I'm aiming here to get more possible explanations, not to pick the evildoers (that may come later). So please add more possible explanations, and correct me where I'm wrong about someone's position. The question mark means I think this is the person who originated this idea, but I can't be sure it's their original work
1. Rosenberg? Too few investment vehicles available because of IMF rules from the 1970s onward
2. Bernanke? worldwide savings glut
3. Gave-Kal- in the past, vast amounts of capital have been regularly wiped out by large-scale wars (WWI and II, Cold War). We are now in a situation where vast capital has not been destroyed for some time. (this appears to me to be a variation on (2.) above - savings glut, but a different explanation from where the glut is coming from).
4. Richenbacher/Daughty/Goldbugs/Bonner
Greenspan/Bernanke, liquidity
5. Noland - Central bank (but with lower emphasis than those in 4. above) liquidity and private liquidity, derivatves, leverage
6. Harry S Dent - demographics, demographics, demo ... . I'm unclear as to exactly what mechanism he proposes for bond yields being forced down by aging boomers, 10 years before their retirements. Oh, Dent's calling for DOW 15,000 in early 2008 and 20,000 late 2009.
Prechter? - does he offer an explanation?
Niederhofer - does he offer an explanation? All I get out of Niederhofer is (insult Buffet) then "free enterprise conquers all, buy the dips" (insult Buffet again) "1000% over the course of the century" (insult Buffett again).
(isn't it interesting that a lot of the "official" explanations are uni-variate/mono-causality ? Or are the official explanations more complex, but reported simplistically? )
99. me? (the ? means "is this combination of things unique to me)
1. reduced friction (electronic trading),
1a. automated, real-time arbitrage in a vast array of goods and services
1b. massive, massive carry trades
2. worldwide liquidity, both private and CB
3. worldwide (seemingly everyone but a few holdouts) alignment of government and central bank objectives, tools, techniques, agendas and orthodoxies (China and Japan and India and Korea and Germany and Britain and Saudi Arabia and the US all agreeing on monetary beliefs and actions)
4. "insurance"
5. leverage and Minksy-type "feel good, take more risks - the risks don't materialize, feel better, take more risks - the risks do materialize, the CB bails you out, feel better, take more risks)
1. Rosenberg? Too few investment vehicles available because of IMF rules from the 1970s onward
2. Bernanke? worldwide savings glut
3. Gave-Kal- in the past, vast amounts of capital have been regularly wiped out by large-scale wars (WWI and II, Cold War). We are now in a situation where vast capital has not been destroyed for some time. (this appears to me to be a variation on (2.) above - savings glut, but a different explanation from where the glut is coming from).
4. Richenbacher/Daughty/Goldbugs/Bonner
Greenspan/Bernanke, liquidity
5. Noland - Central bank (but with lower emphasis than those in 4. above) liquidity and private liquidity, derivatves, leverage
6. Harry S Dent - demographics, demographics, demo ... . I'm unclear as to exactly what mechanism he proposes for bond yields being forced down by aging boomers, 10 years before their retirements. Oh, Dent's calling for DOW 15,000 in early 2008 and 20,000 late 2009.
Prechter? - does he offer an explanation?
Niederhofer - does he offer an explanation? All I get out of Niederhofer is (insult Buffet) then "free enterprise conquers all, buy the dips" (insult Buffet again) "1000% over the course of the century" (insult Buffett again).
(isn't it interesting that a lot of the "official" explanations are uni-variate/mono-causality ? Or are the official explanations more complex, but reported simplistically? )
99. me? (the ? means "is this combination of things unique to me)
1. reduced friction (electronic trading),
1a. automated, real-time arbitrage in a vast array of goods and services
1b. massive, massive carry trades
2. worldwide liquidity, both private and CB
3. worldwide (seemingly everyone but a few holdouts) alignment of government and central bank objectives, tools, techniques, agendas and orthodoxies (China and Japan and India and Korea and Germany and Britain and Saudi Arabia and the US all agreeing on monetary beliefs and actions)
4. "insurance"
5. leverage and Minksy-type "feel good, take more risks - the risks don't materialize, feel better, take more risks - the risks do materialize, the CB bails you out, feel better, take more risks)
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