The Coming Depression
Wednesday, Dec 31, 2008
Here are some of the worst predictions that were made about 2008.
Savor them—a crop like this doesn’t come along every year. You wonder why so
many have lost their savings? Keep listening to these people for future
predictions and you will be in the soup lines. Unless you realize what is
actually coming (A DEPRESSION) the sooner you will prepare for it and SURVIVE!
1. “A very powerful and durable rally is in the works. But it may
need another couple of days to lift off. Hold the fort and keep the faith!”
—Richard Band, editor, Profitable Investing Letter, Mar. 27, 2008
At the time of the prediction, the Dow Jones industrial average was
at 12,300. By late December it was at 8,500.
2. AIG (AIG) “could have huge gains in the second quarter.” —Bijan
Moazami, analyst, Friedman, Billings, Ramsey, May 9, 2008
AIG wound up losing $5 billion in that quarter and $25 billion in
the next. It was taken over in September by the U.S. government, which will
spend or lend $150 billion to keep it afloat.
3. “I think this is a case
where Freddie Mac (FRE) and Fannie Mae (FNM) are fundamentally sound. They’re
not in danger of going under…I think they are in good shape going forward.”
—Barney Frank (D-Mass.), House Financial Services Committee chairman, July 14,
2008
Two months later, the
government forced the mortgage giants into conservatorships and pledged to
invest up to $100 billion in each.
4. “I’m not an economist but I
do believe that we’re growing.” —President George W. Bush, in a July 15, 2008
press conference
Nope. Gross domestic product
shrank at a 0.5% annual rate in the July-September quarter. On Dec. 1, the
National Bureau of Economic Research declared that a recession had begun in
December 2007.
5. “I think Bob Steel’s the
one guy I trust to turn this bank around, which is why I’ve told you on
weakness to buy Wachovia.” —Jim Cramer, CNBC commentator, Mar. 11, 2008
Two weeks later, Wachovia came
within hours of failure as depositors fled. Steel eventually agreed to a
takeover by Wells Fargo. Wachovia shares lost half their value from Sept. 15 to
Dec. 29.
6. “Existing-Home Sales to Trend Up in 2008″ —Headline of a National
Association of Realtors press release, Dec. 9, 2007
On Dec. 23, 2008, the group
said November sales were running at an annual rate of 4.5 million—down 11% from
a year earlier—in the worst housing slump since the Depression.
7. “I think you’ll see [oil
prices at] $150 a barrel by the end of the year” —T. Boone Pickens, June 20,
2008
Oil was then around $135 a
barrel. By late December it was below $40.
8. “I expect there will be
some failures. … I don’t anticipate any serious problems of that sort among the
large internationally active banks that make up a very substantial part of our banking
system.” —Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve chairman, Feb. 28, 2008
In September, Washington
Mutual became the largest financial institution in U.S. history to fail.
Citigroup (C) needed an even bigger rescue in November.
9. “In today’s regulatory environment,
it’s virtually impossible to violate rules.” —Bernard Madoff, money manager,
Oct. 20, 2007
About a year later, Madoff—who
once headed the Nasdaq Stock Market—told investigators he had cost his
investors $50 billion in an alleged Ponzi scheme.
10. “There’s growing evidence
that parts of the debt markets…are coming back to life.” —Peter Coy and Mara
Der Hovanesian, BusinessWeek, Oct. 1, 2007.
Oops.