Bernanke Is Clueless

Quote from daddyeaux:

the world's CBs have dumped $400 billion on the problem with little to show for it........

the late rally today had the Plunge Protection Team's fingerprints all over it......


this is what flashed across my news proggie, dunno if its true (news for today)

"The Fed injected 517 billion to banking system to ease liquidity needs"
 
Quote from jficquette:

There was no reason to for congress to get involved. Determining who can buy a house is not one of congresses duties.

neither is it their job to deliberately set up rules that can only lead to bubbles and exaggerated speculation, or to pass laws that benefit their special interest donators at the expense of the public, or to engage in profligate spending and staggering debt creation.

but they do it anyway, with full knowledge and intent. and it's disingenous to argue that, having done whatever they could to assist J6P into the hole he's in, they should wash their hands of it upon finding a sudden respect for their Constitutional boundaries.
 
AAA,

Let's see. You blame Bernanke for inheriting what has unanimously been called a real estate bubble. You want him to lower rates when inflation is still a big threat, the economy is still growing at a good clip, we're at near full employment, and, most importantly, the dollar has been on a major slide against every major currency?

You rag on Ben for being too much of an academic, while your "policy advice" is based on emotional knee-jerk reflex and very little on academic rigor. Why ask the Fed to kill a fly with a howitzer? Lowering rates to solve a narrow problem will have adverse effects across the entire economy. If there is an intervention -- and I don't support one in the first place -- let it be Congress who legislates a bailout, since they're supposedly the arm of the People and are the ones who should react to your "don't let Joe Sixpack lose the house he shouldn't have bought in the first place" appeal. At least congressional legislation can be more targeted and minimize the adverse impact on other aspects of the economy. Interest rate changes, on the other hand, should only be reserved for issues dealing with inflation, GDP growth, and exchange rates.

I'll take Bernanke over Greenspan -- or you for that matter -- any day.
 
Quote from AAAintheBeltway:

Add Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke to the list of incompetent Bush appointees. He can join such stalwarts as the hapless "Brownie", would be Supreme Court Justice Harriet Miers, AG Anthony Gonzales, US Attorney Johnnie Sutton, Homeland Security honcho Michael Chertoff and CIA chief George Tenant.

Bernanke's chief failing seems to be that he is an academic, insulated and naive about the real world. He demonstrated this early on by his loose lips at a cocktail party when he apparently lost his bearings while in conversation with Maria Bartoroma, but Wall Street and the financial media cut him some slack. In retrospect, she would have done us all a giant favor if she had had the effect on his career she did on that Citibank guy.

Bernanke seems now to be auditioning for a new nickname. I can understand wanting to ditch the "helicopter" appellation, but do we really want a central bank chief whose new nick is "Bankruptcy?"



How exactly has Bernanke failed? He hasn't even been on the job very long. Doesn't the mortgage industry have more to do with the recent market downturn than Bernanke? Douche bags like you will find any reason to beat up a Bush appointee, no matter how absurd.
 
in july, the fed head was talking about subprime being contained.....

as he lies awake tonite counting dots on the ceiling, me thinks he misspoke.....

Meantime the rest of the world is coming to the conclusion that US consumers cant pay back the loans taken out to buy rent houses and plastic crap from China
 
Quote from HotTip:

AAA,

Let's see. You blame Bernanke for inheriting what has unanimously been called a real estate bubble. You want him to lower rates when inflation is still a big threat, the economy is still growing at a good clip, we're at near full employment, and, most importantly, the dollar has been on a major slide against every major currency?

You rag on Ben for being too much of an academic, while your "policy advice" is based on emotional knee-jerk reflex and very little on academic rigor. Why ask the Fed to kill a fly with a howitzer? Lowering rates to solve a narrow problem will have adverse effects across the entire economy. If there is an intervention -- and I don't support one in the first place -- let it be Congress who legislates a bailout, since they're supposedly the arm of the People and are the ones who should react to your "don't let Joe Sixpack lose the house he shouldn't have bought in the first place" appeal. At least congressional legislation can be more targeted and minimize the adverse impact on other aspects of the economy. Interest rate changes, on the other hand, should only be reserved for issues dealing with inflation, GDP growth, and exchange rates.

I'll take Bernanke over Greenspan -- or you for that matter -- any day.

How do you like Ben now?

My focus is not on saving undisciplined borrowers. It is on preventing a freeze-up in the debt markets that could have far-reaching consequences, consequences that might not be so easy to unwind. We had 17 rate increases, a more or less inverted curve, a housing sector clearly in distress and most of our inflation is related to China driving up commodity prices or idiotic congressional ethanol policy, not easy money.

A lot of the members here have never really experienced a deep recession, one that decimates entire industries. I have, and I don't wish that experience on anyone. I would rather risk a future speculative increase in inflation if that is what it takes to contain this immediate risk. Personally, I think the risk of inflation is minimal.
 
Quote from chris12000:

... Douche bags like you will find any reason to beat up a Bush appointee, no matter how absurd.

You clearly haven't been reading my posts in Politics and Religion.
 
The credit markets are going to tell us what kind of a job Ben is doing. I have to say, somthing tells me this time it is different. I hope I'm wrong. One thing is for sure. This news got to a few folks yesterday.
trade well
Keith
 
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