Best of the Week
Robert Prechter's - The DEFLATION Survival Guide - FREE 60 page Ebook
Most Popular of the Week
1.The Government Will Default on Its Debts- Gary_North
2.How and Why China Will Flood the Gold Market - Jeff Clark
3.Telegraph UK House Price 55% Crash Forecast Revisited- Nadeem_Walayat
4.Nouriel Roubini's 2009 Stock Market Calls Track Record- Nadeem_Walayat
5.Is Debt-Deflation Economic Depression Just Beginning?- Mike_Shedlock
6.Stocks, Dollar and Gold Bull Markets Inter-market Analysis- Nadeem_Walayat
7.United States Catching the Argentinian Economic Disease of Hyperinflation?- John_Mauldin
Weeks Analysis
What the #@!!*&# am I Doing Out Here in Indonesia?- 7th Nov 09
Risk Trade Collapse Could Trigger Global Economic Depression- 7th Nov 09
Fed Signals “All Systems Go” for More Inflation- 7th Nov 09
Stock Market Top Likely Reached- 7th Nov 09
Financial Transaction Taxes Would Cause Stock Market Crash- 7th Nov 09
It's Time to Rally for Financial Reform - 7th Nov 09
Global Leveraged Speculation Upsurge, Financial Crisis Not Over - 7th Nov 09
Fed Attempts to Export Inflation Will Fail- 7th Nov 09
U.S. Budget Deficit Debt Crisis, Austrian, East European or Glide Option Solution?- 7th Nov 09
U.S. Economy, Investors Say No Worries Mate- 7th Nov 09
What Happened to the Stock Market Crash?- 7th Nov 09
U.S. Dollar Tops, while Precious Metal Stocks Bottom- 6th Nov 09
Financial Markets Profit Opportunity Thresholds Today- 6th Nov 09
Stock Market Investors Open Mind Warning on Highest U.S. Unemployment In 26 Years- 6th Nov 09
Financial Paper Assets Bubble Mania, What Record High Dollar Volume Says- 6th Nov 09
SPX Stock Market and HUI Gold Stocks Pullbacks- 6th Nov 09
Freaking Out over Global Warming- 6th Nov 09
The Path To Runaway U.S. Inflation- 6th Nov 09
Flashback: Bernanke on Unemployment: ‘we don’t think it will get to 10 percent’- 6th Nov 09
Jim Rogers Vs Nouriel Roubini, Can The Commodities Boom Survive? - 6th Nov 09
The Technical Alignment of Gold- 6th Nov 09
Crude Oil Classic Bullish Continuation Pattern- 6th Nov 09
Research In Motion (RIMM) Stock Buyback Chart Analysis- 6th Nov 09
Has Asia Dethroned Detroit as the Auto Sector Leader?- 6th Nov 09
India Buying 200 Tons of Gold, What does it Mean? - 6th Nov 09
The Ultimate Conditions For Economic Recovery- 6th Nov 09
S&P Stock Market Rally To Fail, Lower Lows Ahead- 6th Nov 09
Gold Market Reaching The Breaking Point- 5th Nov 09
Ryan Davies Finds Hot Technology Produces Solar Power for Half the Price- 5th Nov 09
Robert Prechter Current Stock Market Bear and Crash Calls- 5th Nov 09
The Great U.S. Housing Market Foreclosure Robbery Of The 21st Century- 5th Nov 09
Trading and Investing Books to Keep You Sane in an Insane Market- 5th Nov 09
Rethinking the Growing China Stock Market Bubble- 5th Nov 09
Any Way You Slice It, We’re at a Stock Market Top- 5th Nov 09
Five Tips for Trading ETFs- 5th Nov 09
Gold's Last Hurrah? - 5th Nov 09
Who Cares About the U.S. Dollar? - 5th Nov 09
Gold Price Collapse and Market Behaviourism- 5th Nov 09
Is Warren Buffett Implying the Stock Market Will Crash?- 5th Nov 09
When the U.S. Dollar Rallies, the Stock Market Will Crash - 4th Nov 09
The Significance of the IMF India RBI Gold Sales - 4th Nov 09
S&P 500 Stock Market Trends Analysis for November 2009- 4th Nov 09
London Bullion Market Association 2009, The Last Word on Gold- 4th Nov 09
Current Gold Silver Ratio Screams Buy All Things Silver!- 4th Nov 09
China Up / U.S. Down Investment Risk Theme Checkup- 4th Nov 09
Why Gold Has a LONG Way to Go Higher- 4th Nov 09
Can Capitalism Survive? Creative Destruction and the Global Economy - 4th Nov 09
The Best Simple Gold Indicator Around - 4th Nov 09
Gold Price is No Bubble- 4th Nov 09
Dethroning of the U.S. Dollar Will Happen Sooner Than You Think- 4th Nov 09
Stock Market S&P 500 Chart Tells the Truth- 4th Nov 09
Robert Prechter Latest Financial Market Analysis and Forecasts- 4th Nov 09
Central Banksterism- 4th Nov 09
Fed Preventing Financial Institutions From Deleveraging by Propping Up Asset Prices- 4th Nov 09
Peak Silver and Mining by a Falling EROI- 4th Nov 09 - Steve_St_Angelo
Are Biotechnology Stocks Heading for A Downturn?- 4th Nov 09 - Oxbury_Research
Scary Specter of '30s-Style Economic Depression- 4th Nov 09 -Jay Taylor
Telegraph UK House Price 55% Crash Forecast Revisited- 4th Nov 09 - Nadeem_Walayat
Nouriel Roubini's 2009 Stock Market Calls Track Record- 3rd Nov 09
U.S. Dollar at Crossroad, Gold Rally About to End?- 3rd Nov 09
Securitization Bankrupted America, So Who Owns It Now?- 3rd Nov 09
Jeremy Grantham, Stock Markets Being Silly Again- 3rd Nov 09
Make 20 Times Your Money Investing in this Hated Industry- 3rd Nov 09
What is Money and How Does One Measure It?- 3rd Nov 09
Investing in Preferred Shares Dividend Stocks- 3rd Nov 09
Silver set to Soar as it did in the 1970’s- 3rd Nov 09
Has the Stock Market Broken Major Support?- 3rd Nov 09
How to Ride the Commodities Bull Market- 3rd Nov 09
Gold NOT in Bull Market, Nadler Nonsense?- 3rd Nov 09
Life and Debt Video - 3rd Nov 09
State Budgets, How Bad Will it Get?- 3rd Nov 09
States Should Cut Wall Street Out! Own Your Own Bank - 3rd Nov 09
U.S. Third Quarter GDP Too Good to Be True? - 2nd Nov 09
Agri-Food Commodities Continue to Defy Forecasts by Trending Higher- 2nd Nov 09
Are Bank Safe Deposit Boxes Safe? No- 2nd Nov 09
Obama and the U.S. Strategy of Buying Time- 2nd Nov 09
Long Term Equity Valuation, Replacing the P/E Ratio for DR3- 2nd Nov 09
The Political Economy Postponing Providence- 2nd Nov 09
The Ayn Rand Cult- 2nd Nov 09
The Government Will Default on Its Debts- 2nd Nov 09
Economic Recovery, The Great Hoax of 2009-2010- 2nd Nov 09
Is the U.S. Dollar About To Crush Stocks?- 2nd Nov 09
Gold Survived the Test- 2nd Nov 09
Global Economy is Firing on All Cylinders- 2nd Nov 09
Is Debt-Deflation Economic Depression Just Beginning?- 2nd Nov 09
Gold, Silver and Stocks Analysis, Forecast- 2nd Nov 09
Gold Confiscation Risk- 2nd Nov 09
Stocks, Dollar and Gold Bull Markets Inter-market Analysis- 2nd Nov 09
Stocks Bull Market Forecast Update Into Year End - 2nd Nov 09
Geithner Signals Gold Going Much Higher, What to Buy Now- 1st Nov 09
Gold Bull Market Forecast 2009, 2010 Update- 1st Nov 09
U.S. Dollar Bull Market Scenario Update- 1st Nov 09
The Nanny State and the Cost of Unfunded Government Liabilities- 1st Nov 09
Economic Crisis in the Post-industrial Age- 1st Nov 09
Stock Market Down Draft Warning- 1st Nov 09
Stock Markets Sharply Lower on Sustainability Worries of Global Economic Recovery- 1st Nov 09
Halloween and it's Candy Economy- 31st Oct 09
U.S. Dollar Fiat Reserve Currency Root of the Global Financial Crisis- 31st Oct 09
Healthcare Company Profits Sensitivity to Obamacare- 31st Oct 09
UK House Prices Post Annual Gain for First Time in 18 Months- 31st Oct 09
How and Why China Will Flood the Gold Market - 31st Oct 09
Chinese Yuan the Most Undervalued Currency in the World- 31st Oct 09
Financial Markets React Negatively to Reducing Emergency Economic Stimulus- 31st Oct 09
The US Recession Is Not Over, But The Stock Market Party Is- 31st Oct 09
Is the Debt Fuelled Economic Recovery Sustainable?- 31st Oct 09
United States Catching the Argentinian Economic Disease of Hyperinflation?- 31st Oct 09

News Feeds
RSS Feeds

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Most Popular 2009
1.UK Housing Market Crash and Depression Forecast 2007 to 2012 - Nadeem_Walayat (67,933)
2.Gold Price Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat (60,634)
3.Depression 2009 The Largest Train Wreck in Economic History - Darryl_R_Schoon (56,968)
4.Nouriel Roubini 2009 U.S. GDP Forecasting 40% Home Mortgage Failures? - Andrew_Butter (47,613)
5.Baby Boomers- Your Generation's Crisis Has Arrived - James Quinn (36.400)
6.The Financial War Against Iceland, Being Defeated by Debt is as Deadly as Outright Military Warfare - Prof Michael Hudson (35,542)
7.Ten Major Threats Facing the U.S. Dollar in 2009 - Eric_deCarbonnel (35,401)
8.Emerging Giants Russia, China, Brazil and India Looming Collapse 2009 - Martin Weiss (34,247)
9.Dow Jones Stock Market Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat (33678 )
10.Stealth Bull Market Follows Stocks Bear Market Bottom at Dow 6,470 - Nadeem_Walayat (33,082)
11. Economic & Financial Markets Forecast 2009: Collapsing Global Financial System Ponzi Scheme -Ty_Andros (32,413)
12.Hyperinflation Begining in China and Will Destroy the U.S. Dollar - Eric_deCarbonnel (31,215)
13. Stock Market Crash 2009: Fine Tuning DJIA Target To 5,800 - Eric_Chevrette (30,784)
14. .Stock Market to Fall AT LEAST Another 40%! - Martin Weiss (30,336)
15. Economic Forecast 2009: Deflation, Deleveraging, and Recession - John_Mauldin (28,922)
16.How Hedge Funds, Pyromaniacs and Gangsters Caused the Global Financial Crisis - Martin Hutchinson (28,636)
Most Popular 2008
1. The Great Depression 2008 - It can't happen to us....can it?”
2. The Battle for America Has Begun- Strategic Forecasts
3. UK House Prices Plunge Over the Cliff
4. US Banking System Teetering on the Brink of Collapse
5. US Economy Forecast 2008 - First Recession then Recovery
6. How Safe is My FDIC-Insured Bank Account?
7. Rising Risk of a Systemic Financial Meltdown:The 12 Steps to Financial Disaster By Nouriel Roubini
Most Popular 2007
1. US Housing Market Crash to result in the Second Great Depression
2. Operation FALCON - The USA is turning into a Police State
3. UK Housing Market Crash of 2007 - 2008 and Steps to Protect Your Wealth
4. US Housing Bubble Meltdown: "Is it too late to get out"?
5. Global Liquidity Crisis when the Credit Boom comes to an End
Most Popular 2006
1. Last Warning! Three-Pronged Collapse ... Stocks, Bonds and Real Estate
2. UK Interest Rate forecast for 2007 - Bank of England to do battle with inflation
3. UK Interest Rates Forecast to rise much higher due to rising Inflation and high Money Supply Growth
4. Emerging Markets outlook for 2007 - India, China, Russia, Eastern Europe and Brazil

Links

Money Forums
Certz
TradingTheCharts
Housing Market Forecasts
Local Issues


Free Access to Robert Prechters Current Forecasts

How the Fed Creates Bull and Bear Markets

Stock-Markets / US Stock Markets Oct 27, 2008 - 03:17 AM

By: Clif_Droke

Stock-Markets Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleI received an e-mail recently that is typical of the pop economic philosophy being heavily touted today in various financial forums. The e-mail contained a petition for the elimination of the Federal Reserves system. The gist of the e-mail was that the credit crisis was caused by the Fed's “loose money policy.”


The e-mail explained that loose money is the bane and scourge of the financial system and always leads to financial collapse and economic stability. The author of this e-mail made it sound like a loose monetary policy all by itself will lead to inevitable doom just as surely as clouds lead to rain.

Right here is where I disagree. It wasn't the Fed's loose money policy earlier this decade that resulted in the late financial contagion. Rather it was the Fed's excessively tight money policy of 2004 and onward that was the catalyst for today's trouble.

I won't argue that Greenspan's Fed was excessively loose with money and credit in 2001-2004 and there's no denying that his ultra loose monetary policy led to the creation of the housing bubble. But the pin that pricked the bubble was Greenspan's abrupt slamming on of the money and credit brakes beginning in 2004. This is something that most people fail to grasp. Monetary policy is always a two-way street, not a one-sided affair as the tight money advocates would have us believe. Loose money alone doesn't make for a financial crash; it's tight money that creates crashes.

Here's another e-mail I received earlier this week that relates to the subject at hand: “ I am so brainwashed that the crash is from sub-prime and derivatives. Either I haven't been paying attention to tight money policies of central banks or very few people have written about it.” That pretty much hits it on the head. Most all of us have been something akin to being “brainwashed” by the financial literature out there, the vast majority of which conveniently ignores the Fed's tight money policies of recent years and puts the blame squarely on the shoulders of the loose credit years earlier this decade. The trouble with today's self-appointed Fed experts is that they mostly seem to view monetary policy as the one-way street mentioned above. I'd like to remind them that yes Virginia, there is such a thing as a tight money policy that leads to financial crisis.

In his book, The Money Men , H.W. Brands wrote of the first major test the Federal Reserve faced after its creation in 1913. In its role as arbiter of the nation's money supply the Fed made its first policy blunder in making cheap money overly plentiful in the early 1920s, which encouraged a speculative bubble in the stock market. By 1928, the Fed recognized its error and instead of gradually slowing down the money creation, did something that has been part of their modus operandi ever since. In true reactionary fashion the Fed slammed on the monetary brakes and started raising interest rates, paving the way for the great 1929 stock market crash.

Making matters worse and adding fuel to the fire, the Fed continued its tight money policy while the U.S. government actually raised taxes and thereby greatly exaggerated the Great Depression of the 1930s. Was this a case of ignorance born of inexperience or was a sinister motive at work here? One could almost excuse their mistakes of the late 1920s and early ‘30s due to the Fed's lack of experience. Yet such latitude can't be so easily granted them today with more than 90 years of experience behind them.

Benjamin Strong, who had been the head of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, was one of the architects of the loose money policy of the early 1920s and he also orchestrated the shift to tight money later that decade as stock prices soared. Concerning the Fed's role in containing financial crises, Strong wrote, “The very existence of the Federal Reserve System is a safeguard against anything like a calamity growing out of money rates. We have the power to deal with such an emergency instantly by flooding the Street with money.”

Unfortunately for Strong, he never had a chance to test his theory as he died in 1928. As Brands observed in his book, “No one had the nerve to open the sluice gates” when once the crisis unfolded in 1929-30. “The Fed kept interest rates high, with the result that the American money supply contracted by a strangling one-third.” Truly we see that history repeats as we have experienced this year: the Fed's tight money policy of the last few years catalyzed the late financial crisis and only when the maximum damage was inflicted did the slow-to-respond Bernanke Fed open the sluice gates and that only grudgingly.

Long-time Fed watcher Bert Dohmen of the Wellington Letter offers the following insight, “Who controls the liquidity necessary to buy stocks? It's the Federal Reserve through its monetary policy.” Dohmen goes on to observe, “Invariably bear markets occur when the central bank tightens money. This sudden change in the availability of money causes investors to sell stocks in order to raise cash. Suddenly the buyers turn into sellers and the markets plunge….It's a shift in the demand-supply relationship.”

One astute economist wrote in 1966 concerning the 1929 stock market crash, “The excess credit which the Fed pumped into the economy (in the late 1920's, in order to lower interest rates) spilled over into the stock market – triggering a fantastic speculative boom. Belatedly, Federal Reserve officials attempted to sop up the excess reserves and finally succeeded in breaking the boom. But it was too late: By 1929 the speculative excesses had become so overwhelming that the attempt precipitated a sharp retrenching and a consequent demoralizing of business confidence. As a result, the American economy collapsed….The world economies plunged into the Great Depression of the 1930's.”

This economist was none other than Alan Greenspan. In the above statement he admits that whenever the Fed sees speculative excess (as they certainly did in the 2003-2004 period) it will cause them to tighten money. It has been ever thus since the Fed's inception in 1913.

Will the Fed's latest efforts at reflating the financial market succeed? If history is any guide then it should eventually stabilize the stock market and allow the newly formed 6-year up cycle along with the peaking 10-year cycle to work its magic in 2009 for one final cyclical bull market before the “hard down” phase of the Kress 40-year and 60-year cycles commences in 2010.

Is Bernanke a modern day Lycurgus?

Lycurgus was ancient Sparta's famous lawgiver who transformed his country's economy by minimizing luxuries and emphasizing simplicity. His economic reforms can best be described as communalistic and his name is synonymous with austerity.

According to the historian Plutarch, Lycurgus outlawed the “needless and superfluous arts” thereby channeling Sparta's economic energies from luxuries to staples and necessities. He also abolished gold and silver money, replacing it with iron money. The relative worthlessness and lack of portability of the iron money discouraged his subjects from greedy pursuits. It also kept foreign trade at a minimum and abolished the luxury trade altogether.

Plutarch reports that this monetary reform of Lycurgus forced the Spartans to focus on the necessary arts and eschew all luxuries as non essential. His reforms virtually eliminated the distinction between the poor and the rich and created an exceedingly simple, communal lifestyle among the Spartans.

Lycurgus died some 2,600 years ago. Yet in many ways Lycurgus live on through the monetary policies of current Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke. Bernanke has been committed to following along the road of a Lycurgian austerity and of bringing to America a truly Spartan existence.

It's not hard to imagine Bernanke consulting with Lycurgus on matters of economic policy in Socratic dialogue form. If you listen carefully you can even hear what they're saying:

Lycurgus: Well I see you've been up to your old tricks again.

Bernanke: Ah, you know me too well my curmudgeony friend!

Lycurgus: You've made them all poor with your refusal to bend.

Bernanke: I felt it too soon for the tight money to end.

Lycurgus: Well at least you finally admitted your wrong.

Bernanke: Never will I sing that lamentable song!

Lycurgus: You mean you persist in your stubbornness ere' long?

Bernanke: I'll continue my ways ‘til the sound of the gong.

Lycurgus: And when it's all through, Ben, what will you do then?

Bernanke: First I'll tighten some more, then I'll tighten again.

Lycurgus: And then of the bears you'll make many friends.

Bernanke: And to Greenspan's follies I'll add many more sins.

Lycurgus: But what of the Boomers who are soon to retire?

Bernanke: It's too bad for them all, they must put out for hire.

Lycurgus: They're too old to work, Ben, of that they'll soon tire.

Bernanke: Then I'll hasten their date with the funeral pyre.

Lycurgus: But your legacy, Ben, what will they all say?

Bernanke: Oh, let them eat cake! I see no other way.

Lycurgus: Fair enough, I suppose, at least they have today.

Bernanke: At least for as long as their pensions hold sway.

Lycurgus: Now I must bid thee farewell, my tight money friend.

Bernanke: May austerity prevail ‘til the bitter end!

Bernanke is often ridiculed as “Helicopter Ben” for his supposed adherence to Milton Friedman's helicopter money thesis for dealing with lack of liquidity. What these critics (most of whom are fans of austerity, or “tough love” as they call it) don't realize is that Bernanke is actually their best friend and comrade in arms. Far from being an advocate of loose money as he is charged with, or even an exponent of monetary equilibrium, Bernanke's actions in the first two-and-a-half years of his tenure as Fed chief betray him as a deflationist. Until the exigency of the credit crisis forced him to abandon his tight money stance he was content to favor contraction over economic growth. Before his tenure is through he'll undoubtedly acquire the nickname “Mr. Deflation.”

This leads us to ask, “Is Bernanke possessed of a Lycurgan spirit?” Indeed he seems to be, for the Bernanke Fed has heretofore failed in its appointed task of properly regulating the nation's money supply. The events of this year make that obvious for all to see. In the almost three years of his tenure, Bernanke has shown himself to be a dullard without equal in responding to the monetary needs of commerce. Only when the nation's financial system was threatened with collapse was he finally inspired enough to loosen money. He should be held accountable for his failure to act in a timely manner, along with Greenspan.

Even if Bernanke's emergency actions procure favorable results we should not be quick to overlook the severity of his tight money transgressions. His stubborn refusal to listen to the demands of commerce for liquidity, to the bond market in 2006-2007 – nor even to the deflating real estate market – leave no room for excuse. Untold destruction has been inflicted on the pensions and retirement savings of millions of Americans. Thousands of small businesses were thrown into bankruptcy by the Fed's belated response to the needs of commerce. The consequences of Bernanke's stubbornness will be felt for years to come.

By Clif Droke
www.clifdroke.com

Clif Droke is the editor of the daily Gold & Silver Stock Report. Published daily since 2002, the report provides forecasts and analysis of the leading gold, silver, uranium and energy stocks from a short-term technical standpoint. He is also the author of numerous books, including 'How to Read Chart Patterns for Greater Profits.' For more information visit www.clifdroke.com

Clif Droke Archive


Comments


Post Comment (Moderated)




(Note Commenting Issue: If after Submitting you are returned to the Main Index Page then due to site caching your comment has not been accepted. Solution - Click the Browser Back Button to the article page and Press PAGE REFRESH (you should see the message "You are not authorized to carry out this operation") Now re-enter your comment (ignoring the notice) - If all's well then you will remain on the article page after submitting, a moderator will check and authorise the comment. Alternatively EMAIL to comments @ marketoracle.co.uk , quoting the article number.

FREE Deflation Survival GuideFREE Updated 118 Page Independant Investor E-book