In the 1930s and 1970s stocks stayed down for a decade. That is happening to the US markets again now. According to The Wall Street Journal, "The current market turmoil suggests that we may be in another lost decade." At this point, the S&P 500 is below where it was in 1999.
The stock market is now under-performing investments such as bonds and even real estate, and that adds more fuel to a potential deep recession.
As prices continue to rise rapidly for items like gas and food, the consumer might have been able to turn to his home for equity. Now that home prices are down 15% to 20% in some markets, that does not work anymore. The other pocket in the consumer's pants was the investments he had in mutual funds, stocks, and his IRA. His gains in those instruments is clearly going up in smoke.
Consumer spending has driven GDP growth for years now. The consumer has less to spend now, and that could go to even less than that.
Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

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Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke gave his
He paints you a pretty economic picture. Well, I guess that's what we pay him to do. Give me three minutes in a locked room with him. Actually, I would only need two. Because if I could talk with the man and separate him from his deeply rose colored glasses for a moment or two, he would quickly notice ten thousand former members of the UAW had come with me to speak to him also.

