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Now We Have 'Stimulus You Can Believe In'
Now We Have 'Stimulus You Can Believe In'
By, DARYL MONTGOMERY
Aug 30, 2010
Japan has announced yet another stimulus program today - one in a long line of stimulus programs in the last 20 years. The others have failed to revive the economy and there is no reason to believe this one will be any more effective. The U.S. Fed is talking about more stimulus as well - also an indication that its past stimulus efforts have not worked and the U.S. economy is falling into a double-dip recession.
 

The mainstream media on Monday was hyping a Japanese expansion of a low-interest loan program to financial institutions after talking up Fed Chair Ben Bernanke's statement on Friday that the Fed "will do all that it can" to support the economy. Japanese stocks (NYSEArca: EWJ) and U.S. stocks (NYSEArca: IWV) respectively rallied strongly on these essentially negative news items.

 

The Japanese have been trying to fix their economy for twenty years. They have engaged in one stimulus program after another after another after another after another and it's still dead in the water. Despite the repeated failure of the approach they have taken, this doesn't deter them from engaging in the same behavior again. There is no reason to believe things will be any different this time. Nevertheless, the mainstream media cues the cheerleaders and dutifully reports this as good news, instead of pointing out that the need for a new stimulus program indicates all the previous ones have not worked. That sounds like bad news to me.

The U.S. monetary and fiscal authorities seem to be doing their best to imitate the Japanese. The Fed though has only had three years to follow them on their road to perpetual economic failure. Bernanke's statement on Friday was made from the Fed's annual meeting at Jackson Hole, Wyoming, which the media described as a 'confab' (confab is short for confabulation, which in psychiatry means 'the replacement of a gap in a person's memory by a falsification that he or she believes to be true' - unquestionably an important concept when dealing with establishment economists). What exactly was Bernanke implying when he said that the Fed would be doing all that it can to support the economy? Does this mean that it wasn't doing all that it could have done previously? In at least one sense the answer to that question is yes. The Fed could have opened the floodgates of uncontrolled money-printing and Bernanke was intimating that this is what is going to be happening in the future.

While the Fed and its cohorts in the economic community continue to maintain that there will be no double-dip recession, Intel threw some more cold water on this assumption on Friday. The tech bellwether sharply lowered its third quarter earnings expectations after raising them only a month earlier. PC sales have been running below previous forecasts. This is a strong blow to the U.S. economy since computer and software sales (NYSEArca: IGV) were up 24.9% in the second quarter GDP report. A drop to a negative number for this category could turn the entire third quarter GDP negative. But don't worry, Ben Bernanke will be handling the situation and we all know what an excellent job he's done previously in the fixing the economy. Wait, isn't that a confabulation?

Disclosure: No positions

Daryl Montgomery
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

Daryl Montgomery is an independent contributor to ETFguide. His viewpoints do not necessarily reflect those of ETFguide or the ETF Profit Strategy Newsletter. 

 
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 Comments
francesco said on August 30, 2010
  If they need a "stimulus" they should not be
happy at all !
Let us see what will happen...

(IMO)
 
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Artfulmuse said on August 30, 2010
  Sure Ben Bernanke has made many bad calls and decisions as a "monetary policy maker", just as any Federal Reserve Chairman would do. The key difference here though is Uncle Ben inherited an economic mess, he didn't create it.

You see, Greenspan is the real blame for today's financial mess. First, he contributed directly to the real estate bust, by keeping interest rates too low for too long, thus creating a housing bubble that didn't need to exist. Thanks Al.

And LET'S NOT FORGET the fools (like the mortgage companies, banks, brokers, your Uncle Jim, Aunt Jemima etc.) that participated and got burned from the real estate bust - THEY TOO share in the blame.

BUT, none of this would have probably occurred, had it not been for Greenspan's loosy goosy modus operundi. Also, given his fall from grace, I'm not sure he can still get $85k per speech and anyone that would pay it in my view needs to have their head examined.

 
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AlanGreenscam said on August 30, 2010
  "There will be no economic double-dip because I still get $85,000 per speaking engagement and I sell books with empty meaning that people still buy. We've bottomed."
 
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 Author Profile
Bullet DARYL MONTGOMERY
  New York Investing meetup
  Organizer
  Mr. Montgomery is Author of Inflation Investing – A Guide for the 2010s. He's an independent market strategist and trader along with organizer of the New York Investing meetup.
  http://investing.meetup.com/21
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