thegreekdog wrote:Thanks guys. Hate to be rude, but I understand most of those things and you haven't really answered my question. I'll try to ask it a different way.
Vocal Economists and Government-Types: "The U.S. sequester will cause a depression in the U.S. stock market."
Dow Jones, NASDAQ, etc.: Stocks prices, generally, go up rather significantly (this includes fundamentals as well as "flavor of the month").
Were the vocal economists and government-types wrong?
Was it, as my brother-in-law said, that the stock market is six months ahead of everything else (or was it six months behind)?
Thanks, and will attempt to answer exactly.
Vocal Economists and Government-Types: "The U.S. sequester will cause a depression in the U.S. stock market."I disagree. Yes, the sequester would have an impact on Govt spend but I have always been of the opinion that govt. types tend to think their contribution to real money is far greater than it actually is. Markets are a lot larger than Govts, fact.
While there may be some adjustment to those specific industries affected (defence as an example) this adjustment will be reflected and countered in other areas as spending there increases. In short I would see a sequester as ultimately causing a small surge in prices due to perceived values of certain sectors increasing. So my response to the question
"Were the vocal economists and government-types wrong? " would be most definitely. But then I have always thought those two august bodies of financial intellectuals have far too much to say on matters they have little understanding of (for an example, find me an economist or politician who has managed to ever get anything right when forecasting financials).
The stock market tends to work on perceived value these days. This includes building potential value into the current price, so any fall in real value has most probably been factored in anyway. Now this may seem to contradict my previous statement (in that any increase is also factored in) but history shows that the factoring is often tight when compared to reality so there will be a further decrease/increase in stocks.
Hope this is more what you were looking for.