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Strategies & Market Trends : Waiting for the big Kahuna -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: William H Huebl who wrote (43976)10/14/1999 10:09:00 PM
From: Skeet Shipman  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 94695
 
Greenspan Raises Concern Over Stocks

Reuters Finance News By Caren Bohan Oct 14 9:49pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan Thursday
advised banks to set aside more money as insurance against a big financial-market
downturn, a sign he is worried about a potential bubble in equity prices.

While emphasizing he was not predicting a stocks crash, Greenspan told a banking
conference that sudden losses in investors' confidence ``inevitably' occur from time to
time and said financial institutions should boost their reserves to account of that
possibility.

``History tells us that sharp reversals in confidence occur abruptly, most often with
little advance notice,' he said. 'These reversals can be self-reinforcing processes that
can compress sizable adjustments into a very short period.'

Greenspan, who sent markets reeling in December 1996 when he raised a question
about ``irrational exuberance' in stock prices, used more subtle words in Thursday's
speech to remind investors that the bull stock market of the 1990s was not typical and
there was no guarantee it would continue.

His comments prompted a drop in U.S. stock futures prices and sent the dollar down
against the yen in Tokyo trading.

Greenspan said diversification among different types of assets -- a common strategy
used by portfolio managers to guard against market risks -- may not be sufficient to
account for all types of scenarios in which the value of investments might decline
sharply in value.

``At a minimum, risk managers need to stress test the assumptions underlying their
models and set aside somewhat higher contingency resources -- reserves or capital --
to cover the losses,' he said.

Greenspan likened the building up of such reserves to paying for fire insurance, noting
that many people might be inclined to consider it a waste of money -- until the day a
fire breaks out.

The Fed chairman pointed out that equity premiums, the return investors demand to
cover the risks associated with investing in stocks, had declined in recent years but he
said it was unclear why.

``The key question is whether the recent decline in equity premiums is permanent or
temporary,' he said.

If the decline was only temporary, then portfolio managers may find they were
underestimating the credit risks of loans collateralized by stocks and could be too
optimistic about how protected they were by spreading their risk, Greenspan said.

Greenspan said investment professionals who specialize in risk management should
take this factor into account and weigh carefully whether investors were paying enough
heed to the risk associated with holding stocks.

``The decline in recent years in the equity premium ... should prompt careful
consideration of the robustness of our portfolio risk-management models in the event
this judgement proves wrong,' he said.

Greenspan was criticized in the aftermath of his irrational exuberance comment for
appearing to second-guess financial markets.

As he has done on many other occasions since then, Greenspan Thursday went to
lengths to stress that he was not making a prediction about the market.

``To date, economists have been unable to anticipate sharp reversals in confidence,'
he said. ``To anticipate a bubble about to burst requires the forecast of a plunge in the
prices of assets previously set by the judgements of millions of investors, many of
whom are highly knowledgeable about the prospects for specific investments.'

At a top-notch symposium of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyo. in August,
Greenspan said that fluctuations in the prices of assets such as stocks can influence
monetary policy because they play a role in macroeconomic trends such as consumer
spending.

But he and other Fed officials have also made clear that they do not specifically target
the prices of stocks in the setting of interest rates. That suggests that even if
Greenspan is worried about stock prices, his concerns may not necessarily make him
more willing to boost interest rates to prick a potential stocks bubble.