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To: Tomas who wrote (76245)10/13/2000 6:32:49 AM
From: Crimson Ghost  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 95453
 
Wall Street begging Greenspan to bail them out again.

IT'S TIME FOR GREENSPAN TO RESCUE
THE MARKET
Friday,October 13,2000

By JOHN CRUDELE

IS the stock market getting set to crash?

There's no Ouja board on my desk. But I do see a few things that'll have to
happen in order to avoid the chance of a full-scale panic on Wall Street.

First, Alan Greenspan must step in and save the market if this slide is
going to stop. And an active rescue effort is the simplest and most
effective way out of the equities market's current predicament, although it
is also extremely dangerous and controversial. Greenspan must get the
Treasury to buy futures in the Dow and S&P indexes this morning if those
indices continue to decline. A further drop is a very real possibility,
especially if the nation's Producer Price Index for September is worse than
the 0.5 percent jump that the experts expect. A Fed official back in 1989
suggested that buying index futures - rather than pumping liquidity into the
banking system - was the way to avert a disaster. He knew what he was
talking about.

Second suggestion: The Fed has to stop making covert attempts to help the
market, as it did this week. That effort, like past ones, failed miserably
when Greenspan added liquidity to the banking system on Tuesday by
doing billions in so-called repos and coupon passes. The more the Fed fails
in these secret efforts, the less confidence people will have in its ability to
avert disaster.

The Fed's goal here should be singular - step in front of the troubled market
so that investors know a rescue effort is in place. That's what the Fed has
done in the past for several large Wall Street firms, and small investors
deserve no less.

And the timing is very important.

Greenspan has to stop the bloodletting before small investors lose the faith
they've had in stocks these past 10 years. If prices continue to dive like
they did yesterday, small investors will not only lose faith; they will
panic.

Then there will be a crash.

Americans have entrusted more money to Wall Street than ever before.
Retirement, college, vacation plans, home-ownership goals - are now all
riding with the stock market.

There is no room for error. No time for cute solutions. No more second
chances. This column warned its readers at the beginning of the month that
October was not to be trusted, especially when stock prices were still in
bubble territory, and people had become downright complacent about the
past record of crashes.

And I even warned you that the Clinton administration's politically
inspired dip into the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve might lead to
unexpected problems - like increased Middle East tension just as we were
getting nearer the presidential election.

Am I psychic? No.

But when you are rolling a bubble through the calendar while pretending
it's a solid ball, you'd better be very careful about bumping into sharp
objects like jinxed months, irresponsible political moves and ominous
chatter about corporate profits.

A lot of things are going wrong for the stock market right now.

Corporate profits are down because of inflation and higher borrowing
costs. International companies are having earnings problems because of the
extraordinary weakness of the euro.

And little of the cliched "bargain hunting" seems to be occurring, no matter
how low stock prices fall.

Worse, the quick-fix that the Clinton administration attempted on oil
prices has backfired. Crude oil dropped for a short while but an
orchestrated pick-up in Mideast tensions quickly got the tab back up to
$36 a barrel - just two bucks short of the record. And there are no more
tricks left.

You get the idea - a lot of problems.

But investor confidence is what this is all about. Lose that and all is lost.



To: Tomas who wrote (76245)10/14/2000 8:00:35 PM
From: Tomas  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 95453
 
California gas discovery a real blast
Calgary Herald, October 14
calgaryherald.com