Tuesday, November 25, 2008

More bailouts and then some more...Peter Schiff's solution

Bailouts, Bailouts and more bailouts...this is never ending. I 've already written a bit on this topic, but I want to highlight this again, beautifully written by Peter Schiff:


Put simply, our government doesn't have enough spare cash to bailout a lemonade stand let alone a bloated and failing industry that is losing tens of billions of dollars per month. Washington can only offer funds that it has borrowed from abroad or printed. Unfortunately, the nation is in the grips of a delusion that money derived from these sources has the power to heal.
But history has clearly shown that borrowed or printed money only has the power to destroy.


The solution he proposed is correct, but too tough to implement:

Spending must be replaced with savings, and consumption with production. The service sector must shrink and manufacturing must expand to fill the void. The dollar must fall, wages in America must be brought down to a competitive level, and hopefully government spending and burdensome regulation can be reduced.
This transformation will not be fun, but it is necessary. Our standard of living must decline to reflect years of reckless consumption and the disintegration of our industrial base.
Only by swallowing this tough medicine now will our sick economy ever recover. By accepting a lower standard of living today, we will eventually be rewarded with a higher one tomorrow.


Source

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Can a Black Swan 'Change' Obama?

Barack Obama gave a historic win to America, an event very hard to replicate anywhere in the world. People not just from USA , but from countries across the continents moved by his victory, his ability to reach the heights and to create hope.

Everybody knows he promised to bring 'change' for a better world with synchronizing assurance of his supporters singing with him- 'Yes, We can!'. It was such a rosy picture and I sincerely hope it stays that way.

Obama was very quick to assume responsibility and started to jump on the mess created by the 8 horrific years under Bush. Tasks to take on are unsurmountable.
The victory gave a chance for America's enemies to put him on test. Militant outfits in Iraq and Afghanistan sent out a message not much different than their previous ones; Russia wants to build a missile system near Poland; Iran was happy with his election (which might make Israel a bit nervous); un-employment reached 14 year high; Auto companies going bankrupt; and of course Wall street was not really happy with his election.

The first two initiatives Obama has taken were totally disappointing to me.
  1. Stimulus package - which has not worked and never will
  2. Appointment of Rahm Emanuel
So much for 'Change' and 'hope', that Rahm was appointed on chief-of-staff position?? A pro-war Zionist, Freddie Mac board member during its drive towards the cliff's edge, sitting in a position which decides what information President must get and also appoint people in key White house jobs. Aaah, Please!!

More questions arise:
  • Will Obama govern by wisdom or ideology - polished version of Bush's way of governance?
  • Can Obama's 'Change' handle a Black Swan, geo-political or financial??
A Black Swan event can land him in the same position as Bush was after 9/11. Such an event can come from geo-political means or economic means. Nobody knows. A major attack, a financial catastrophe, a preemptive strike on any nation in middle east...we never know who will test the waters in the present perception of US weaker financially.

Real change under Obama will be when he does not curtail freedom of people and start new fronts of war with same kind of warmongering as previous regime did. The trust factor can sweep many Americans towards him and it is quite dangerous.

On the economic front, If he goes on to increase taxes, it will be no better than what Hoover did before Great Depression. He has to realize that more Government involvement is the problem.

Obama is smart, has sense of judgment. But, real 'Change' will come when he does not rattle in such huge problems as he didnot during all the speeches he gave.

People are losing trust in Capitalistic system. If Obama fails to deliver, they might as well start questioning Democratic system.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Greenspan, regulation and future outlook

Greenspan , the war criminal of the global financial world has come out and finally spoken something. This is what he has to say:

Source: Economics news
-
In 2005, I raised concerns that the protracted period of underpricing of risk, if history was any guide, would have dire consequences. This crisis, however, has turned out to be much broader than anything I could have imagined," Greenspan said in his testimony to the House Committee of Government Oversight and Reform on Thursday.


What?? What doea he mean by '..but it has turned out to be...", You mean you were doing tail-and-error with people's money?? It hasnt turned out to be 'much broader', it has shaken the countries across the board and millions are clueless about what needs to be done next and whether their homes, savings, pensions will be safe.

-

Greenspan said a stabilization in home prices is the ultimate solution, but that is many months away "at a minimum". In the interim, he said the $700 billion Troubled Assets Relief Program is adequate to avoid a severe retrenchment in the economy and banking industry.

TARP (must have been actually called TRAP- to trap people towards a debasing currency). The bailout was ridiculous. The crisis is far beyond house prices, Mr. Greenspan!! Its credit crisis and slowly creeping into Credit cards, Derivatives and every single place where credit is involved, meaning it includes even the currency people use.

-

"The consequent surge in global demand for U.S. subprime securities by banks, hedge, and pension funds supported by unrealistically positive rating designations by credit agencies was, in my judgment, the core of the problem," he said.

Why did you allow such financial instruments in the first place? You had every power to take decision.

-
Once the crisis abates, Greenspan said the financial landscape will be far different and characterized by exceptional caution.

We are just praying one more Greenspan or Bernanke doesnot take charge of 'financial landscape' you are talking about.

"It is important to remember, however, that whatever regulatory changes are made, they will pale in comparison to the change already evident in today's markets," he said.

aaah, regulation? FED needs to be regulated first. Free markets will work. Its the FED who was always interventionist.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

India highly prone to global credit crisis

Citigroup cites India’s very high ratio of total external finance to forex reserves and high level of mobile capital compared to the reserves as the main drawbacks, making the country highly vulnerable to the global financial crisis.

“Regardless of the future path of the financial crisis in the US, global economic and market conditions are likely to change. The world will probably no longer be the same as the one of the past decade. The global turmoil will further tighten liquidity and lead to a dramatic slowdown in global assets inflation,” says the Citigroup report. The report adds: “Rising capital outflow risks could also add greater pressure on the Indian rupee, won, peso and rupiah.”

A fund manager of a domestic brokerage house said selling by hedge funds in the Indian market is like throwing a stone in the sea. Since the depth of the sea is not known, it will be difficult to ascertain where the stone is headed or how far hedge funds will continue with their selling spree.


Source: Business Standard

Friday, October 10, 2008

Alternate Solutions?

As the Global economic crisis caused by an era of Interest based finance takes its toll on Investors and the common man, people are scouting around for alternative places to Invest or keep their money safe.

This has generated a lot of Curiosity and Interest(pun definitely intended!!)  among people for Islamic finance and Banking, A very interesting article about this trend is given here. Non-Muslims flock to 'safe haven' Sharia bank protected from the crunch by non-gambling rule
 
It says that 
Under the strict rules of Sharia Law, the charging or paying of interest is prohibited, leaving many Islamic banks unscathed by the credit crisis - and nervy customers flocking to put their savings in safer hands.
This gives a big boost to Islamic Banking , and the powers to be can look at this option now seriously. 

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Quick Inflation tutorial - 1

Inflation:
Symptom - Rising prices ( usually this is considered as cause )
Cause - increase of money supply in market
Consequences of Inflation - Dont tell me u dont know yet!!
Worst case scenario - Hyperinflation

Increase in price of a certain good can happen in any of the following cases:
  1. Increasing the supply of money

  2. A decrease in the supply of goods and services

  3. An increase in demand, i.e. population increase

The last two cases will result in increase of a particular good and not general price levels in the market.
What is generally explained by authorities as cause for inflation could be any or a combination of below listed reasons:
  1. Cost-push inflation as a result of arbitrary demands of labor unions.

  2. Profit-push inflation resulting from the greed of businesses raising prices.

  3. Crisis-driven inflation resulting from acts of nature or weather.


These reasons are said to account for a large rise in the general price level (not just a relative rise in some prices, such as the price of oil), the economy’s output must shrink by a large percentage. In practice, “supply shock” cases are seldom large enough to account for much inflation and are typically short-lived. For example, of the 9.2 percent U.S. inflation rate in 1980 (as measured by the GDP deflator, gP = 9.2 percent), the negative growth of real GDP (due, in part, to the OPEC oil price shock of 1979–1980) accounted for only 0.2 percentage points (gy = −0.2%). [Source]

Inflation
is an increase in the quantity of money and credit relative to available goods resulting in a substantial and continuing rise in the general price level, an increase in the quantity of money caused by government.

I will deal
how it happens in later post.

whats in bailouts dude?

Bailout to banks everywhere...what exactly is happening and what does it mean?

Bailout, as done by US and EU countries here means helping people who do scams so large that its better to get them out of mess than admitting mistakes for allowing it to happen. Its just that!

So, now what about the common people who lost money for mistakes of bunch of casino traders? - They can protest in front of some political offices and go back home cribbing.

Will the bailout really solves something? NO, NOT AT ALL. Close to trillion dollars have been used as bailout so far, across the continents. Nothing happens because you are trying to value assets whose worth you don't know at all.

Where does govts get that money from? They print money....simple and straight. That cause inflation as more supply increases.

Is it better if not bailed out? YES! Countries might have financial problem for following couple of years, then markets will correct themselves. Its better than debasing the currency and getting into bigger trouble.

Here is the longstanding crusader against this form of corporate socialism: