I really don't see any happy ending possible for the dollar or the nation.
Gold will still be gold, no matter what.
Gold will still be gold, no matter what.
Quote from austinp:
Next question: does everyone expect interest-rate cuts to mark a years'-long bottom in stock markets?
The latest rate-cut cycle from 2001 saw stock index markets fall into a bear market the entire way. Fed kept slashing -50 basis to -25 basis, stocks would quickly ramp and promptly dive to new lower lows with reality of a slowed economy.
If the housing market remains slumped, credit any kind of concern and food / energy driven inflation crimps the consumer from discretionary spending, interest rate levels at 0 won't save the market.
This economy needs credit-worthy homebuyers with stable to increasing incomes. The economy needs consumers who aren't already buried & maxed out beneath credit card and mortgage debt.
All smoke & mirrors attempts to keep propping up a debt crisis by encouraging even more debt is not a solution. Everyone with a smattering of common sense knows that... but like junkies are jonesing for the quick-fix pipedream.
Maybe the market bottoms on a retest of lows and soars upward for years to come. Maybe it has begun the inevitable stage of sequential lower lows for months or years to come. Impossible to say. One fact that is possible to assert: interest rate cuts cannot fix everything. Nor are they a long-term solution.
Time is the only long-term solution, when everything plays out according to plan. Fed intervention never negates this process, only delays it in long, drawn-out fashion.
Quote from thriftybob:
The real problems are the debt levels and additional twin deficits. They aren't EVER going to improve and at some point the world will not want payment in dollars for anything.
Austin, I agree with most of your points regarding the psychology and setup for the Fed meeting. However, I strongly disagree with the portion quoted above. Here are some of my thoughts:Quote from austinp:
As for the long-term setup, this financial market is every bit a bubble as 1999-2000 was. Forget current or projected PEs... need to see actual earnings over next two cycles for the real view.
The market is up right now ONLY due to cheap money before and current hopes of a return to cheap money conditions past 9/18. An end to cheap money = an end to current stock market levels, all else is moot. Indexes would not be where they are, not even close if it weren't for a liquidity flood. When that flood recedes, so will stock market levels.
Liquidity always seeks its own level, high or low tide equally
Quote from JSSPMK:
Yes, that's what I am thinking also, 1 Global market.