So we hear from the pundits that the financial crisis is brought about by (a) lax lending standards sometimes artificially mandated by the government to improve home ownership (b) extremely low interest rates from the ‘liquidity drug dealer’ aka, the Fed, (colorful phrase from Marc Faber), to keep the economy on a ‘high’ perpetually (c) Banks issuing more and more risky loans to seek higher returns (d) Banks could package and ’securitize’ these loans and sell them to others seeking high returns, and so could get these toxic stuff off balance sheet and go back to offering more risky loans. (e) various institutions buying up these wholesale packaged loans on excessive leverage, to hold them just enough time to get a good return, but hoping to offload them to a greater fool just in time (f) man-on-the-street sees higher and higher home prices, feels he’s left out, joins the party and everyone is looking to sell their assets to a greater fool .. until some bagholder can’t find a greater fool and whole pack of cards starts coming down.
Iam sure I’ve simplified and not included quite a few other reasons like the role of derivatives (which i don’t fully understand), and I’ll leave the full analysis to the books which surely will be arriving soon to a bookstore near you. But that list is enough for me understand what went on. In simple terms — greed, short term thinking, and negligence on part of millions of people. Perfect cocktail for bubble creation.
But what concerns me more are the much larger bubbles that are created by the same mentality of greed, short term thinking and negligence. I believe our entire global economy itself is a bubble from a historical perspective. Just as the asset bubbles are created by cheap money liquidity drug, our current economy is ‘high’ on fossil energy Redbull accumulated over millions of years, one-time bounty of earth’s natural resources and stability of our ecological system. But beware of the times when we cannot economically extract the drug anymore (see Simmons), or when Ma nature can no longer put up with our reckless partying (see Hansen).
We better get our house in order into a low-footprint economy, before that bubble bursts. Because if we don’t, there’s nobody to bail us out. No Fed can issue more barrels of oil like it prints paper and no amount of tax payer money can bailout the climate system.
There’s one take away for me from the financial crisis — don’t trust those ivy leage experts who promise everything is hunky-dory until the chips start falling. And I don’t trust the so-called experts who say our economy and way of life is sustainable long term.



