" an housing bubble, a mortgage bubble, an equity bubble, a bond
bubble, a credit bubble, a commodity bubble, a private equity bubble,
a hedge funds bubble are all now bursting at once in the biggest real
sector and financial sector deleveraging since the Great Depression."

But not, strangely enough, a land bubble - even though this has
occurred many times before in history.

Nothing is so invisible as the ground under our feet.

Harry

*******************************

Harry Pollard

Henry George School of Los Angeles

Box 655   

Tujunga  CA 91042

(818) 352-4141

*******************************

 

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
Sent: Wednesday, October 15, 2008 1:40 PM
To: futurework
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Futurework] M'God, everything's falling apart!

 

>From the Daily Reckoning, Wednesday, October 15, 2008:

 

"This from Nouriel Roubini, Professor of Economics at the NYU Stern
School of Business: 

“The crisis was caused by the largest leveraged asset bubble and
credit bubble in the history of humanity where excessive leveraging
and bubbles were not limited to housing in the U.S. but also to
housing in many other countries and excessive borrowing by financial
institutions and some segments of the corporate sector and of the
public sector in many and different economies: an housing bubble, a
mortgage bubble, an equity bubble, a bond bubble, a credit bubble, a
commodity bubble, a private equity bubble, a hedge funds bubble are
all now bursting at once in the biggest real sector and financial
sector deleveraging since the Great Depression.

“At this point the recession train has left the station; the financial
and banking crisis train has left the station. The delusion that the
U.S. and advanced economies contraction would be short and shallow – a
V-shaped six month recession – has been replaced by the certainty that
this will be a long and protracted U-shaped recession that may last at
least two years in the U.S. and close to two years in most of the rest
of the world. And given the rising risk of a global systemic financial
meltdown, the probability that the outcome could become a decade long
L-shaped recession – like the one experienced by Japan after the
bursting of its real estate and equity bubble – cannot be ruled out.

“At this point the risk of an imminent stock market crash – like the
one-day collapse of 20% plus in U.S. stock prices in 1987 – cannot be
ruled out as the financial system is breaking down, panic and lack of
confidence in any counterparty is sharply rising and the investors
have totally lost faith in the ability of policy authorities to
control this meltdown.

“A vicious circle of deleveraging, asset collapses, margin calls, and
cascading falls in asset prices well below falling fundamentals, and
panic is now underway.”

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