by rose-colored-coolaid » Fri Mar 20, 2009 4:55 pm
It's been a while since I've updated this. The short answer is no this is not the bottom. The longer answer?
So, what's changed. Public opinion has taken a violent shift from "we really don't like bailouts to banks while real people are *suffering" to "you #$%@ #^%$ #$%@ fat cat bankers can suck my #@#% %#@ $#%# if you think we're going to fund your bonuses." There has now been more outrage over $165M in bonuses than there was in $1.5T of TARP/stimulus, and the AIG bonus outrage is still chock full of steam. AIG is one more bad quarter (or month maybe) away from being nationalized. The chorus to nationalize AIG is growing stronger, and frankly they are right. For those who freak at such terms, this does not mean the US Government will be in the insurance business; rather it means that we'll seize AIG, immediately reprivatize every profitable aspect (real insurance) and any outstanding collateralized debt derivatives will be put into a bad bank where they can be sorted out with full government control. When this happens, it will reek havoc on the stock market for about two weeks.
Two positive weeks on Wall Street. Well, technically it was more like 7 consecutive positive days. I guess the recession is over - NOT. Evidently all the problems at Citibank and Bank of America have been solved - NOT. Oh yeah, US auto is doing fine as well - NOT. In other words, a lot of false optimism is suddenly hanging in the air, mostly because we have had two weeks without a lot of hard economic news (nobody's announcing quarterly profits and such). The general outlook is still positive if you put people in a vacuum. Seems to me like that means we haven't had enough of a crash yet, and fear hasn't really run its course.