Over the last 20 years, first under Alan Greenspan and then Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve has taught Wall Street to expect a reward for bad behavior.
* Build a hedge fund on a mathematical model and a prayer, as Long-Term Capital Management did — borrowing $129 billion on just $4.7 billion in assets — and the Federal Reserve will organize a bailout.
* Bid dot-com stocks to the sky — as Wall Street analysts did with ever-higher target prices on Amazon.com (AMZN, news, msgs) and others — and the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates to 1% and keep them there.
* Put the money from that rescue to work to build skyscrapers of structured debt — until a collapse in the market for mortgages turns even low-risk AAA-rated debt spiraling to junk bond prices — and the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates.
Bernanke's Fed first cut rates in a panic by a half a percentage point in September, but the latest cut — a quarter-point on Oct. 31 — was in direct response to Wall Street.
Jon Markman says the Fed is, in essence, trying to delay a recession until after the November 2008 presidential election.
The old Fram oil filter commercial said, “You can pay me a little bit now, or a whole lot later.” Well, the next president’s going to have to do a lot of paying, and that’s another reason why I don’t get Democratic candidates not talking more about the economy. One of them could be having to lead a pretty big clean-up.
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