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By the editors of Casey
Research
"We've averted" the risk of a depression, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke
said this week. "Now the problem is to get the thing working properly again."
Appearing on CBS network's 60 Minutes, Bernanke told correspondent
Scott Pelley that concerted efforts by the government likely averted a depression
similar to the 1930s. He also stated the nation's largest banks are solvent
and that he doesn't expect any of them to fail; and that the U.S. recession
will come to an end "probably this year."
Is this finally the light at the end of the tunnel for the U.S. economy?
We don't want to appear as perpetual gloom-and-doomers, but fact is, when
Bernanke tries to predict the future, he's usually wrong.
Prediction: The subprime mess is grave but largely contained,
Bernanke reassured the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago in a speech on March
15, 2007.
While rising delinquencies and foreclosures will continue to weigh heavily
on the housing market, it will not cripple the U.S. economy, he said. "Given
the fundamental factors in place that should support the demand for housing,
we believe the effect of the troubles in the subprime sector on the broader
housing market will likely be limited."
Reality: The median price of a home sold in the U.S.
fell to $170,300 in January 2009, down 26% from a year and a half earlier,
according to the National Association of Realtors. This housing crash has spread
pain more widely than any before it. Home prices fell about 30% during the
Great Depression, according to calculations by Yale University economist Robert
Shiller. But back then, the nation was less concentrated in urban centers,
and much fewer Americans owned homes.
Other housing downturns in recent decades have been regional; this one is
national. Prices in the fourth quarter of 2008 fell in nearly 90% of the top
150 metro areas, according to the Realtors group. And 5.4 million homeowners,
about 12%, were in foreclosure or behind on mortgage payments at the end of
last year. The Federal Reserve now estimates home prices could fall 18%-29%
more by the end of 2010.
Prediction: "I expect there will be some failures" of
smaller banks, said Bernanke in February 2008. "Among the largest banks, the
capital ratios remain good and I don't anticipate any serious problems of that
sort among the large, internationally active banks that make up a very substantial
part of our banking system.
Reality: IndyMac Bank failed in July 2008, with $32 billion
in assets. Washington Mutual failed in September 2008, the largest bank failure
in history with $307 billion in assets. Wachovia was sold to Wells Fargo in
October 2008, amid concerns about its financial health, and Citigroup still
scrambles to raise cash from both the government and private sources.
Fortunately for Bernanke, and unlike us at Casey
Research, he doesn't make a living by being right about the future. If
he did, we strongly suspect that by this time, he would find himself without
subscribers.
Thus, it is a mystery to us why the mainstream media still seem to eagerly
soak up his every word, much like a devout Catholic would absorb a papal ex
cathedra proclamation. But until the last American has woken up to Bernanke's
fallibility, that likely won't change.
In the meantime, we recommend using the Fed chair's economic outlooks as a
contrarian indicator - if he says the market looks good, run for cover as fast
as you can.
***
Bernanke may be wrong more often than not and still keep his job - we at Casey
Research cannot afford that luxury. Our subscribers depend on us researching,
correctly analyzing, and predicting market currents and emerging trends… which
also includes the movements and changing policy decisions of Big Politics.
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