Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Fidelity Comments

The Great Depression was actually two depressions. It started with World War One, which essentially bankrupted Europe in the 1920's. The
U.S.—via the Fed—lent a helping hand by extending easy money to Europe, around 1925-1927. However, in a classic example of the "laws
of unintended consequences," some of this easy money ended up in our own stock market, thus contributing to the massive bubble that burst
in 1929. This episode shows that the concept of "moral hazard" is not new. It existed as far back as the 1920's.
When the bubble burst in 1929, it unleashed a wave of deflationary debt deleveraging onto the U.S. economy, much like occurred in 2008
after the housing bubble burst. However, during the 1930's the Fed was on the gold standard, which made it impossible to just open up the
liquidity spigot like it did last year. In fact, the gold standard acted somewhat like a straight jacket and the Fed actually raised rates for a while,
which is obviously the last thing you one should be doing during an economic crisis. This "policy error" undoubtedly contributed to the 87%
blood bath in stocks from 1929 to 1932.
Bernanke knows this well, which is probably why he responded with such overwhelming force in the fall of 2008 following the collapse of
Lehman. Not only did the Fed lower rates to zero, but it expanded the monetary base. We call this "quantitative easing" or more simply
"printing money”.
The idea behind quantitative easing is that the Fed creates (out of thin air) excess banking reserves. Those reserves end up on the balance
sheet of the banks, who are then supposed to lend out these new reserves to consumers and businesses. That triggers what is known as the
money multiplier, which then expands the money supply and brings the economy back to life, and creates inflation (which under those
circumstances is a desired outcome).
The problem back then was that the Gold Standard prevented the Fed from doing this, until Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) came into power in
1933. FDR realized that the gold standard was limiting his ability to respond to the crisis, and in April of 1933 he changed it. He did this by
making it illegal to own gold. Holders of gold had to turn in their bullion and they received the stated conversion price of $20/oz. FDR then
changed the conversion price to $35/oz, and with the stroke of a pen he increased the money supply by 60% and devalued the dollar at the
same time. That was the catalyst for a 150% rally in the stock market and several years of very strong economic growth.

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