Hope anybody in the FL area is OK....
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I think what's important for me here is that you're talking about a scenario that doesn't happen very much anymore. People with that kind of excess capital don't give it to banks, and they aren't seeking out a <2% return from a savings account.
.....The practical side of me recognizes that we're all better off when capital is spread around. Left in the hands of too few and we get the bullshit we have now. I can think of very few things for which the concept of a balance of power does not apply.
In the context of our previous discussions, what both of us see is a manifestation of artificially depressed interest rates. When the financial sector can borrow money at a rate of close to zero, there is no way the "market for money" can determine which projects "deserve" funding. In this situation, money flows to existing businesses where there is some ability to project earnings (hence the stock market balloon).
IMO, most central banks (at least in developed countries) have been backed into this situation. It used to be that both fiscal and monetary policy were available to policymakers. Keynes emphasized the fiscal, Friedman the monetary, but everybody recognized they were both policy tools. Since the 2008 recession, which ended in March of 2009, citizens have made it clear to their elected officials that the pain of recession is no longer acceptable. And neither is a reduction in welfare payments, higher taxes, shrinking the government or any of the fiscal tools that once were available. Monetary policy alone has maintained prosperity, but it is starting to show cracks. News like this week's news about Deutsche Bank is troubling because once a "panic" starts, no amount of government intervention will stop it. Panic is, by definition, irrational.
Hack, I told you I would think about investments in a world of long-term negative interest rates. Zero coupon bonds would be one.
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Trump makes history, as in historically bad.
With just a little over a month until election day, Donald Trump has racked up zero major newspaper endorsements, a first for any major party nominee in American history. While newspaper endorsements don’t necessarily change voters’ minds, this year’s barrage of anti-Trump endorsements could actually move the needle come November, experts say. “It’s significant,” Jack Pitney, professor of government at California’s Claremont McKenna College, told TheWrap.
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Agreed, Stan. Geezer I think we'd have to ask why rates are low. Agree with your starting point as the financial crisis. It happened because we let capital pool to an unhealthy extent. Regular people lacked it and so they relied on home equity, and on the other end, where the capital pooled, and with too much of it out of the hands of people that would spend it in the economy, the shortage of solid investments led to an overreliance on financial engineering to create returns. And then the crisis. Capital kicked out a leg of its own stool. Short-termism brought on by a lack of oversight. So, we now get this. Easy to blame Bernanke or Yellen, but in truth Fed governance is a choice between least-bad options.
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