Yesterday,
I suggested
that Robert Prechter’s prediction of “Dow Under 1,000” was
worth reading but likely wrong. Today, some thoughts on how we might go
about foiling it.
But
first this . . .
AN
INTERESTING NEW WAY TO HELP
In
case you feel like helping your LGBT friends, relatives, or colleagues –
or even just Charles and me – attain the same first-class citizenship you
enjoy, here’s a brand new way
to do it. Take two minutes to watch the video to see if it grabs you?
And
now this, which is vaguely related to the Prechter issue . . .
japAn
to build insanely fast network
As
Shelley Palmer summarizes:
“Japan’s EMOBILE has made a deal with Ericsson to build a new
42Mbps wireless network. And, they even have a workable plan to crank it up to
84Mbps after it launches. That’s so remarkably fast, we don’t have
anything to compare it to in the United States. Luckily the government just
allotted an additional $800 million to the nationwide broadband effort; even
so, we may still be left in the dust.”
And
these, which are directly related to the Prechter issue . . .
PRECHTER
Monty
Goolsby:
“Robert Prechter predicted that the Dow would lose 90% after the
‘correction’ of 1987. At that time the DOW was just over
1750. If you had followed his advice you would have missed the large
bull market that followed.”
WAVES,
SHMAVES
Chris
Brown:
“Re the Times Article you linked to: ‘Originating
in the writings of Ralph Nelson Elliott, an obscure accountant who found
repetitive patterns, or “fractals,” in the stock market of the
1930s and ’40s, the theory suggests that an epic downswing is under way,
Mr. Prechter said. But he argued that even skeptical investors should take his
advice seriously.’ Elliot may have found any number of things
in the 1930s, but they certainly weren’t called “fractals” at
the time. That term was coined by Benoit Mandelbrot in the 1970s.
The same Mandelbrot that demonstrated that a random, scaling (non-normal)
generator will make charts that people see cycles and patterns in, ex-post,
even if there is zero predictive value in these patterns. Nearly every chart, ex-post,
lends itself to a short-duration cycle, a medium-duration cycle, and a
long-duration cycle. Which is also why if Gluskin Sheff’s David Rosenberg wants to
believe that we have several years of bear market ahead because that is how
long it takes for a massive deleveraging, then that is a reasonable hypothesis,
but that if he thinks the Dow is going to 5,000 because that is what the
18-year chart pattern tells him, one should realize that particular datum lends
no support to his argument.”
And
now . . .
foiling
catastrophe
Global collapse is always possible, though (echoing
Chris’s point above) I think it might more likely come from some
unforeseen panic-cascading catastrophe than from any inexorably predictable
financial “wave.”
Yes, we face huge challenges, nationally and globally.
But we also have astonishing new tools at our disposal. (My iPhone 4 is
in Hong Kong as we speak, and I can track its journey as it flies east over a vast ocean into my outstretched graspy little
fingers. A 3.6 kilowatt solar photovoltaic array sits on my roof,
powering the equivalent of 36 100-watt light bulbs at peak capacity. Who
would have dreamed of such things 50 years ago?)
There is the problem that, as a species, we’re
breeding faster than we’ve learned to handle the extra load. (Were
the people of Haiti – to take just one sad example – properly
prepared to welcome so many million more children into the world over the last
few decades?) There are the problems of ignorance and corruption, envy
and short-sightedness – and the sometimes terrible consequences of
religious fundamentalism. (Queen Isabella was a piker by
comparison, yet even she acknowledged, “I have caused great
calamities. I have depopulated provinces and kingdoms. But I did it
for the love of Christ and his Holy Mother.”) And don’t
get me started on evil dictators, cyberterror – or drugs.
So I’m not saying success is guaranteed – and
I’m certainly not denying that many of us are going to have a tough slog
as we work its way through the current mess.
But if we’re smart, it seems to me tremendous
opportunities lie ahead.
Think about the basics. Can America – and the
species, for that matter – grow enough food to feed everyone?
Yes. Clothe and house everyone? Yes. Provide clean water and
basic medical care for everyone? Yes. Provide the necessary
energy? Yes.
The big problems come not in figuring out how to do these
things, but figuring out how to organize ourselves to do them effectively.
How do you distribute the work that needs doing and then
distribute the fruits of that work?
One strategy, born of high ideals and disastrous lack of
insight into human nature, was “from each according to his ability, to
each according to his needs.” Communism. Which morphed into, “they
pretend to pay us and we pretend to work.” What a miserable failure
that was. To address their most basic need, food, the Soviets
thought collective farms would be a good idea – and all but starved their
entire nation. They wound up relying in no small measure on the U.S.,
with its private farms, to supply their grain.
Another strategy is to have largely free markets, but with
enlightened regulation, a modest level of government involvement, and
progressive taxation. Our system. It’s worked awfully well,
and the better once we added things like FDIC insurance to prevent bank runs, anti-trust
law to preserve competition, and a social safety net to preserve individual
dignity and lessen the severity of business contractions.
(Unlike the Soviets, we’re all about free markets and
individual freedom. But even here government farm programs are in place –
most at the request of the farmers themselves – to keep our farm sector
strong. And few would argue that the SBA – or DARPA or the FDA –
are bad ideas.)
I like our “enlightened capitalism” strategy.
So the biggest point I want to make: the sun will surely
come up tomorrow, and there’s plenty of work that needs doing –
here in the U.S. and around the rest of the world – with both resources
and technology equal to the task. If we’re smart, we’ll make
the adjustments required to keep driving forward. And not get all freaked
out if some of those adjustments include some temporary (or even some
permanent) government involvement.
What adjustments?
The Republicans, as always, say tax cuts are the key
(coincidentally lightening the load on those who are best off) and that we’d
better slash government spending (coincidentally tightening the vise on those
in direst straits). But as I’ve argued before, I
don’t buy the tax cut notion, much as we’d all like that to be the answer. And can
anyone think that laying off hundreds of thousands of teachers and cops and
slashing the social safety net – by, for example, cutting off bare-bones
unemployment benefits – will stimulate the economy?
Paul Krugman says
now is not the time to slash spending, and as you can tell, I
agree.
Matt Miller – who describes himself as a deficit hawk
– ditto.
He offers some interesting policy prescriptions to get things rolling in a
better direction and then (but only then) applying fiscal discipline. Well
worth the read.
Our country has a great deal of shaping up to do, most
particularly in terms of becoming more energy efficient and independent but
also in terms of renewing our infrastructure and educating the next generation.
At the same time, there are an awful lot of people looking
for work.
Matching their talents with the tasks is no small
issue. Indeed, it’s the challenge of our time. But as a
general matter, it seems nuts to me that we would contemplate keeping them
unemployed (with all the fiscal strains that puts on us to keep them from
starving) when so much work needs to be done. What ended the Depression
was a massive mobilization to win World War II. It ratcheted our debt way
up, but had to be done. Now we should embrace a massive mobilization to become
more efficient, energy independent, and to, well, shape up generally.
(Insanely fast Internet, anyone? Smaller portions? Less meat?)
There’s no need for the country, or the world, to go
over a cliff. And it probably won’t. But a rocky financial road
is likely, so consider that four-prong
strategy.
Tomorrow: Tax Fairness