by Mircea » Sat 16 Jun 2007, 22:12:56
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ElijahJones', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('birchm', 'I')f that's the case, then why are we on day 3 of an awesome stock market rally, eh?

The stock market is a piss poor measure of economic strength. In fact the current stock market is considerd to be overvalued to the tune of 10% or more by many experts.
Such a statement needs qualifying.
The value of any given stock as listed is its
perceived value, not its true value. To approximate the true value of any stock, subtract the liabilities from assets then divide that figure by the number of outstanding shares.
Example: P&G currently at $62.57
Total Assets: $135,695,000,000
Total Liabilities: $72,787,000,000
Total Shares: 3,178,000,000
Real P&G stock value: $19.79
P&G stock is over-valued by about 32%
If a judge ordered P&G shareholders to cash in their stocks, no one would receive $62.57 per share. In fact, you would receive far less than $19.79 per share unless P&G was able to sell off all of its assets and receive 100% of their listed value.
If you think P&G's stocks are outrageously over-valued, there are other stocks that over-valued 3 to 10 times more than P&G's paltry 32%.
As you might expect, a few stocks are undervalued.
Many, myself included, believe the stock market is over-valued by about 1/3, making the actual value somewhere between 7,500 and 9,500 not the current 13,639.
As an indicator of economic strength, the stock market really is a piss poor measure.
At most, the stock market indicates only that a small percentage of the population is able and willing to gamble with their money.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')ight now the Fed and TPTB are pissing in their drawers and burning the midnight oil to try to find out how to actually deliver the promised soft landing from such lofty heights in the face of a housing bust, high energy prices, climate change, and energy insecurity, impending peak labor, peak healthcare
I don't see where any of those are real factors. The "housing bust" is a real joke. Unlike other markets, the housing market is finite, not infinte. There are only so many buyers. Many people have no desire whatsoever to own a home for one reason or another, and many potential buyers are cut out by other restrictions.
The housing boom occured because many lenders were willing to remove some of the restrictions, such as accepting 0% down payment, and lending to people who are so immature with money that they should be shot for merely starting to form a semi-coherent thought about credit of any type. Those two actions, in conjunction with low interest rates, increased the supply of potential buyers.
It didn't take long to tap the market out and run out of buyers, leaving thousands of newly built homes unoccupied and builders offering car-type deals on radio and television ads (you know, $10,000 cash back for buying now etc ad hoc ad nauseum). Foreclosure glutted the market with cheap housing, so housing prices have dropped. This is a positive thing, as housing contruction workers can learn new skills, like being a greeter at Wal-Mart, easing the "peak labor" thing.
It's all good. Think of the joke "How do you stop an elephant from charging? Take away his credit card. Lower home values means home owners lose equity in their homes, reducing the credit limits on their HELOCs. It also means they can't take out 2nd and 3rd mortgages to bundle up their credit debt then run their credit cards back up buying useless crap at Wal-Mart. Higher oil prices means a decrease in the demand of even more uselesss things, most of it made in China.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.')... The dollar has fallen by major amounts against almsot all other currencies in the last year, we have staggering current account deficits (both nationally and personally) and it is rumored that our major creditor (China) is spinning 800 billion in bonds into other assets.
That's a good thing too. It means US power and influence is waning. Now all that needs to happen is for Congress (and many of the states and local governments) to stop with the regulatory nonsense so that non-publicly traded corporations can begin business start ups to rebuild the industrial and manufacturing base in the US.