TruthEverytime The Fed blows bubble every time it bursts and everytime the traders profitted massively from market movement.
2000 and 2008 were my best P&L years ever
TruthEverytime The Fed blows bubble every time it bursts and everytime the traders profitted massively from market movement.
...
We haven’t even had a bear market (20% down) in 12 years. By far the longest on record.
If you mean that had the Fed not intervened to assure adequate liquidity in markets -- one of their main functions -- the markets would stop functioning well and there would have been negative repercussions for the equities markets, I can't disagree. But that would have been irresponsible action by the Fed having nothing to do with the fundamental reason for markets becoming overbought. The Fed and SEC may fairly be blamed for not acting to counteract a bubble that is threatening to grow too big. But is it incorrect to blame them for formation of the bubble in the first place?
If you really want to understand the formation of market bubbles as a natural consequence of a capitalist economy* then I can not recommend too highly Soros's Second lecture at the Central European University. [see Amazon books]
* "When Alan Greenspan spoke of irrational exuberance in 1996, he misrepresented bubbles. When I see a bubble forming I rush in to buy, adding fuel to the fire. That is not irrational. And that is why we need regulators to counteract the market when a bubble is threatening to grow too big; we cannot rely on market participants, however well informed and rational they are." -- George Soros, "The Soros Lectures at The Central European University", Pg. 33, 2010.


Rather than just repeat or paraphrase what has already been said about Treasury-Fed-SEC- tools available to let some of the air out of bubbles, I will refer you to pages 41-45 of The George Soros Lectures at the Central European University. This little book is available for a few dollars on Amazon. The primary tools, of course, should be aimed at reducing the amount of leverage. And of course one of the first things that should come to everyone's mind in that regard are the margin requirements; yet another are the minimum capital requirements. But this barely scratches the surface of what is available to our regulatory bodies.How does the FED counteract?