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To: UnBelievable who wrote (67121)2/13/2001 10:27:01 AM
From: Les H  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
Greenspan testimonies

bondtalk.com



To: UnBelievable who wrote (67121)2/13/2001 10:36:34 AM
From: Perspective  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 436258
 
Now we know who the remaining Clown is that still actually listens to the ANALcysts:

"Moreover, although recent short-term business profits have softened considerably, most corporate managers appear not to have altered to any appreciable extent their long-standing optimism about the future returns from using new technology. A recent survey of purchasing managers suggests that the wave of new on- line business-to-business activities is far from cresting. Corporate managers more generally, rightly or wrongly, appear to remain remarkably sanguine about the potential for innovations to continue to enhance productivity and profits. At least this is what is gleaned from the projections of equity analysts, who, one must presume, obtain most of their insights from corporate managers. According to one prominent survey, the three- to five-year average earnings projections of more than a thousand analysts, though exhibiting some signs of diminishing in recent months, have generally held firm at a very high level. Such expectations, should they persist, bode well for continued strength in capital accumulation and sustained elevated growth of structural productivity over the longer term.



To: UnBelievable who wrote (67121)2/13/2001 10:41:55 AM
From: Perspective  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 436258
 
Well, maybe there is hope for him. The second set of bold text says what I've been saying for a loooooooooong time:

"The hastening of the adjustment to emerging imbalances is generally beneficial. It means that those imbalances are not allowed to build until they require very large corrections. But the faster adjustment process does raise some warning flags. Although the newer technologies have clearly allowed firms to make more informed decisions, business managers throughout the economy also are likely responding to much of the same enhanced body of information. As a consequence, firms appear to be acting in far closer alignment with one another than in decades past. The result is not only a faster adjustment, but one that is potentially more synchronized, compressing changes into an even shorter time frame.

"This very rapidity with which the current adjustment is proceeding raises another concern, of a different nature. While technology has quickened production adjustments, human nature remains unaltered. We respond to a heightened pace of change and its associated uncertainty in the same way we always have. We withdraw from action, postpone decisions, and generally hunker down until a renewed, more comprehensible basis for acting emerges. In its extreme manifestation, many economic decisionmakers not only become risk averse but attempt to disengage from all risk. This precludes taking any initiative, because risk is inherent in every action. In the fall of 1998, for example, the desire for liquidity became so intense that financial markets seized up. Indeed, investors even tended to shun risk-free, previously issued Treasury securities in favor of highly liquid, recently issued Treasury securities.

"But even when decisionmakers are only somewhat more risk averse, a process of retrenchment can occur. Thus, although prospective long-term returns on new high-tech investment may change little, increased uncertainty can induce a higher discount of those returns and, hence, a reduced willingness to commit liquid resources to illiquid fixed investments.



To: UnBelievable who wrote (67121)2/13/2001 11:37:41 AM
From: patron_anejo_por_favor  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
This part of the testimony is beyond frightening; absolutely terrifying would better describe it:

Corporate managers more generally, rightly or wrongly, appear to remain remarkably sanguine about the potential for innovations to continue to enhance productivity and profits. At least this is what is gleaned from the projections of equity analysts, who, one must presume, obtain most of their insights from corporate managers. According to one prominent survey, the three- to five-year average earnings projections of more than a thousand analysts, though exhibiting some signs of diminishing in recent months, have generally held firm at a very high level. Such expectations, should they persist, bode well for continued strength in capital accumulation and sustained elevated growth of structural productivity over the longer term.

So BubbleBoy is relying on stock analysts now, to determine future corporate earnings (and implicitly, future productivity projections)? Holy $hit, I'm stocking up on freeze-dried vittles and shotgun shells RIGHT NOW!<G>

EDIT: LOL! I read down further and see you guys were all over this passage. I guarantee, that won't be the part that makes the network news tonight....<NG>