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Gold/Mining/Energy : Strictly: Drilling and oil-field services

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To: hitsoft17 who wrote (82124)12/19/2000 6:11:33 PM
From: ItsAllCyclical  Read Replies (1) of 95453
 
Hitsoft, international crisis in '97 vs today...

>> I recall when the international crisis hit a couple years ago and they came in with two mid period rate cuts and turned the slide around quickly. They can do it again and likely will if they think the need is there. <<

That is the mindset of many. I disagree with it, here's why:

1) The US economy is basically the lifeline to the world. Last time when the crisis hit the US economy was so strong that we bailed everyone else out through exports. This time we might need the bailing out, but everyone else is already weak.

2) In the '97 crisis $12 oil and cheap natural gas helped get us out of trouble. Now we still face $25 oil and very expensive natural gas. Greenspan can't do a thing about those.

3) In '97 the crisis was largely a debt-default/currency crisis issue. The Fed and the powers that be can deal with those types of issues better than they can the economy in general. Greenspan interest rate cuts will only help on 9-12 month lagging basis and they only moderately help the stock markets in an indirect way.

4) In '97 the stock market was overvalued, but fundamentals still looked strong. We certainly didn't have mania at that point. Today we still have some mania and fundamentals are deteriorating. Again I think the comparisions to Japan's Nikkie in '89 and Nasdaq 5000 are justified. 10 years later Japan is still underwater. A sobering thought.

I'm certainly no expert, but I think there are MAJOR differences between today and the '97 crisis.

It's not a question of owning gold going forward, but rather how much do you own?

Maybe some of our more astute posters can add some thoughts on '97 vs today and Greenspan's role.
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