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     Apr 26, 2008
Page 2 of 3
BOOK REVIEW
The Fed's king of bubbles
Greenspan's Bubbles - The Age of Ignorance at the Federal Reserve
by
William Fleckenstein
Reviewed by Julian Delasantellis

if the health and prosperity of his stock market flock was a concern of equal, or more importance, to the health of the general economy. As Fleckenstein put it, "he had herded all the little fish into the stock market pool, and he appeared to be leery of suffocating them if he drained out liquidity too rapidly".

Here commenced the famed "Greenspan put", the feeling that the US Federal Reserve would always support the stock markets, would always cut rates to backstop selloffs and re-ignite rallies. Thus, according to Fleckenstein, the conditions were set for the


 

largest speculative bubble in American history.

It may seem like the 2003-07 period was pretty good for US stocks, but, when you lengthen the perspective out a bit, things don’t look so rosy. Even at last October’s highs the S&P 500 index never got much past its 2000 highs; not even close in real, inflation-adjusted terms. The NASDAQ composite, after topping out near 2900 last October, now is once again more than 50% off its year 2000 highs just over 5000.

Fleckenstein contends that this is wholly Greenspan’s doing, in that the speculative damage caused by the popping of the 1990s stock market bubble continues to weigh on stocks.

For what a decade the 1990s was. The S&P 500 index rose from 304 in 1990 to over 1500 in 2000, a fivefold gain; the NASDAQ did even better, with a 15-fold gain. Even by the standards of what we’ve seen recently with Southern California and Southern Florida condominium prices, this was a very impressive speculative bubble.

You should not have had to tell an economic historian such as Greenspan that bubbles are bad for an economy; the 17th century tulip craze in Holland and the French Mississippi bubble of the 18th century damaged both these countries’ economies for almost a century afterward. But, according to Fleckenstein, Greenspan not only refused to do anything to fight the bubbles, he was, in fact, their cause.

Ron Insana of CNBC and Insana Capital Partners wisely observes that the most dangerous sound any investor can ever here is the phrase "this time it’s different". Bubbles come and go; they flourish when the human instinct of greed decisively trumps its mirror image of fear. Still, with every bubble, somebody comes along and says this time it’s different, this time it’s not a speculative blowoff, but some new technological or societal feature has arisen that justifies the madness. By 1995, Greenspan looked at the rise of information technology and said this time it’s different.

It was in the middle of 1995 that the US stock market, especially the NASDAQ, really took off. From 1995 to the top in early 2000 the S&P 500 rose at a respectable average rate of 24% a year, but that was nothing compared with the NASDAQ, which rose at an annual average of 40% a year, blowing off with over 50% rises in both 1998 and 1999. By the end of the decade we would witness the dot-com madness we all recall so well.

Remember Pets.com, and its cute sock puppet? TheGlobe.com, and its over 600% first day of trading price rise? Webvan, the grocery delivery company that went through $1 billion of venture capital before going bankrupt? Boo.com, the attempt to create a global internet fashion conglomerate, which seemed to have chosen its corporate name only because they knew they had to have something to the left of the dot and the com? My favorites were the newly born companies such as FreeLotto.com, Alladvantage.com, and ePipe.com.com, and their revolutionary business plans; essentially, they were just going to give away money, and for that, they raised billions of dollars in investment capital for their daring schemes.

By early 2000, the tech stock madness had led to the stock of Cisco Systems having a market capitalization of $550 billion, which amounted to 6% of total US gross domestic produt and just under 2% of total world GDP.

Bubble blindness
We all knew it was a bubble; it was obvious to all-except chairman Greenspan. Looking at the madness of the period through the rose-colored glasses that presented the image of everything that markets did being right, Greenspan delivered his blessing to the insanity.

At a December 1995 meeting of the Federal Reserve Board’s Open Market Committee, Greenspan expounded on his new truth.
You may recall that earlier this year I raised the issue of the extraordinary impact of accelerating technologies … looking at market values, we are not capitalizing various types of activities properly. In the past, we looked at capital expenditures only as spending on a blast furnace or a steel rolling mill. Now, improvement in the value of a firm is influenced by such factors as how much in-house training they have and what type. That creates economic value in the stock market sense, and we are not measuring it properly.
In essence, what Greenspan was saying here, and in many other forums at other times, was that investment in high technology spending and training should not be treated as an expense, but as an asset.

Stock market professionals judge whether a stock is over, under or fairly priced not by its nominal share value but by dividing the stock price by the company’s earnings, to produce a number called the price/earnings ratio, or, the p/e. (For a discussion of the mechanics and importance of p/e ratios, see The decline in US equity markets, Asia Times Online, May 10, 2007.) In early 2000, Cisco Systems p/e stood at 150, compared with its current ratio of under 20.

If a stock rises without a commensurate rise in earnings, its p/e ratio rises; it is said that the stock is getting expensive. That is what seemed to be happening to US stocks from 1995 to the top in early 2000.

But the Greenspan analysis, believing that high technology investment should be accounted as an asset rather than expense, meant that the rising price/earnings numbers did not exist; they were much lower in reality than what the companies were reporting. Low p/e numbers automatically implied no bubble, no matter what the nominal stock prices were doing.

As smooth defense lawyers in the American South say to witnesses who claim they saw the lawyer’s client committing a crime, "Who are you going to believe, me, or your own lying eyes?" In essence, Greenspan argued that a productivity miracle occurred just by putting a computer on a worker’s desk, even if the machines were not even networked, as they are now.

The official US productivity statistics never were able to find Greenspan’s miracle. According to a 2000 study by Northwestern University Professor Robert J Gordon, prepared for the US Congressional Budget Office:
There has been no productivity growth acceleration in the 99% of the economy located outside the sector that manufactures computer hardware. Indeed, far from exhibiting a productivity acceleration, the productivity slowdown in manufacturing has gotten worse. When computers are stripped out of the durable manufacturing sector, there has been a further productivity slowdown in durable manufacturing in 1995-99 as compared to 1972-95, and no acceleration at all in nondurable manufacturing.
If you want to argue against Professor Gordon, and say that the computer on your office desk has made you more productive, your argument might have more credence if you first closed the Windows Solitaire game you have open on your desktop. But still, as the stock market madness continued and intensified, Greenspan was continually bedeviled by charges that he was facilitating a dangerous stock market bubble.

Nothing can be done
Greenspan's replies to this charge evolved through the '90s, and have continued to evolve over time. Besides the high technology argument, occasionally he would contend that the presence of bubbles could not be ascertained while they existed; that you only knew you had been in one after they had broken. Then, he would sometimes argue that, even if you could determine that a bubble was currently existent, you couldn’t really do anything to stop it. Fleckenstein notes that Greenspan vehemently resisted the application of the standard implement to curb excessive stock market speculation, the raising of stock margin rates.

The Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 explicitly assigned to the Federal Reserve the power to regulate margin rates. This is the ability of speculators (not investors - buying stocks on margin is just about the textbook definition of speculation) to buy stocks with borrowed money to boost their cash returns if the stock rallies; in the same way their losses are accelerated if the stock sells off.

Just as the home mortgage debt has exploded in the past few years, stock margin debt ballooned in the 1990s. At their core, speculative bubbles are always caused by excessive utilization of credit. Fleckenstein expounds on just how pervasive stock margin speculation had become.
As of February 2000, total margin debt stood at $265 billion. It had grown 45 percent since the previous October, and had been more than tripled since the end of 1995. Relative to GDP, margin debt was the highest it had been since 1929, and over three times as high as it was in October, 1987.
Academics scratched their heads at Greenspan’s contention that raising margin rates does nothing to tamp down speculation. Doing just that is the standard method by which financial exchanges cool overheated markets; the New York Mercantile Exchange did so with gold futures in late January of this year. A few weeks later, gold broke 15% lower, and has still come back to nowhere near its highs of $1,000 an ounce.

As the stock bubble raced towards its final denouement, Fleckenstein noted that Greenspan found a new way to rationalize

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