Housing data points to slowdown in sales
Article via Reuters By Supantha Mukherjee Signed contracts for the sale of existing U.S. homes retreated from a 1-1/2-year high in December and demand for home loans...
When looking at investing from a global perspective, sometimes it helps to see the forest rather than the trees. It is necessary to blend together different lenses to see what others are not seeing. If, for example, there were a competition to see what experts could predict what the tallest tree in a forest was in 10 years what would different experts say? An expert on tree species might choose the fastest growing species. An expert on tree disease might see disease in the forest and choose the tree that was resistant to it. An expert on soil might choose the tree in the most fertile ground. But they might all be wrong. Someone who stepped back and saw the dry brush might consider for a moment the possibility of a forest fire and choose the little lonely birch tree alone in the field – the only tree that would remain intact. Let us consider for a moment what happens if this crisis continues and something breaks on a global scale, what is the most likely equivalent of a global forest fire?
The depth of the global recession, perhaps even depression, and the structural dependency on globalization makes us think that “this too shall NOT pass” before some very ugly adjustments are made and the piper is paid. The great depression ended with WWII – indeed the US was lifted out not by FDR but by the war effort which used every factory, employed every man (and many women) and drove the economy with a feverish intensity. If that crisis was ended by a world war could this one too?
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Phineas Upham has a PhD in Applied Economics from the Wharton School (University of Pennsylvania). Phin is a Term Member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He can be reached at phin@phinupham.com
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