The basic problem is that the US federal government and average citizen is living well beyond its means.
We're going to have a long string of lean years before the imbalances are corrected.
The dollar will continue to come under pressure as US growth slows. At the same time, interest rates will have to rise in response.
Consumers won't be able to pile on more debt. The government will have to cut the deficit or lose its AAA credit rating.
We're all going to have to learn to live with less.
I can't predict which bank will fail next or where the S&P will be at this point next year but I like to think that I can pick out general trends.
And the general trend I see is that the US does not matter as much as it used to. Normally high commodity prices slow down economic growth and lead to lower commodity prices. That's not happening right now because of the rapid economic development in the Asian countries.
We could actually see a recession in the US, Japan, EuroZone, UK while still maintaining growth in China and the Middle East.
The whole world hasn't decoupled from the US (as is evidenced by the recession in Europe) but China has enough domestic demand that it could avoid a recession by spending some of that "savings glut" that Bernanke used to talk about.
As for the actual issue at hand, bank failures. The largest banks are not in immediate jeopardy of collapsing thanks to unprecedented access to the discount window. Once the Feds decided that JP Morgan could borrow money from the discount window to buy Bear Stearns, we opened up a can of worms. The Feds then decided that Fannie and Freddie deserved access to an
unlimited line of credit from the US Treasury at very generous rates. Now "homeowners" are going to see their mortgages backed up by the Treasury to the tune of $300 BILLION. It's gotten out of control.
Does anyone expect them to sit by idly while Citigroup or Bank of America shut down?
I strongly agree with
Bill's Fleckenstein article on MSN. We've become a bailout nation. American taxpayers are going to foot the bill for any crisis.
Just like last time the banking industry collapsed in the 1990s.
The system won't collapse because it's not in the interests of TPTB to let it collapse. They will lobby and are currently lobbying Congress to spend more taxpayer money to glue everything back to together. Maybe they can patch it up for another 15 years before the same people get into the same mess again.
The collapse comes in the form of a lowered standard of living for the average person. There won't be a sudden crash, just the slow and steady erosion of our currency and the real economy.
The result is the same, it's just not as noticeable.
And with that I go to bed and try to figure out a way not to read as much news tomorrow.
(seahorse, is this what you were looking for?)