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DON’T
FIGHT THE FED There is an old line
on Wall Street: “Don’t fight the Fed.” Meaning that, if the
Federal Reserve (or in this case the entire Federal Government) is determined
to make something happen, you’d best not bet against it. That seemed to be
the case yesterday – gloriously – and it may mark the beginning of
a virtuous cycle . . . tentative and halting at first, but then perhaps gaining
momentum as people gain confidence the world will not end and that
houses (and mortgage rates) this cheap are too good not to snap up,
and the same with stocks. Or not. Lots of
“old Wall Street lines” work wonderfully except when they
don’t, and it’s the “or not” aspect of this that is
likely to make the virtuous cycle tentative and halting at first, or possibly
abort it altogether. I don’t
know. But I do know it
won’t go back to being “like it was.” If we are to succeed,
it will be with some wrenching dislocations as we become a nation slightly less
of shopkeepers and real estate agents – wonderful as shopkeepers and real
estate agents are – and slightly more a nation of infrastructure
strengtheners and medical records digitizers. A nation of somewhat smaller
homes and cars and cheeseburgers – wonderful as big homes and cars and
Big Macs are – and slightly more a nation that consumes less than
it produces instead of more, saving, rather than borrowing, the
difference. I also know we
have a tremendously talented leader, with an awful lot of talent right beneath
him (and off to the side, over at the Fed), and quite a cadre of leaders in the
G20, meeting in London April 2, who also have reason to try to get the world
through this. So there’s
reason for hope, reason for caution, reason to throw your support behind the
President (take the pledge!), and reason to stick to all the basics
of living beneath your means, saving for the future, and diversifying that always
make sense. Note: For
details on all the initiatives rolled out in the last few weeks – a truly
impressive arsenal when you see them all on a single page – click here. Yesterday’s stands a good chance of applying
the skills and competitive juices of the private market to valuing frozen
assets and unfreezing the system. Yes, Wall Street stands to make a lot of
money from taking these risks (or to lose it all, which is what sharpens their
minds to the task); but so does the taxpayer, who will be investing alongside Wall
Street. FROM THE MIND
OF MAN . . . But only if you
have two minutes you
can truly afford to lose. Tomorrow: From
the Mind of Less
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