Posted on 07/16/2002 7:28:31 AM PDT by sandlady
Edited on 04/29/2004 2:00:51 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
Perhaps, though most Freepers - to my virulent disagreement - like to pin the prick (no Willard pun intended) on the 'Toon Justice Department's lawsuit against Microsoft, mainly because it allowed them to both worship at the Altar of Gates and ream Clinton at the same time (and that it "coincided with the start of the crash", even though the prosecution news didn't break until a good month after the Big Drop had already begun; too many people are unwilling to accept that correlation does not equal causastion, especially when it doesn't even really correlate). In any case, that bubble had to be pricked, and the pricking was inevitable. The date that it finally happened, or the supposed impetus, is almost beside the point.
The 64 million dollar question.I worked on the foor of a national securities exchange for twenty years.The market is where fear and greed,as well as reason meet.To try to explain why the market does what it does on any given day or in any given month or year calls more for a psychologist than an economist.But consider this.
You've probably heard that the stock market,over the long term,is the best place to put your money.That relies on a return of about 8%!Nothing more.Since we've had,now,years of double-digit returns,negative returns are called for as the market regresses to the mean.For example,if memory serves me correctly,the dow was at about 1000 in summer of 1982.If I take 1.08(8%) to the twentieth power(20 years later),I get 4.66,which implies that the dow should be about 4,660.In 1987,before the "crash,the market was about 2,200.So 1.08 to the 15th power is 3.17,implying a dow of about 6,978.Again my memory does not serve well,but in 1994,the market was about 4000.So,1.08 to the 8th is 1.85,or a dow of 7,400.This return of about 8% to capital is fairly well established.Greenspan's notions of productivity are built into it,and will not supercede it.
You might also note that this number also puts an effective cap on interest rates,i.e.,they may not in any case exceed 8%,as then one cannot borrrow money and invest it in capital production profitably. Any rate of interest above the rate of return on capital is usury,and will result in economic contraction.
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