. Positive news: we’re not even in a recession yet. “Recession” is based on negative GDP. Our current GDP is +3, meaning we’re not in a recession. The FUD of the media could put us in a recession though if we’re not careful.

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  39. I am unsubscribing, you are over the top. You are making things worse with your death spiral hyperbole.

    P.S. You constantly support Obama, who do you think got us here? Jimmy Carter started this whole thing with the Community Reinvestment Act that gave loans to the wrong people, Bill Clinton expanded it and Barack Obama worked with the rest of the Democrats to shoot down John McCain and even (gasp) George Bush’s attempts to fix it in 2003 and 2005.

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  40. I am unsubscribing, you are over the top. You are making things worse with your death spiral hyperbole.

    P.S. You constantly support Obama, who do you think got us here? Jimmy Carter started this whole thing with the Community Reinvestment Act that gave loans to the wrong people, Bill Clinton expanded it and Barack Obama worked with the rest of the Democrats to shoot down John McCain and even (gasp) George Bush’s attempts to fix it in 2003 and 2005.

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  41. The current economic storm is daily topic here in Europe also. The small country of Iceland is now going through hell as the foreign debt-driven economy is about to collapse.

    Some positive things: price of oil is going down. Also, I see that the pace of global economy is very high – the momentum of the storm will be exhausted soon. Furthermore, there are several important lessons learnt; we become better prepared for the next one.

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  42. The current economic storm is daily topic here in Europe also. The small country of Iceland is now going through hell as the foreign debt-driven economy is about to collapse.

    Some positive things: price of oil is going down. Also, I see that the pace of global economy is very high – the momentum of the storm will be exhausted soon. Furthermore, there are several important lessons learnt; we become better prepared for the next one.

    Like

  43. @brandon, are you, like, 12? Come back when you’ve read more and listened less to the talk radio shows you parrot.

    Sorry Robert. Delete this if you want.

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  44. @brandon, are you, like, 12? Come back when you’ve read more and listened less to the talk radio shows you parrot.

    Sorry Robert. Delete this if you want.

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  45. I’m sorry, but it’s sensationalist stories like this that get people riled up for nothing. There is more to the economy than the stock market, and what people should really be upset about it the $700 billion (filled with pork as well) was another waste of government money.

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  46. I’m sorry, but it’s sensationalist stories like this that get people riled up for nothing. There is more to the economy than the stock market, and what people should really be upset about it the $700 billion (filled with pork as well) was another waste of government money.

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  47. The bright news is that in the UK we have the Olympics to look forward to!

    The bad news is that the taxpayer is funding that + any credit bail-out.

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  48. The bright news is that in the UK we have the Olympics to look forward to!

    The bad news is that the taxpayer is funding that + any credit bail-out.

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  49. Robert – inflammatory titles like “we’re in a death spiral” don’t help matters.

    People are afraid….no need to throw more gas on the fire.

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  50. Robert – inflammatory titles like “we’re in a death spiral” don’t help matters.

    People are afraid….no need to throw more gas on the fire.

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  51. Its the media which makes it worse. The 24/7 coverage just promotes fear and whilst we have lived beyond our means it’s the media which is spiralling it out of control.

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  52. Its the media which makes it worse. The 24/7 coverage just promotes fear and whilst we have lived beyond our means it’s the media which is spiralling it out of control.

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  53. I was told by an experienced person that “the fundamentals of our economy are sound”. OK, bad joke. Seriously, seeking positive news, I’d suggest we remember all the curves are going exponential, ala Kurzweil’s presentation. Therefore, good change may also happen very fast. There are an exponentially growing number of good looking solutions happening, such as the new solar chips capable of 80% conversion, and global accessibility to scientific knowledge, and a biotech revolution, and the plausibility that a new government may actually help make the world a better place. A friend of mine just decided to have a baby. Optimism is a choice.

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  54. I was told by an experienced person that “the fundamentals of our economy are sound”. OK, bad joke. Seriously, seeking positive news, I’d suggest we remember all the curves are going exponential, ala Kurzweil’s presentation. Therefore, good change may also happen very fast. There are an exponentially growing number of good looking solutions happening, such as the new solar chips capable of 80% conversion, and global accessibility to scientific knowledge, and a biotech revolution, and the plausibility that a new government may actually help make the world a better place. A friend of mine just decided to have a baby. Optimism is a choice.

    Like

  55. Robert, the fear in your writings the last couple weeks tells me that you really need to step back and get a grip on yourself.

    Yes, bad things are happening, people are losing money, and people will be losing jobs.

    Is this the end of the world? No.

    I don’t know about you, but I refuse to live in fear. Yes, things are changing, but change brings opportunity.

    Look to find and seize these new opportunities!

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  56. Robert, the fear in your writings the last couple weeks tells me that you really need to step back and get a grip on yourself.

    Yes, bad things are happening, people are losing money, and people will be losing jobs.

    Is this the end of the world? No.

    I don’t know about you, but I refuse to live in fear. Yes, things are changing, but change brings opportunity.

    Look to find and seize these new opportunities!

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  57. Hopefully the good news out of all those bad news is that MAYBE we will learn.
    Heck, we in the Telecoms/IT industry have been hit badly 8 years ago ONLY. Now it’s the Banking system at large that is collapsing. Pretty much narrow deeps. Time to think again, right ?

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  58. Hopefully the good news out of all those bad news is that MAYBE we will learn.
    Heck, we in the Telecoms/IT industry have been hit badly 8 years ago ONLY. Now it’s the Banking system at large that is collapsing. Pretty much narrow deeps. Time to think again, right ?

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  59. Lets step back and look at this from a little distance before going crazy….

    The economic gains of the last 5 or so years were based on a bubble. Like the tech bubble before it, this one is bursting and we’re sliding heavily. The difference between the tech bubble and the housing bubble is that this bubble had a lot more individuals buying into it. The tech bubble had the benefit of not really dealing in tangible things like houses.

    Remember that the Dow didn’t cross 10k until April of 1999. We spent much of 2002 and 2003 below 10k on the DJIA. We’re not even close to our lowest point of 7527.4 on Oct 3th 2002 (Since crossing 10k).

    Did we have some massive recession or depression in 2002? Nope. Were times tough in the job market? Yup. Did we bounce back from it fast? Heck yeah.

    People are panicing worse than they should. Sensationalist media, and some incredibly irresponsible money decisions are amplifying to the point where people are thinking it’s the financial End Times. Even with the loss of 30% on the DJIA since October 2007, we still have very low unemployment. GDP still grows. Outside of banks you don’t hear about companies closing their doors left and right. In fact, so far the companies most hurt by this are the ones who were exploiting the bubble the most, who were playing the subprime game.

    Everyone repeat after me: It’s. Not. As. Bad. As. It. Looks.

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  60. Lets step back and look at this from a little distance before going crazy….

    The economic gains of the last 5 or so years were based on a bubble. Like the tech bubble before it, this one is bursting and we’re sliding heavily. The difference between the tech bubble and the housing bubble is that this bubble had a lot more individuals buying into it. The tech bubble had the benefit of not really dealing in tangible things like houses.

    Remember that the Dow didn’t cross 10k until April of 1999. We spent much of 2002 and 2003 below 10k on the DJIA. We’re not even close to our lowest point of 7527.4 on Oct 3th 2002 (Since crossing 10k).

    Did we have some massive recession or depression in 2002? Nope. Were times tough in the job market? Yup. Did we bounce back from it fast? Heck yeah.

    People are panicing worse than they should. Sensationalist media, and some incredibly irresponsible money decisions are amplifying to the point where people are thinking it’s the financial End Times. Even with the loss of 30% on the DJIA since October 2007, we still have very low unemployment. GDP still grows. Outside of banks you don’t hear about companies closing their doors left and right. In fact, so far the companies most hurt by this are the ones who were exploiting the bubble the most, who were playing the subprime game.

    Everyone repeat after me: It’s. Not. As. Bad. As. It. Looks.

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  61. The good news? This is a fantastic time to buy stock. This is “deal of the century” time. All you need is a bit of available money.

    Another piece of good news? Some (most?) people only learn by being seriously disrupted, and I’m expecting a lot of learning is going on right now. The pattern of buying more of everything than you can possibly afford based on the assumption that your earning power will increase “next year” is a self-destructive. Yet a lot of folks have been living this way for years. Buying a $300,000 home with a $200,000 mortgage is reasonable behavior (and yet can still get you in serious trouble). The folks who really need a lesson are the ones buying a $300,000 home with a $400,000 mortgage- how can that be a smart thing to do? And yet it is done.

    The one thing that I really wish would change likely never will, and that is the all consuming extreme greed that pervades our society. Healthy growth is 10% per year; cancerous growth is 10% on top of whatever you made last year. 30% this year? Nice, but it better be 35% next year, and your company is a dog if isn’t growing at 43% the year after that. Heck, what is wrong with a healthy profit, damn the annual expectation of endless growth?

    Back in ancient times (30 years ago), a firm wouldn’t lay staff off unless they were losing money. Now they lay people off if their profit didn’t grow as much as expected. At every turn, the greed leads to incredibly self-destructive behavior: we are eating our own children here.

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  62. The good news? This is a fantastic time to buy stock. This is “deal of the century” time. All you need is a bit of available money.

    Another piece of good news? Some (most?) people only learn by being seriously disrupted, and I’m expecting a lot of learning is going on right now. The pattern of buying more of everything than you can possibly afford based on the assumption that your earning power will increase “next year” is a self-destructive. Yet a lot of folks have been living this way for years. Buying a $300,000 home with a $200,000 mortgage is reasonable behavior (and yet can still get you in serious trouble). The folks who really need a lesson are the ones buying a $300,000 home with a $400,000 mortgage- how can that be a smart thing to do? And yet it is done.

    The one thing that I really wish would change likely never will, and that is the all consuming extreme greed that pervades our society. Healthy growth is 10% per year; cancerous growth is 10% on top of whatever you made last year. 30% this year? Nice, but it better be 35% next year, and your company is a dog if isn’t growing at 43% the year after that. Heck, what is wrong with a healthy profit, damn the annual expectation of endless growth?

    Back in ancient times (30 years ago), a firm wouldn’t lay staff off unless they were losing money. Now they lay people off if their profit didn’t grow as much as expected. At every turn, the greed leads to incredibly self-destructive behavior: we are eating our own children here.

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  63. perfect reason why you shouldn’t vote democrat this year. the dems have blocked any chance of reform for freddie and fannie over the years.

    the dems guarding freddie and fannie coupled with the mandate that banks maintain a portfolio of 50% of subprime loans is at the heart of this mess.

    if you don’t believe that, please just shut your computer off and jump out your window.

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  64. perfect reason why you shouldn’t vote democrat this year. the dems have blocked any chance of reform for freddie and fannie over the years.

    the dems guarding freddie and fannie coupled with the mandate that banks maintain a portfolio of 50% of subprime loans is at the heart of this mess.

    if you don’t believe that, please just shut your computer off and jump out your window.

    Like

  65. The markets are going down because they are overvalued.

    Grab anything with a straight edge, a ruler, a piece of paper and lay it over the plotted points on the following 3 charts connecting around 1982 to 1994. Notice where the trend line take you for 2008.

    http://finance.google.com/finance?client=ig&cid=983582
    http://finance.google.com/finance?client=ig&cid=13756934
    http://finance.google.com/finance?client=ig&cid=626307

    Dow = 7000
    Nasdaq = 1200
    S&P 500 = 750

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  66. The markets are going down because they are overvalued.

    Grab anything with a straight edge, a ruler, a piece of paper and lay it over the plotted points on the following 3 charts connecting around 1982 to 1994. Notice where the trend line take you for 2008.

    http://finance.google.com/finance?client=ig&cid=983582
    http://finance.google.com/finance?client=ig&cid=13756934
    http://finance.google.com/finance?client=ig&cid=626307

    Dow = 7000
    Nasdaq = 1200
    S&P 500 = 750

    Like

  67. If you have spare cash, invest smartly now and wait it out, that’s what Warren Buffet did with some of his billions, it’s smart finance.

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  68. If you have spare cash, invest smartly now and wait it out, that’s what Warren Buffet did with some of his billions, it’s smart finance.

    Like

  69. Dr Ron Paul said: “We are looking at the movement of America being a democracy toward a socialist society”

    The U.S. is not a democracy. It’s a PLUTOCRACY. The measures will not move America toward socialism. These measures are set in motion to protect the wealthy. Simple as that.

    Like

  70. Dr Ron Paul said: “We are looking at the movement of America being a democracy toward a socialist society”

    The U.S. is not a democracy. It’s a PLUTOCRACY. The measures will not move America toward socialism. These measures are set in motion to protect the wealthy. Simple as that.

    Like

  71. If someone is naive enough to think the dollar is the most postive thing that is coming from this mess they are sorely mistaken.

    Watch when this 700 billion dollar bailout does to our inflation, and the continual destruction of the dollar the government is doing that isn’t even restoring confidence to the markets.

    No, the best thing we get about this is cheap markets and lucrative deals 😉

    Like

  72. If someone is naive enough to think the dollar is the most postive thing that is coming from this mess they are sorely mistaken.

    Watch when this 700 billion dollar bailout does to our inflation, and the continual destruction of the dollar the government is doing that isn’t even restoring confidence to the markets.

    No, the best thing we get about this is cheap markets and lucrative deals 😉

    Like

  73. Hi Everyone,

    we can be fearful and do nothing or goes berserk. But I want to encourage everyone to keep our heads up and keep on doing great things. For me, I’m steaming ahead with my startup, and I hope everyone is the same. Fear is a bitch, and we need to kick it in the rear. Onward!

    Like

  74. Hi Everyone,

    we can be fearful and do nothing or goes berserk. But I want to encourage everyone to keep our heads up and keep on doing great things. For me, I’m steaming ahead with my startup, and I hope everyone is the same. Fear is a bitch, and we need to kick it in the rear. Onward!

    Like

  75. Those that should be worried are the ones that need money from their investements NOW. If you weren’t planning to sell before the recent drops then don’t sell now, soley based on the market price of your investements. You only lose money if you sell. If the fundementals for the company have changed then sure you should reevaluate your holdings.

    Like

  76. Those that should be worried are the ones that need money from their investements NOW. If you weren’t planning to sell before the recent drops then don’t sell now, soley based on the market price of your investements. You only lose money if you sell. If the fundementals for the company have changed then sure you should reevaluate your holdings.

    Like

  77. Stop being a fearmonger. It’s not the end of a world, it’s the bottom of a fierce cycle compounded by 24-hour news and an election coming. Everyone notices everything in real time, and the President yelled “fire” in the crowded theatre, which caused the stock market to plunge. The stock market is just the stock market. It’s not the economy, and it’s certainly not the end all and be all of life.

    Now if I were told I had a serious illness, I might be fearful. But over MONEY???? Future money? Paper losses?

    Get your priorities straight.

    Like

  78. Stop being a fearmonger. It’s not the end of a world, it’s the bottom of a fierce cycle compounded by 24-hour news and an election coming. Everyone notices everything in real time, and the President yelled “fire” in the crowded theatre, which caused the stock market to plunge. The stock market is just the stock market. It’s not the economy, and it’s certainly not the end all and be all of life.

    Now if I were told I had a serious illness, I might be fearful. But over MONEY???? Future money? Paper losses?

    Get your priorities straight.

    Like

  79. My friend in the mortgage biz had to stay at work late tonight because they have so many new loans. certainly the exception. the market is correcting itself, that’s something good. real good.

    also, partly socializing the banking system with the 700bill, even though it set a bad precedent, will (theoretically) thwart the full socialization of those tending toward that form of government, if they make it into the white house.

    Like

  80. My friend in the mortgage biz had to stay at work late tonight because they have so many new loans. certainly the exception. the market is correcting itself, that’s something good. real good.

    also, partly socializing the banking system with the 700bill, even though it set a bad precedent, will (theoretically) thwart the full socialization of those tending toward that form of government, if they make it into the white house.

    Like

  81. If you have been managing your finances responsibly and avoided the allure of non-traditional mortgages and buy-now-pay-later consumerism, and have no immediate plans to retire, there is no reason to panic. But there is plenty of reason to be cautious and pro-active with what’s left of your money. Cutting-back on discretionary spending is a natural and prudent reaction to this environment, particularly if you work in a market segment that is experiencing or will be affected by the fall-out of the real-estate and credit market downturns. As I work for a company that’s been drastically affected by the current crisis, I can tell you that planning for a 25% decrease in salary is something that realistically needs to be considered. At the very least you should not plan on any big salary adjustments or bonuses for the near term.

    I think the stock market still has a ways to go before there’s a sustained reversal, (I’ve been predicting low 8,000’s for a while now), so you need to look at your holdings and sell off those that are still at-risk. I think the credit crisis isn’t over yet, and won’t be until the major consumer credit companies get beaten-up. That will surely be the next wave as people already overextended run out of available credit to off-set their expenses, and start defaulting on balances as they divert available cash to essentials. Companies big into consumer debt will take losses as they write-down balances, increase interest rates to cover risk, and then write down more balances. This will spill over into consumer product sales as credit for new flat-screen TV’s and iPods disappears. Coal might be a popular and even sensible Christmas gift this year!

    So, government-insured 3.5-4.5% CD’s and high-yield savings accounts are looking like safe harbor right now; particularly compared to the 30% hit the stock market has collectively lost over the past 12 months. Individual corporate bonds might generate better yields, if you are confident in the company’s ability to pay off. The return on federal stuff isn’t worth the effort, and I think muni’s are going to be a problem in 12 to 18 months as tax revenues drop to reflect what’s happening with real-estate markets.

    I think it will be a cold winter, quite literally, for many people. But I also think the bottom of the real-estate market is in sight, and by late next summer prices should stabilize. As real estate stabilizes, so should the credit and stock markets. Residential rental properties look like a good investment if they can be purchased at good prices. A big factor in how long this might go on is the severity of the upcoming winter and price of oil, natural gas and coal. Energy commodity markets will play a big part in this equation, as they have over the past 3 or 4 years in driving oil over $50, then $75, then $100 a barrel. Personally, I think some government limits on speculation are going to be needed to keep prices under control.

    The people I feel the sorriest for are those who were due to retire in the next 5 or 10 years. I was on track to semi-retire in 10 years. But now my portfolio has taken a huge hit, my company pension is uncertain, and Social Security isn’t looking too good with all this bail-out money being passed-around. Fortunately, at 48 I still have time to build it back up, and maybe with prudent investment and rebounding markets, I can rebuild my losses and still retire as planned. Or maybe I have to buckle-down and save even harder to retire in 20 years.

    With any luck, some good will come out of all this. I believe in free markets and capitalism, but I think that there does need to be better control and accountability in the banking, investment and financial services industries. Looking back through history, we see time and time again that these industries have failed to exercise restraint and have resulted in many of our financial crises. We need to do a better job of encouraging long-term growth versus short-term profits. We need to develop and implement long-term strategies for reducing the cost of energy: more oil drilling, more nuclear power, more biomass power, more wind power, more solar power, more electric cars, higher taxes on inefficient cars, lower taxes on diesel cars and fuel; leave nothing off the table. And we need to find some plan for rewarding corporate execs for meeting these long-term goals, rather than focusing on bumping short-term gains and salaries, (I advocate paying execs in stock rather than dollars, negotiated once a year and requiring 50% to be held for at least 24 months).

    And consumers need to learn to shun the plastic economy. People should not be buying groceries or paying for Happy Meals™ or Grande Cappuccinos with credit cards. No more 30 years of $10-per-month payments at 24% interest for a new HDTV. Take $80 or $100 out of the bank on Monday, fill your car with gas, (saving 10-12¢/gal versus credit), and live the rest of the week on what’s left.

    But most of all, we need to learn to resist the Madison Avenue, and even government campaigns to believe we can spend our way out of financial turmoil and charge our way to nirvana. Gluttony, not frugality, is the sin.

    BTW, I am not an economics or financial expert, nor do I play one on TV. I’ve just got some common sense and street smarts, and my predictions haven’t been off-base for a long time. Your mileage my vary considerably!

    Like

  82. If you have been managing your finances responsibly and avoided the allure of non-traditional mortgages and buy-now-pay-later consumerism, and have no immediate plans to retire, there is no reason to panic. But there is plenty of reason to be cautious and pro-active with what’s left of your money. Cutting-back on discretionary spending is a natural and prudent reaction to this environment, particularly if you work in a market segment that is experiencing or will be affected by the fall-out of the real-estate and credit market downturns. As I work for a company that’s been drastically affected by the current crisis, I can tell you that planning for a 25% decrease in salary is something that realistically needs to be considered. At the very least you should not plan on any big salary adjustments or bonuses for the near term.

    I think the stock market still has a ways to go before there’s a sustained reversal, (I’ve been predicting low 8,000’s for a while now), so you need to look at your holdings and sell off those that are still at-risk. I think the credit crisis isn’t over yet, and won’t be until the major consumer credit companies get beaten-up. That will surely be the next wave as people already overextended run out of available credit to off-set their expenses, and start defaulting on balances as they divert available cash to essentials. Companies big into consumer debt will take losses as they write-down balances, increase interest rates to cover risk, and then write down more balances. This will spill over into consumer product sales as credit for new flat-screen TV’s and iPods disappears. Coal might be a popular and even sensible Christmas gift this year!

    So, government-insured 3.5-4.5% CD’s and high-yield savings accounts are looking like safe harbor right now; particularly compared to the 30% hit the stock market has collectively lost over the past 12 months. Individual corporate bonds might generate better yields, if you are confident in the company’s ability to pay off. The return on federal stuff isn’t worth the effort, and I think muni’s are going to be a problem in 12 to 18 months as tax revenues drop to reflect what’s happening with real-estate markets.

    I think it will be a cold winter, quite literally, for many people. But I also think the bottom of the real-estate market is in sight, and by late next summer prices should stabilize. As real estate stabilizes, so should the credit and stock markets. Residential rental properties look like a good investment if they can be purchased at good prices. A big factor in how long this might go on is the severity of the upcoming winter and price of oil, natural gas and coal. Energy commodity markets will play a big part in this equation, as they have over the past 3 or 4 years in driving oil over $50, then $75, then $100 a barrel. Personally, I think some government limits on speculation are going to be needed to keep prices under control.

    The people I feel the sorriest for are those who were due to retire in the next 5 or 10 years. I was on track to semi-retire in 10 years. But now my portfolio has taken a huge hit, my company pension is uncertain, and Social Security isn’t looking too good with all this bail-out money being passed-around. Fortunately, at 48 I still have time to build it back up, and maybe with prudent investment and rebounding markets, I can rebuild my losses and still retire as planned. Or maybe I have to buckle-down and save even harder to retire in 20 years.

    With any luck, some good will come out of all this. I believe in free markets and capitalism, but I think that there does need to be better control and accountability in the banking, investment and financial services industries. Looking back through history, we see time and time again that these industries have failed to exercise restraint and have resulted in many of our financial crises. We need to do a better job of encouraging long-term growth versus short-term profits. We need to develop and implement long-term strategies for reducing the cost of energy: more oil drilling, more nuclear power, more biomass power, more wind power, more solar power, more electric cars, higher taxes on inefficient cars, lower taxes on diesel cars and fuel; leave nothing off the table. And we need to find some plan for rewarding corporate execs for meeting these long-term goals, rather than focusing on bumping short-term gains and salaries, (I advocate paying execs in stock rather than dollars, negotiated once a year and requiring 50% to be held for at least 24 months).

    And consumers need to learn to shun the plastic economy. People should not be buying groceries or paying for Happy Meals™ or Grande Cappuccinos with credit cards. No more 30 years of $10-per-month payments at 24% interest for a new HDTV. Take $80 or $100 out of the bank on Monday, fill your car with gas, (saving 10-12¢/gal versus credit), and live the rest of the week on what’s left.

    But most of all, we need to learn to resist the Madison Avenue, and even government campaigns to believe we can spend our way out of financial turmoil and charge our way to nirvana. Gluttony, not frugality, is the sin.

    BTW, I am not an economics or financial expert, nor do I play one on TV. I’ve just got some common sense and street smarts, and my predictions haven’t been off-base for a long time. Your mileage my vary considerably!

    Like

  83. What’s to be afraid of? During recessions what money you do have goes farther, your taxes get lower (unless Obama is elected), stronger companies are created, kids and adults alike learn invaluable lessons about saving and budgeting, people start looking out more for their neighbors, families and friends become more creative as they can no longer afford to buy gifts or have somebody else intertain them….

    In the grand scheme of things, money isn’t as important as we all try to make it out to be. Recessions provide a good, healthy reminder of that.

    Like

  84. What’s to be afraid of? During recessions what money you do have goes farther, your taxes get lower (unless Obama is elected), stronger companies are created, kids and adults alike learn invaluable lessons about saving and budgeting, people start looking out more for their neighbors, families and friends become more creative as they can no longer afford to buy gifts or have somebody else intertain them….

    In the grand scheme of things, money isn’t as important as we all try to make it out to be. Recessions provide a good, healthy reminder of that.

    Like

  85. “Hoarding” isn’t a bad thing. It’s what should have been happening all along.

    For years people have been spending more than they are earning. Now suddenly everyone is either building savings either by choice or by force. Regardless it’s a good thing.

    Personal savings does help insulate against recessions, which are a normal part of a healthy economy. It pads us for the hard times (that’s why it’s strongly suggested you have some).

    What’s the lesson to learn here? Never spend more than you can afford, always put a % of your cash into a place with enough liquidity and stability that you can quickly retrieve it at a moments notice (savings account, money market account, etc.).

    Unfortunately everyone is feeling it, even if they weren’t the individuals (and companies) who made these mistakes.

    Like

  86. “Hoarding” isn’t a bad thing. It’s what should have been happening all along.

    For years people have been spending more than they are earning. Now suddenly everyone is either building savings either by choice or by force. Regardless it’s a good thing.

    Personal savings does help insulate against recessions, which are a normal part of a healthy economy. It pads us for the hard times (that’s why it’s strongly suggested you have some).

    What’s the lesson to learn here? Never spend more than you can afford, always put a % of your cash into a place with enough liquidity and stability that you can quickly retrieve it at a moments notice (savings account, money market account, etc.).

    Unfortunately everyone is feeling it, even if they weren’t the individuals (and companies) who made these mistakes.

    Like

  87. We are only in a “death spiral” as long as the media keep telling us we are. The mere reporting of “panic” helps CAUSE panic. Maybe you can use your power/influence to help remind us of the GOOD things going on, as the more we hear about companies creating revenue, opportunities, and jobs, the more confident we will all get.

    Like

  88. We are only in a “death spiral” as long as the media keep telling us we are. The mere reporting of “panic” helps CAUSE panic. Maybe you can use your power/influence to help remind us of the GOOD things going on, as the more we hear about companies creating revenue, opportunities, and jobs, the more confident we will all get.

    Like

  89. Robert A. is right. It’s called “saving,” not “hoarding.” Nothing wrong with it, good times or bad.

    Like

  90. Robert A. is right. It’s called “saving,” not “hoarding.” Nothing wrong with it, good times or bad.

    Like

  91. In the late 80s the Sovjet Union fell because it completely regulated the economy, resulting in corruption and a black market out of control. No, I’m afraid Ronald Reagan had little to do with it, since the economy started to slow down in the 70s, the downfall was a matter of time. Economies based on extreme principles will not work.

    One other extreme principle is complete deregulation because markets will sort themselves out (hint: they won’t). Now here one can claim Ronald Reagan has had a hand in. The S&L crisis was the first fruits of this labor, this one is yet another. But somehow few see it as the failing of a deregulated economy, where banks are allowed to use financial instruments that put layer on layer of leverage products that stand away miles from the real economy, where goods and services are actually produced. Of course we are far away from a barter economy and taking a loan to buy a house or start a business is great, if not necessary. But a loan that is 5 times your annual income for your third car or a bank taking a loan orth many times their assest and buying and reselling mortgages with it, or using it to trade in options and futures (never, ever trade in derivates with money you don’t own), that’s insane.

    [I stole this more or less from an English comedian] If, in the UK, I go to Ladbrokes and want to place a bet worth my annual income on the price of oil going up 15% in 3 months, they’ll say ‘go home, son, you’re drunk’. Banks will not only take thes bets, they will place them themselves, several times a day. With a straight face. It’s legal too. Go figure.

    Why should I still take the captains of the financial industry (or any industry, remember Enron?) seriously when they prove time and time again they either don’t have a clue or see no problem in gambling with other peoples money (and why should they? they get a severance bonus the size of a small countries’ GDP and the state will hand them a blank corporate wellfare check for the bank itself)?

    The economy cannot be influenced let alone be controlled. So don’t do your best to make it worse. Just make sure you build reserves in case of a storm.
    And anyone who thinks that keep spending will avert recession: you are as naive as they were in the Sovjet Union. Everything will work in a growing economy. The cardhouses of completely regulated and completely unregulated economies will fall over the first slight bump. There is a middle way. CEOs and governments: redeem yourself be finding it. Now.

    Like

  92. In the late 80s the Sovjet Union fell because it completely regulated the economy, resulting in corruption and a black market out of control. No, I’m afraid Ronald Reagan had little to do with it, since the economy started to slow down in the 70s, the downfall was a matter of time. Economies based on extreme principles will not work.

    One other extreme principle is complete deregulation because markets will sort themselves out (hint: they won’t). Now here one can claim Ronald Reagan has had a hand in. The S&L crisis was the first fruits of this labor, this one is yet another. But somehow few see it as the failing of a deregulated economy, where banks are allowed to use financial instruments that put layer on layer of leverage products that stand away miles from the real economy, where goods and services are actually produced. Of course we are far away from a barter economy and taking a loan to buy a house or start a business is great, if not necessary. But a loan that is 5 times your annual income for your third car or a bank taking a loan orth many times their assest and buying and reselling mortgages with it, or using it to trade in options and futures (never, ever trade in derivates with money you don’t own), that’s insane.

    [I stole this more or less from an English comedian] If, in the UK, I go to Ladbrokes and want to place a bet worth my annual income on the price of oil going up 15% in 3 months, they’ll say ‘go home, son, you’re drunk’. Banks will not only take thes bets, they will place them themselves, several times a day. With a straight face. It’s legal too. Go figure.

    Why should I still take the captains of the financial industry (or any industry, remember Enron?) seriously when they prove time and time again they either don’t have a clue or see no problem in gambling with other peoples money (and why should they? they get a severance bonus the size of a small countries’ GDP and the state will hand them a blank corporate wellfare check for the bank itself)?

    The economy cannot be influenced let alone be controlled. So don’t do your best to make it worse. Just make sure you build reserves in case of a storm.
    And anyone who thinks that keep spending will avert recession: you are as naive as they were in the Sovjet Union. Everything will work in a growing economy. The cardhouses of completely regulated and completely unregulated economies will fall over the first slight bump. There is a middle way. CEOs and governments: redeem yourself be finding it. Now.

    Like

  93. I want to affirm the comments made by a few people above – the economy is largely based on models that are divorced from every day life. In short, it is largely a construct of our beliefs about it – whether it is growing or shrinking is also affected in such a way. The more we contribute to the challenges we are facing with inflammatory and sensationalist titles such as this, the worse it is going to be for everyone.

    I dont mean to ignore the reality, I just mean dont exacerbate it. The great depression, and from what I understand the failure of WaMu was in some measure a result of a ‘run on the banks’ – what does this mean really? it means that people freaked out and thought they needed to horde cash in their matresses. By reducing the amount of cash the banks had on hand, it changed their leverage – how much they had outstanding in loans against the deposits. So when the deposits dropped below a certain point, it required them to file bankruptcy even though they weren’t ‘out of cash’ per se.

    The point is, what it is, is up to us. Real leadership in a time like this requires calm, rational thought.

    Like

  94. I want to affirm the comments made by a few people above – the economy is largely based on models that are divorced from every day life. In short, it is largely a construct of our beliefs about it – whether it is growing or shrinking is also affected in such a way. The more we contribute to the challenges we are facing with inflammatory and sensationalist titles such as this, the worse it is going to be for everyone.

    I dont mean to ignore the reality, I just mean dont exacerbate it. The great depression, and from what I understand the failure of WaMu was in some measure a result of a ‘run on the banks’ – what does this mean really? it means that people freaked out and thought they needed to horde cash in their matresses. By reducing the amount of cash the banks had on hand, it changed their leverage – how much they had outstanding in loans against the deposits. So when the deposits dropped below a certain point, it required them to file bankruptcy even though they weren’t ‘out of cash’ per se.

    The point is, what it is, is up to us. Real leadership in a time like this requires calm, rational thought.

    Like

  95. The dirty little secrete is that the bad mortgages are not the main problem. They were the spark that lit the pile of gasoline soaked straw. Gathering the straw and soaking was pure human greed. Wall Street has been involved in the biggest Ponzi scheme in the history of mankind, then they blame the poor. The real problem had to do with
    Credit default swap
    markets.
    As I have written in my own blog, this is simply the Biblical truth found in 1 Tim 6:10 Love of money has caused this death spiral

    Like

  96. The dirty little secrete is that the bad mortgages are not the main problem. They were the spark that lit the pile of gasoline soaked straw. Gathering the straw and soaking was pure human greed. Wall Street has been involved in the biggest Ponzi scheme in the history of mankind, then they blame the poor. The real problem had to do with
    Credit default swap
    markets.
    As I have written in my own blog, this is simply the Biblical truth found in 1 Tim 6:10 Love of money has caused this death spiral

    Like

  97. “Lucky I’m isolated at college. Hopefully the economy will have recovered by the time I graduate.”

    You’re kidding..

    I’m in college too and I feel the crunch myself..

    Maybe I should quit reading the WSJ for awhile?

    Like

  98. “Lucky I’m isolated at college. Hopefully the economy will have recovered by the time I graduate.”

    You’re kidding..

    I’m in college too and I feel the crunch myself..

    Maybe I should quit reading the WSJ for awhile?

    Like

  99. People panicking is causing these loses which is causing panic… There is a LOT of money to be made through all this nonsense. Just be careful what you invest in.

    Like

  100. People panicking is causing these loses which is causing panic… There is a LOT of money to be made through all this nonsense. Just be careful what you invest in.

    Like

  101. NEITHER PARTY DESERVES ANY “REWARDS”

    Both political parties led us down this road. Bill Clinton signed a major deregulation bill. Congressional Democrats encouraged (and allowed) Freddie Mac and Fannie Ma to write un-capitalized loans. The Republicans dropped nearly all regulation for large corporations, and allowed the resulting good and bad paper to be re-packaged together and resold.

    Corporation execs garnered enormous, bloated salaries while their companies languished. The Repubs encouraged this, as well as permitting corporation execs to over-value their companies to encourage investment, even though their profit margins were inadequate to support that.

    What a MESS.

    This is going to be painful. Two weeks ago, I thought it might take a month or so for the bottom to occur. I was WRONG!

    The market could easily go to less than 4,000 in the coming weeks.

    If you’re over 55, GET OUT of the market.

    It’s all a matter of age. You may not have too much longer to protect your 401K. It could take easily another 10 years to wind down from the effects of the worst possible market calamity since 1929.

    I am sorry to hear myself say this.

    But it is reality.

    sanjosemike

    Like

  102. NEITHER PARTY DESERVES ANY “REWARDS”

    Both political parties led us down this road. Bill Clinton signed a major deregulation bill. Congressional Democrats encouraged (and allowed) Freddie Mac and Fannie Ma to write un-capitalized loans. The Republicans dropped nearly all regulation for large corporations, and allowed the resulting good and bad paper to be re-packaged together and resold.

    Corporation execs garnered enormous, bloated salaries while their companies languished. The Repubs encouraged this, as well as permitting corporation execs to over-value their companies to encourage investment, even though their profit margins were inadequate to support that.

    What a MESS.

    This is going to be painful. Two weeks ago, I thought it might take a month or so for the bottom to occur. I was WRONG!

    The market could easily go to less than 4,000 in the coming weeks.

    If you’re over 55, GET OUT of the market.

    It’s all a matter of age. You may not have too much longer to protect your 401K. It could take easily another 10 years to wind down from the effects of the worst possible market calamity since 1929.

    I am sorry to hear myself say this.

    But it is reality.

    sanjosemike

    Like

Comments are closed.