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Does anyone recall some of the bizarre theories circulating around in spring
of 2000?
When things started declining I remember hearing "They are just trying to
steal your shares", and "They missed the big runup in JDSU and are pushing
it down so they can get in". The counter-argument circulated in the chat rooms
was "don't fall for it, the 'gorilla' is worth any price, just hang on". I
am sure there were plenty of other conspiracy theories floating around and
thinking back on it now, if there was a Wall Street conspiracy at all it was
to get you to hang on and stay the course even though Henry Blodget, Mary Meeker,
and others knew the stocks they were touting were worthless. I am not much
of a conspiracy buff but if in fact there was a conspiracy, people were 180
degrees wrong about just what it was. JDSU fell from 153.42 to a low of 1.32
where it sits right now. As conspiracy theories go, just how successful were "they" at "sealing" your
shares?
Fast forward to 2005. The new conspiracy theories just happen to be about
Real Estate. According to this
article, talk of bubbles in housing is a conspiracy by Wall Street to get
you out of real estate and back into equities because "they are after your
money".
That's hilarious. Investment U was laughing about it and so am I.
As for whether or not there is a bubble, "home sales as a percent of the
economy are now at 17%. For the statisticians out there, that's 3.4 standard
deviations from the mean. For the non-statisticians out there, speculation
in home buying is literally off the charts. Said another way, it's not a
Wall Street conspiracy that speculation in housing is at a statistical extreme;
it's a fact."
Hmmm. Is the real conspiracy (if there is one at all) the exact opposite of
what people think? Are real estate agents in conjunction with lending institutions
encouraging people to buy houses or condos they know (or should know) their
clients simply can not afford? Are they encouraging sucker investments just
as Mary Meeker and Henry Blodget hyped garbage at the top? After all, do banks
or mortgage lenders or real estate agents care what the aftermath is as long
as they get their initial cut? Who does care as long as mortgages can be dumped
off on Fannie Mae? Fannie in turn "guarantees" the mortgage (trillions of dollars
worth) and repackages the stuff selling it to pension funds looking for extra
bits of yield. It's a great system for banks because they know Easy Al will
come to their rescue just as he has done many times before.
Nah, that can't be it. There are no conspiracies just paranoia. After all, "It's
a totally new paradigm" and 3.4 standard deviations from the norm proves it.
Now go buy that Florida condo before it goes up another $50,000 in "value" tomorrow.
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