Quote from whitster:
devastation?
it's OPPORTUNITY.
people who overleveraged themselves will suffer
for others, its opportunities.
opportunities to get real estate CHEAP (just wait)
etc.
trading is all about buying others panic and selling their euphoria
everybody hated gold in 1998 and loved stocks. guess what? pretty good time to go long in gold.
everybody will start to HATE real estate pretty soon. i can't WAIT.
as long as people take dumb risks, and misprice assets (in either direction) due to greed, fear, etc. there will be opp's for traders.
gloom and doom serves nobody.
these are OPPORTUNITIES for traders (and investors)
Bingo.
The current sub-prime mess is yet another chapter in a long, long story. Those of us who have been around remember previous chapters: the Savings and Loan Crisis, Long-Term Capital Management, the Dot-Com Bubble. The story goes way back before anyone of us was here; Galbraith and Mackay are well worth reading for those who want more.
One thing that I have NOT heard in the press in recent weeks is that one of the reasons why hedge funds "invested" in this sub-prime mortgage securities products is because they, as well as most of corporate America, have been flush with cash. Easy credit is partly to blame, of course, but the fact is that these have been good times. This isn't like the 1970's, when companies struggled to find the necessary capital to build their businesses. Companies increase their dividends, and increase them again, and still have too much cash.
Perhaps one of the reasons why Bernanke has been hesitant to cut rates (other than because he is an inflation hawk) is because he would like those with excess capital to invest in more stable, reliable investments (bonds, bills, notes), and not in speculative garbage like these packaged mortgage products. One of the reasons why Americans have not been eager to lend money to the federal government is because, frankly, the rate of return has been pretty pathetic. In the long run, that may well change.
Rising interest rates will only let more air out of the real estate bubble. There will be foreclosures, and cheap homes (again). The dollar may stop going down (sorry manufacturing). And in the long run, the purge will be good for the system, because that is how capitalism is supposed to work.