According to most central bankers, one reason why asset prices should not be considered in the formulation of monetary policy is that it is impossible to determine whether prices are fundamentally justified or are driven by speculation.
Maybe it’s not a coincidence that logarithmic paper went out of fashion before today’s central bankers went to school…
Source: www.economicreason.com
This is, of course, nonsense. Most speculative bubbles share several common features, which makes them easy to spot. Among these characteristics are an expansionary monetary policy, high credit growth, financial imbalances, speculative mood, high turnover, media frenzy etc.
Another distinct feature of a speculative bubble is an increasing growth rate. A maturing bubble is often growing faster-than-exponentially. This is easy to understand: as a bubble gets more mature, both the probability of a crash and the expected loss from a crash are increasing. In order to compensate investors for that increasing risk, ex ante returns have to increase, which – ex post – results in an increase in the bubble’s growth rate.
Exponential growth yields a straight line when plotted on a semi-logarithmic chart. Faster-than-exponential growth yields an upward-sloping curve when plotted on a semi-logarithmic chart. The following chart of the Shanghai Stock Market Index shows that the Chinese stock market is probably in bubble territory at least since November 2006. When the bubble will burst and how it will affect other markets is another question.
Maybe it’s not a coincidence that logarithmic paper went out of fashion before today’s central bankers went to school…
Source: www.economicreason.com
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