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One Guy Who Has Seen It All Doesn't Like What He Sees Now

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For years Peter Bernstein has watched the US markets, from the postwar recession of 1958 till today. He is now 89 years old. He sees 2 culprits one is oversecuritization and the second is years of overborrowing by financial institutions and consumers alike. He rules out a V shaped business cycle. he sees an L shaped business cycle or a a flat U. It would be a flat U because it will take a long time for the memory to recover from the excesses of recent years and the consequences. He remembers the early years after World War II, it took a very long time to get the depression out of business and banking decisions. And he says one of the things that helped people take risks was the feeling that the central bank had got things right and knew what it was doing but he says the Fed too now is going to feel what it should do now is less clear. So the feeling going forward will be to be very careful. He thinks this will take a long time to clear up, much longer than people think. Not 2009, he is sure they are wrong, there has to be a respite along the way is how he puts it. He says until credit is going up instead of down you can't have growth. And he thinks housing has to be a part of this. And then there is the uncertainty. What if, what if China goes into a recession? His point that " nothing can go in one direction forever." And China has been growing like this for twenty years since the 1990's. It just does'nt go on forever. and there has to be a respite. Again here him speak: first he goes to housing, he says somehow housing has to flatten out. Then he shifts to say "we have to underpin the consumer" and with that he shifts to saying this is why its different, and to saying this is why its like nothing we have had before. And then he turns to investment, saying its investment that made the V at the bottom of the cycle but he doesn't see the consumer in the USA coming up with a positive till he has worked out the excesses of overspending. Exports or consumer overseas? He thinks they maybe too infected by us to do it. Though Asian growth will help.

The views and wisdom of Peter Bernstein.

03/30/2008

Peter Bernstein who turned 90, has watched financial markets from the fifties as they recovered from the war and depression. He sees little reassurance from looking at the past and thinking that "the seas will be flat again." He thinks its vital that President Obama tackle the household sector and mortgages first, with forceful action to stop foreclosures by government intervention and compulsory mortgage modification.

Grouped Articles

When the Long View Isn’t So Scenic

New York Times 03/30/2008

One Guy Who Has Seen It All Doesn't Like What He Sees Now

Wall Street Journal 04/26/2008

Put Away the Wish List, and Help Households Bounce Back

New York Times 11/09/2008

How a Modern Depression Might Look -- If the U.S. Gets There

Wall Street Journal 03/30/2009

Peter L. Bernstein, Explainer of Risks of Stocks, Dies at 90

New York Times 06/08/2009

A Year After a Cataclysm, Little Change on Wall St.

New York Times 09/12/2009


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