Deep funk in Financeland: Wall Street investors are gripped with fear, uncertainty, and pessimism about the future.

AuthorWhalen, Christopher
PositionSince September 11th

In the months since September 11th, two things have become clear to investors: First, the U.S. economy has been in a recession during 2001. Second, the once glib rhetoric about "free markets" so fashionable on Wall Street during the height of the Internet hype has been in favor of calls for speedy salvation from Washington in the form of government loan guarantees, tax cuts, and lower interest rates.

The idea that Washington can "stimulate" the economy is a neo-Keynesian illusion, the sort of socialist claptrap that passes for mainstream economics on Wall Street. Most Wall Street folk are politically left of center, meaning that they privatize the profits and socialize any losses. This fact is demonstrated by Senator John Corzine (D-NJ), the one member of Congress smart enough to ask U.S. airlines for equity warrants in return for government loan guarantees. When things get rough in the "free markets" Wall Street leaders grab for cheap money from the Fed followed by tax cuts, preferably on capital gains. The goal of current policy moves by the Fed is to make investors think the economy is improving, as illustrated by the Street's effort to convince investors that corporate earnings will improve in 2002. Once confidence is restored, the folks at CNBC tell us, the U.S. equity markets will rebound.

The year 2001 was one of the worst in generations for both stocks and bonds. Acknowledging that the U.S. economy is far weaker than Wall Street supposed even six months ago is the beginning of the process toward true recovery. But accepting that neither the Congress nor Federal Reserve Board can do much in the short run to affect an economy fueled by a speculative bubble on Wall Street is the real lesson of 2001. If there had been no terrorist attacks on September 11th, the U.S. financial markets might have taken longer to reach the lows achieved during 2001, but the result would have been the same.

In a strange way, the attacks on the World Trade Center ripped away the last remnants of the once infectious optimism created by the Technology-Media-Telecom investment bubble. The reality of death that touched so many average citizens also sobered up many traders, bankers and fund managers, ending the illusion of an economic rebound at the end of 2001. While investors once paid heed to such indicators as earnings estimates from sell-side analysts at major brokerage firms, the emphasis now is on preserving capital as pessimism spreads from Wall Street to Main Street.

"Market participants may not have considered the logical progression of the current severe U.S. economic contraction," says financial analyst Michael Belkin. "The World Trade Center attack accelerated the velocity of the downturn created by the collapse of the Greenspan speculative bubble. The shock of the WTC attack will pass, but the fundamental imbalances of the U.S. economy will take longer to liquidate. Greenspan sent deceptive signals with all those bailouts and smoothings of the...

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