S&P has wiped out the last 10 years of “growth”
By Daniel at 7 October, 2008, 8:12 am
Since the last 10 years were nothing but growth in debt, the market now reflects more closely, the real economy. Unfortunately, our economy is shrinking as defined by the massive continuing outflow of capital. That means that the market slowly continues to decline in real terms till this problem reverses. The effects on the consumer from this return to reality have not been felt but are coming very soon bailout or no bailout.
Somebody’s getting rich and it isn’t the guy next door.
I think a group of people in power are manipulating the market to extract every bit of wealth possible from the various investments the general public has been lured into feeding the past 5 to 7 years. This feels like a targeted attack.
People are distracted by the housing slump and the subsequent credit crunch and are ignoring the fact that value is leaving the market and is not being reinvested. I fear that at the end of all this, we will no longer be in control of The United States.
Will there be another debt bubble with the present fed money injections?
Perhaps, but not for long. Reality has a way of carrying the day.
InvestmentWatch relies on the financial support of its readers.
Your endorsement is greatly appreciated!
Possibly Related Posts:
- Forbes Article: “JPM is the Best Bank”
- US Treasuries and all paper money
- China mid June steel output hits 2009 high -CISA
- LEGG MASON’S BILL MILLER: BANK OF AMERICA(BAC) IS SUPERUNDERVALUED ECHOING MANY OTHERS
- WSJ: BAC HAS A VERY LUCRATIVE 2Q THANKS TO STRONG TRADING, UNDERWRITING, MERRILL, COUNTRYWIDE
Did you like this? If so, please bookmark it, about it, and subscribe to the blog RSS feed.Share this Post[?]















No comments yet.