The Philadelphia Fed Survey of Manufacturing in the tri-state area came in at -12.7. This was an improvement from the prior month's reading of -16.3, and slightly ahead of expectations. Initial unemployment claims were 432,000, which was also an improvement from the prior week's reading of 445,000, and better than expected.
Despite these improvements, these numbers are still quite negative. We may be in the process of forming a short-term bottom. Much of this will depend upon what happens to oil prices. If oil prices stabilize or continue to drop in the near future, this will offer some much needed relief to our consumer-driven economy. However, if the recent drop in oil is only a minor correction, the economic news will get worse.
- Even if oil stabilizes and if the economy starts to form a bottom, I do not believe that we will experience a substantial rebound. There are too many economic pressures which will not be resolved overnight:
The housing crisis is very similar to the one experienced in the late 1980s and early 1990s. This took a decade to resolve. - The current banking and credit crisis also resembles the Savings and Loan debacle of that earlier era. This eventually required massive intervention by the Federal government in the form of the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) to repair the financial system.
Those people expecting a quick recovery like 1998 will be sorely disappointed.
Doug Roberts is the Founder and Chief Investment Strategist for ChannelCapitalResearch.com, and is the author of Follow the Fed® to Investment Success: The Effortless Strategy for Beating Wall Street. He previously held executive positions at Morgan Stanley Group and Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-21-2008 @ 3:03PM
william lindblad said...
I was there and see little that resembles the RTC era. The size and scope of today's situation is at least 10 times larger and that is conservative. It was also entirely domestic and today the money that propelled this fiasco was worldwide. While we are concerned with our own markets, mortgage related issues are also in the U.K., Spain and now, it looks like China.
This one is unique - and new. However, it does have some of the aspects of other bad economic times, going back to 1893.
The RTC resolved the situation with about 100 billion(1991) taxpayer dollars and a good deal of this money went into the pockets of the bankers that were retained to do the job. The RTC was a proverbial snake and I know, first hand
If anyone gets the idea for a follow-up they should be aware that this time the bill will be at minimum - 1 trillion.