RSS Feed for This PostCurrent Article

It’s the Economy, Stupid!!

The American public is becoming increasingly wise to the ways of Wall Street and Washington.

Many Americans were duped by financial practices and products emanating from Wall Street. Where was Washington? I would assess Washington’s involvement and responses in the following fashion:

1. At worst, Washington was complicit given a wide array of failed public policy programs, especially in housing. These public policies were largely ‘greased’ by lobbying dollars and campaign contributions.

2. To a large extent, Washington was negligent in terms of oversight, especially on the financial regulatory front.

3. At best, Washington was naive given a general lack of understanding of markets and finance.

The American public is now responding in appropriate fashion. How so? In increasing numbers, they are choosing not to play the Wall Street game. What game is that? Active trading and investing. While the numbers of pure day traders may have increased, the American population at large is focused elsewhere. Where is that focus? On the economy at large and on their individual pocket books.

Washington’s focus on Wall Street and its selling of the market rebound as reflective of a return towards prosperity is a product that will not fly . . . try as they might. Why?

It’s the economy, stupid! Reports this morning indicate that wages will likely show the greatest decline since 1991. Even in the face of declining wages, consumers’ purchasing power is being further eroded by the continuing decline in the value of the dollar. That decline is inflationary which hurts consumers but it continues to present a very cheap funding vehicle for those who want to use the greenback to employ leverage in the markets. Who has the advantage in that process? The large banks. Do they spread that wealth in terms of increased credit and higher savings rates? Now why would they do that?

The American saver and consumer shouldered the cost of the bank bailouts in 2008. They are now shouldering the cost of the wealth transfer to the banks in 2009. While Washington would like to sell this dynamic differently, the American public gets it.

Washington will continue to sell this dynamic at its peril.

LD

  • AF catfish

    Time mag’s cover story is rethinking/replacing the 401k.

    Right on, Larry Doyle, you’ve got your finger on the pulse. Please keep writing.

  • http://noquarter foxyladi14

    thanks Larry.

  • ImaLlindatoo

    correct you are, as usual.

    And a comment I just posted on the “Reid” post is pertinent here as well. As I said, they (Obots and Dem Leadership) can try to gloss over, but the people see things differently.

    here is the piece pertinent here as well.

    …”Reid may be greasing the hands of special interests, which normally is ok to fool voters that he is bringing home the bacon for them, but, it’s not the jobs special interests, but key money and power shakers that doesn’t translate to the overall Nevadans. I drove thru Nevada (ok, Hoover damn to Las Vegas and Vegas down thru Searchlight -ugh, down to AZ thru Cali) The only money is maybe military and big Contractors for them that dabble in domestic services…ie trains, roads-KIEWIT) Nice new roadways from Vegas to Searchlight, home of one business/casino…on to Laughlin and to Nevada/Cali border, but that’s it. Nothing where it counts. And, be sure….Nevadans know Obambi backtracked from his committment to workers like in Las Vegas, where they need it most. Slamming Vegas as a destination and never apologizing.

    They know this. Vegas only has bodies walking the streets now after their supposed big season where it remained empty with discount shoppers and the malls all threatening closing with no buyers there or in the Casinos. Vegas is filled with window shoppers and people watchers.

    On the way back, stopping at Denny’s in Deming, NM, we ran in to a former Saleswoman from Las Vegas now waiting tables saying she lost everything. And she chose not to be the growing population living under the city , now est. at 750 living in the drains under the Strip. She instead asked her friend if she could recoup with them. She told the stories of watching men wearing 10K shoes standing in line to get an app to work at the new In and Out in Vegas that received thousands of applicants. And in case you can’t tell I talk, she grabbed a seat and started chit chatting with me and hubby so long about things that she actually got a call from her boss. (we were assured she still had a job after that)

    So, while these folks want to continuouslly cover for Barry and Dirty Harry, the people see things differntly.”

  • oowawa

    Fox guarding the henhouse dept:

    “SEC Taps Goldman Sachs Executive as COO of Enforcement Division”

    The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission tapped Goldman Sachs executive Adam Storch on Friday to serve as the agency’s first-ever chief operating officer of the enforcement division.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20091016-710808.html

  • http://www.hillaryorbust.com Hillary or Bust

    I’m sorry, this is off-topic, but it would be great if NQ covered the protests today and tomorrow calling the media out on ignoring the 9/12 rally in DC. It reminds me of how the media covered for Obama in the election, and the media ignored the caucus fraud against Hillary.

    http://www.operationcanyouhearusnow.com

  • ImaLlindatoo

    OMG, just amazing. Now they aren’t even trying to hide it.

  • graywolf

    Obama got 52% of the vote.
    What did the dopey voters think would happen?
    Hope and change?
    Duhh…
    Life is tough.
    It’s tougher when you’re stupid.

  • Peggy Sue

    Perfect, oowawa! If we thought the “regulatory reform” was a joke to begin with, this seals the deal. I think it’s a mark of how little regard these firms and agencies have for the public’s growing disgust with business as usual.

    I still believe a reckoning is coming. The grab-your-children-and-hold-your-hats kind.

    Thanks for the continuing updates, Larry. I go for #1, worst case scenario. There’s limit to incompetency. This smells like outright fraud and corruption in DC and Wall St. with more dirty hands than not in the corridors of power. It’s pretty sickening.

  • oowawa

    HaHa. As someone commented on Market Watch: “At least he’ll know exactly where not to look . . . “

  • oowawa

    Yes, Peggy Sue. When I look at how Goldman Sachs’ tentacles reach out through government, I am reminded not only of Matt Taibbi’s well-known expose in Rolling Stone, but also of Frank Norris’s 1901 novel, The Octopus, which dramatizes the overwhelming power and control of railroads over the hapless individuals who happen to oppose their interests. God help those who might get in their way or bet against them.

  • felizarte

    Wallstreet is deceiving everyone by making it look like the DOW has recovered. Actually, they simply removed Dow components like AIG, Citibank and others only the insiders know. Without this sleight of hand, the DOW wouldn’t look that rosy. They changed the baseline and doing a con job on everyone. This is October and the bottom might still fall out.

  • beachnan

    Thank you Larry. I had four clients in the last two weeks tell me that they had just lost their jobs. They lose their job, and then I lose them as a client. My husband is working in another state because of the lack of construction in our state. People have come in to my business and told me about filing for bankruptcy. I know of many people who have tried to work with their banks to adjust their mortgage, but most are getting the runaround. My daughter works for a bank as their small business officer for 10 of their branches, and she is very frustrated with the bank’s unwillingness to give out loans. In order for a business to get a loan, they must prove that they really don’t need it. Honestly, the banks are a joke, and no one is holding their feet to the fire. First we get Timmy Geitner, and now we get this smuck from Goldman Sachs. We need real reform, and we are not going to get it from this administration. They are a joke. Unfortunately, the joke is on us.

  • Diana L. C.

    I second this comment. I have no understanding of Wall Street, so I really appreciate your posts. I enjoy watching you on the rare occasions I am able to catch you on the tube.

  • ziggy

    “The American public is now responding in appropriate fashion. How so? In increasing numbers, they are choosing not to play the Wall Street game.”

    How can we confidently invest when the system is still infested with people who placed risky bets with our hard-earned money, and pocketed multi-millions themselves regardless of how the bets turned out?

    They’ve broken the faith of many Americans not only in investing as a rational and measured risk-taking process, but in the very future of the dollar itself.

    Risk-taking should be a matter of calculated betting on the success of a particular comprehensible business endeavor–not on whether the game and the casino itself are honest.

  • FrenchNail

    When the SEC hires a 29 year old goldman sacks alumini as COO of its enforcement division, you KNOW the game is stacked against the American people.

    They really think we are stupid. That we have not figure out that they are depleted our wealth and betting against America. And when I say “They” I mean the Morgan Mafia and its bought and paid for Obama administration,Washington villagers and Congress.

    Do not tell me that there is no experienced mature man, a man with a conscience and morals and sense of right and wrong who could have been hired for the job.

    They want Boys that they can control and sacrifice in time, boys with no sense of patriotism, boys driven by greed and ambition.

    They are setting this country for destruction. They are criminals.

  • Archimedes

    Comment by felizarte | 2009-10-16 17:05:03

    Wallstreet is deceiving everyone by making it look like the DOW has recovered. Actually, they simply removed Dow components like AIG, Citibank and others only the insiders know. Without this sleight of hand, the DOW wouldn’t look that rosy. They changed the baseline and doing a con job on everyone. This is October and the bottom might still fall out.

    While that is an interesting note, keep in mind that the Dow is quoted in DOLLARS! By that measure, without a single equity trade accuring the index would climb by way of require a greater quanity of dollars to purchase the same value.

    With that said, I would be curious to know the percentage of trading volume originating overseas. Gobbling up domestic firms built on sweat, blood and capital investment of a day day when “the almighty dollar” wasn’t a punch line!

    The collapse of the dollar is also going to bite us in ways that are not even bing talked about, yet. When the inevitable hyper infaltion kicks in the price of what you purchase, like say, healthinsurance rises. How wlong till YOUR policy lands in the “Cadillac” bracket and you get wolloped for the aditional 40% tax?

    And enroute to a Weimar economy and the cost of labor correspondingly rises on slightly lagging commodities, watch how fast how many unsuspecting middle-classers fall into the $250K zone that were only meant for the rich.

    These are but a couple of examples of the catastrophically rude awkening coming down the pike.

    We are in deep, deep, shit friends.

  • Sammie
  • Sammie
blog comments powered by Disqus