The Price of Greenspan's Success
Even if he's not widely credited for it, Alan Greenspan has been successful recently in sustaining strength in housing, boosting stock and Treasury market prices, and weakening the dollar.
But acknowledging that Greenspan is getting what he wants is not the same as condoning his actions. Many observers worry Greenspan's short-term successes are going to cause major long-term headaches. Although the chairman is hoping rapid money-supply growth -- M2
has risen at an annualized rate of 13.4% in the last eight weeks -- will continue to fuel higher asset prices, critics contend this overly accommodative monetary policy threatens to unleash dangerous speculation in equities, reminiscent of the late 1990s, as well as grossly inflated Treasury and housing markets.
Broadly speaking, Greenspan is betting strength in the housing market -- and more recently stocks -- will spur consumer spending to keep the economy afloat until business expenditures revive. Despite a 42-year-low in the fed funds rate, corporate executives remain reluctant to spend because the 1990s spending boom generated poor returns and created overcapacity that remains onerous today. (Yes, many executives also are distracted by new accounting regulations and other oversight issues.) ...
Recent Comments
| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,285.97 | 1,091.93 | 2,172.99 | 33.92 |
Oil *
75.40
|
|
DOWN
104.14
|
DOWN
11.32
|
DOWN
16.62
|
DOWN
0.56
|
10 Yr
3.39%
SPDR Gold
110.95
|
|
-1.00%
|
-1.03%
|
-0.76%
|
-1.62%
|
Data delayed 20 minutes |


Connect with TheStreet