Thursday, August 2, 2012

More Despair, More Worry, More Buying


The markets never move without the some confusion and important miscalculations but they are always convinced whatever the current direction must be the right direction, at the moment.  EU failure to produce any real substantive economic intervention has put the world markets into end of world mode. But looking at the map, the DJIA and the S&P500 are not far from all time highs and bearish sentiment is on every sign post. We must be at that place they call Going Higher Right Now, Down Later.

Now maybe there will be an event triggered from economic twists no markets can withstand.  But the game being played here is to placate the markets.

Fed intervention to stabilize asset prices has worked in so far as it has inflated financial indexes prices.  This is in part to cover the Fed's inability to stem the downward spiral of new job creation and its ineffectiveness to produce any reasonable economic recovery.

But there are real dangers.  Affecting the balance sheets of banks and providing massive liquidity for lending is much easier than ultimately controlling stock markets which have at their core random movements kicked around by price discovery.  Added volatility resulting from a policy of asset stock inflation works both positively and negatively and up cannot be guaranteed just because a Fed points its finger higher.  Markets are now faced with having to defend speculation in stocks promoted by lower interest rates without the benefit of economic growth.  No jobs, just higher stock prices. 

The Fed and now the EU have created a cloud upon which all financial markets now sit.  With whatever the EU comes up with being probably too thin to save massive red balance sheets, the Fed is locked in.  The Fed believes it has the dominant strategy so that no matter what any of the other players do, it has implemented the correct action.  Clearly the Fed believed things would be improving much more rapidly when it undertook its strategy.  As in any other game, if you are wrong about having the dominate strategy, you lose your defense, and for the Fed that would be asset price protection.