-----Original Message-----
From: Danny Cox [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 07, 2000 4:59 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [bearslist] History shows paths to market crashes, but lessons
seem forgotten


From: Danny Cox <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


 http://www.ardemgaz.com/tech/D4bcrashes6.html 
   
History shows paths to market crashes, but lessons seem forgotten

   LARRY ELLIOTT
   THE GUARDIAN, LONDON
   In the spring of 1720, when all of London was clamoring for shares in
   the South Sea company, Sir Isaac Newton was asked what he thought
   about the market.
       "I can calculate the motions of the heavenly bodies, but not the
   madness of the market," the scientist is said to have replied.
       Newton should have heeded his own wise words. Having sold his
   stock in the company at 7,000 pounds sterling, he later bought back
   more at 20,000 pounds sterling at the top of the boom and went down
   for the count with other speculators when the crash came.
       Little has changed in the intervening 280 years. Common to every
   bubble is the ingrained belief that this time things will be
   different, that the rise in the price of an asset is rooted this time
   in sound common sense rather than recklessness, stupidity and greed.
       Take the crash of 1929. In Devil Take the Hindmost, Edward
   Chancellor records how Wall Street's elite convinced themselves that
   the rules of economics had been rewritten and that the market could
   support ever-higher share prices.
       John Moody, founder of the credit agency that bears his name,
   intoned in 1927 that "no one can examine the panorama of business and
   finance in America during the past half-dozen years without realizing
   that we are living in a new era."
       And Yale economist Irving Fisher declared a few weeks before the
   October crash that stock prices had reached a "permanently high
   plateau." Why was this? Simple, he said. The creation of the Federal
   Reserve in 1913 had abolished the business cycle, and technological
   breakthroughs had created a "new economy" that was much more
   profitable than the old.
       As share prices continued their heady rise, traditional methods of
   stock market valuations were abandoned. It did not matter that many
   start-up companies of the late 1920s were not making any money; what
   counted was that some day they surely would. So share prices were
   justified by discounted future earnings.
       Investors mortgaged themselves to the hilt to buy stocks in exotic
   companies from brokerages houses, which proliferated in the 1920s. One
   analyst warned that "factories will shut ... men will be thrown out of
   work ... the vicious circle will get into full swing and the result
   will be a serious business depression" unless sounder minds were
   brought to bear.
       He was, of course, ridiculed by market experts.
       Sound familiar? It should, because the gravity-defying performance
   of stocks in London and New York is eerily redolent of 1929. And again
   those who warn that the stock market edifice is built on sand have so
   far been proved wrong. It is quite possible that they will continue to
   be wrong and that this time the rules really, really have been
   rewritten.
       It may be that Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan has abolished the
   business cycle, that Goldman Sachs' contented equity guru Abby Joseph
   Cohen is wiser than Irving Fisher, that Amazon.com is in a different
   league from RCA (the go-go stock of the 1920s).
       However, there are plenty of warnings there for those prepared to
   heed them.
       One is what is happening in the markets themselves. More and more
   money is being concentrated in a handful of stocks in the technology
   sector, while shares in "old industry" fall. An analysis by Peter
   Oppenheimer of HSBC showed that the price-earnings gap in London
   between the new economy stocks and the old economy stocks is the
   largest for any market ever.
       An analysis of the balance sheet of Amazon.com by Tim Congdon of
   London showed that liabilities were covered more than four times by
   holdings of cash and securities in early 1999. However, by the end of
   the year, high investment and trading losses meant that liabilities
   were higher than cash and securities. He believes that the rise in the
   Nasdaq index is being underpinned by firms borrowing money to buy each
   other's shares -- the equivalent of taking in each other's washing.
       Amazon.com's results, he says, give "a fascinating and alarming
   insight into the cost of building an Internet brand. Arguably, they
   also demonstrate that the high-tech element in the American stock
   market is now gripped by a speculative madness of a kind never before
   seen in the organized financial markets of a significant industrial
   country."
       Economist Robert Gordon has started to unpick the American
   productivity data in an attempt to put the "new paradigm" into
   historical perspective. "I believe that the inventions of the late
   19th century and early 20th century were more fundamental creators of
   productivity than the electronic-Internet era of today," he said.
       Oppenheimer, at HSBC, estimates that share prices in the new
   economy imply growth rates that are unlikely to be achieved and that
   collectively shares are overvalued by 40 percent.
       Sushil Wadhwani, a member of the Bank of England's monetary policy
   committee, quoted a survey last week showing that 133 Internet
   companies that have gone public since 1995 would need on average to
   expand their revenues by 80 percent a year for the next five years.
   Microsoft, which has had a virtual monopoly, has managed only 53
   percent a year; Dell, 66 percent.
       It's no wonder that Greenspan is doing his level best to massage
   share prices down. He knows that the alternative could be a full-scale
   panic. But even on the assumption that there is no repeat of 1929,
   there are certain conclusions to be drawn.
       First, the euro looks considerably undervalued against the U.S.
   dollar.
       European exchanges have performed strongly in recent months.
   Equity investors seem to have cottoned on to the recovery in the
   European economy, but foreign exchange dealers -- perhaps recalling
   how they were too long on euros around its introduction -- have not.
       Second, the real medium-term danger for the global economy will be
   deflation rather than inflation.
       Downward pressure on prices is strong; it would not take much to
   tip western economies from disinflation into deflation. Even though
   policy-makers believe they have scope to ease monetary and fiscal
   policy, the experience of Japan in the 1990s suggests that such action
   may be more difficult than they think.
       A crash would have more profound implications, not least the
   rediscovery of the virtues of social democracy and the need for some
   curbs on the global money machine. A meltdown on Wall Street would be
   seen, rightly, as the crescendo of a period of financial turbulence
   that started a decade ago.
       Some today say that the United States is just another Thailand
   waiting to happen. After all, the United States has all the
   ingredients -- a rising trade deficit, a consumer credit binge and
   wasteful investment in nonperforming assets.
       At this point, it is traditional to say that a crash is to be
   avoided at all costs. Actually, a shake-out would not mean that the
   benefits associated with the new technologies would be lost, any more
   than the end of the railway boom in the 19th century put an end to
   railways.
       But crashes do have the effect of cleansing the stables. In the
   aftermath of the 1929 crash the policies of laissez-faire were cast
   aside in favor of controls on speculation and the financial system in
   general.
       Sadly, those lessons have been forgotten, with the result that we
   live in a state of perpetual financial instability.
   
   
This article was published on Monday, March 6, 2000


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