CNNMoney.com is reporting a doom-and-gloom scenario that highlights the chaos on Wall Street caused by banks’ fear of loss threatening to bring down the financial system.
We’re suffering the aftereffects of the collapse of a Tinker Bell financial market, one that depended heavily on borrowed money that has now vanished like pixie dust. Like Tink, the famous fairy from Peter Pan, this market could exist only as long as everyone agreed to believe in it.
So because it was convenient - and oh, so profitable! - players embraced fantasies like U.S. house prices never falling and cheap short-term money always being available. They created, bought, and sold, for huge profits, securities that almost no one understood. And they goosed their returns by borrowing vast amounts of money.
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How is this slowdown different from other slowdowns? Normally the economy goes bad first, creating financial problems. In this slowdown the markets are dragging down the economy - a crucial distinction, because markets are harder to fix than the economy.
A leading political economist, Allan Meltzer of Carnegie Mellon, calls it “an unusual situation, but not unprecedented.” When was the last time it happened in the U.S.? “In 1929,” he says. And it touched off the Great Depression.
We’re not going to paraphrase the entire article. We’d love to add some insightful KoolAidMan commentary, however the article speaks for itself echoing many of the statements that Drinking Is Believing has been providing since its inception.
So, after all this, we end up with the same old story. Whenever you see a financially driven boom and people tell you, “This time it’s different,” don’t listen. It’s never different. Sooner or later, the bubble pops, as it has now. And you and I end up paying for it.
Drinking is believing…




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