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Why the bear market is not over

We have entered a secular, not a cyclical bear market. These

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Why the bear market is not over

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    1. Why the bear market is not over

    2. We have entered a secular, not a cyclical bear market. These “Super Bear” markets can last for years

    8. A Key Lesson about Markets “Bear” Markets usually parallel the “Bull” markets that precede them “Super-Bear” markets traditionally follow “Super-Bull” markets

    10. What Happened After?

    11. Past Secular Bear Markets

    12. Credit drives the excesses in the stock market & economy

    13. Greenspan on Excess Credit “The excess credit which the Fed pumped into the economy 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 braking the boom. But it was too late: by 1929 the speculative imbalances had become so overwhelming that the attempt precipitated a sharp retrenching and a constant demoralizing of business confidence.” Alan Greenspan, Gold and Economic Freedom, 1966

    17. Credit excess leads to “malinvestment”

    23. Corporate America had the wind at its back in the ’90s, but faces stiff headwinds going forward. For example:

    25. Economy - gotta keep it goin’

    26. Real Estate Finance Has Been the“Key”

    27. The Economy - Now What ? Consumption will slow as savings must increase Because consumption has created 88% of recent economic growth, this will decimate the economy Inflation concerns & dollar weakness temper FED’s ability to cut further & rates must now increase. Asset quality will slide, more debt creates even more problems for the overleveraged Excesses of overcapacity & consumption must be corrected through retrenchment, not from & over-even more excesses Gold will skyrocket as bailouts intensify

    28. In our view, there is a risk that foreigners will reduce holdings of dollar-based assets. Reasons could include:

    32. Are we nuts ?

    33. Goldman Sachs Economist

    34. The Bubble Fix

    35. Larry Lindsey on the Economy “We have had 18 years of expansion, & it has been an extraordinary period … There is a big imbalance… Last year, the private sector spent $700B more than it earned after-tax, 7% of GDP. We have never been there before. The public sector ran a surplus of 3% of GDP. And we took in 4% of GDP by borrowing from abroad. We are in uncharted territory … We are borrowing increasing amounts. … It looks like this year (cur acct deficit) is going to come in about $520B. We are going to need $650B in additional cash in ‘02, probably $800B in ‘03. … and it won’t work. … Something has to give.” Larry Lindsey, White House economics adviser, May 2001

    36. Conclusions Printing $ simply attempts to re-ignite the bubble, problem in system is too much debt, not too little If money growth was the key to economic growth, then Latin America would be the world’s leader Rate cuts can’t save us this time, won’t cause more router or PC sales Constraints are now inflation, exchange rates, current account deficit and credit quality. Economy hasn’t crashed due to reckless mortgage growth that’s perpetuating the R/E bubble Once more credit no longer helps, you get “pushing on a string.” We’ll be lucky with Japan’s outcome

    37. Some Optimism … “The world is a resilient place. And America stands for a special resilience and resolve that has shaped its destiny for 225 years. I have no doubt that the United States will weather this storm and come out the other side with an even greater sense of renewal and determination. That doesn’t mean it will be easy. Yet as day follows night, healing follows pain. And recovery will eventually also follow recession. This time is no different. Sadly, it’s just a lot more painful.” Stephen Roach

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