Is it safe to go back into the markets now?
Investors certainly seemed to think so. Markets in the
The FTSE 100 jumped a whopping 3.5% to 5,689. It’s now fallen a mere 11.9% in the past 12 months.
So was that the bottom? Somehow I don’t think so…
The rebound in markets yesterday seemed like yet another short-term rebound before the next bout of bad news. None of the problems underlying this crisis have gone away.
Let’s look at what’s been happening. Yesterday we heard that US consumers are feeling more grim about their economic outlook than at any time since Richard Nixon was in the White House in 1973. “Obviously, this is a recession signal,” said Lynn Franco, research director of the US Conference Board, which issues the data.
Meanwhile, according to the Case-Shiller Index, house prices in the 20 largest
Should the Bank of England be doing more?
And this morning, The Telegraph reports that banking giant Citigroup has been criticising the Bank of England for not jumping in to save the
“The Bank of England should now be adopting a more determined approach to easing financial market strains… The
Tim Bond of Barclays Capital adds: “The reason why we had a bear raid on HBoS last week is because people question whether the Bank of England is there to backstop the system.”
Well, that’s an interesting view. It strikes me that what Mr Bond is saying here is effectively that we wouldn’t have seen a bear raid on HBoS as long as everyone in the market believed the Bank of England would keep it from harm. Try substituting HBoS for Marks & Spencer here and you see the problem. “No one would have sold that retail stock if they’d realised the Bank would buy up all its pants and socks if the worst came to the worst.”
I hate to say this, but if banks expect to be saved by the Government (ie, the taxpayer) when they collapse, then they should equally expect to be tightly regulated by the Government during the good times. If we effectively underwrite their profits, then we should expect to share in them too.
Banks are not too important to fail
As Jeff Randall points out in The Telegraph today, bankers love market forces when they’re happening to other people. “After all, job losses = cost reductions; company insolvencies = sector consolidation; falling prices = buying opportunities.” But when it happens to them, there’s a “chorus of calls for taxpayers’ funds to rescue distressed lenders.”
Now, the idea of more regulation is instinctively not something I like. A better solution might be to strip government intervention out of the market altogether. After all, as I pointed out yesterday (see: Who’s really to blame for the financial crisis?), the reason that banks have come to believe that they are too important to fail is because the authorities have always treated them that way. At the first hint of a crisis, Alan Greenspan cut interest rates, and it always worked.
Not anymore. And so the banks and the markets sit back and expect the central bank to do whatever it takes. Perhaps if we’d allowed a few more of the past ‘crises’ to inflict some pain, we wouldn’t find ourselves in this situation now. As for what we can do – well, any bail out is still going to hurt.
Turning to the wider markets…
Triple-digit gains for FTSE
In
There were big gains for stocks elsewhere in
Across the
In
FSA admits Northern Rock failings
Crude oil futures had risen to $101.77 this morning. In
Spot gold had climbed to $936.70 this morning, continuing its ascent from last week’s one-month low of $904.00. Silver, meanwhile, had risen to $17.82.
In the currency markets, the pound was steady at 2.0084 against the dollar and 1.2787 against the euro. And the dollar was at 0.6365 against the euro and 99.81 against the Japanese yen.
And in
Our recommended articles for today…
Why you should ignore gold price fluctuations
– The price of crude oil in terms of gold hardly changed last week, but in terms of dollars both commodities fluctuated wildly. For more from James Turk on why you should stick with the metal rather than volatile paper money, read: Why you should ignore gold price fluctuations
Would a short-selling ban prevent another HBOS-style panic?
– A letter to The Times last week suggested that the best way to avoid another rumour-fuelled run on a bank such as HBOS is to ban short-selling. Tom Bulford runs through the arguments for and against this practice, here: Would a short-selling ban prevent another HBOS-style panic?