Benson's Economic
& Market Trends
Bernanke Scares
Pavlov's Sheep
Richard Benson
June 14, 2006
This is a partial edited reprint of my article entitled "The
Fed and Pavlov's Sheep" that was written and published
in May of 2004. The topic is especially appropriate today.
Ivan Petrovich Pavlov was a brilliant Russian Physiologist
whose experiments on animals led to discoveries that would make
the demented doctors in World War II, in both Germany and Japan,
very jealous. Some of Pavlov's early work was done on sheep.
Unfortunately for the sheep, the experiments on them were so
stressful they eventually died of heart attacks. Pavlov's work
on sheep, analogous to stock market investing, is critical for
this article because speculators, hedge funds, and particularly
retail stock investors, do tend to act a lot like sheep.
Pavlov's work on the conditioned reflex reaction of sheep to
stimuli should be of the utmost importance to the Federal Reserve
and world central banks at this juncture in a world where signs
of speculative excess - even to the bubble level - clearly remain
in all major risk asset classes including housing, commodities,
emerging markets, and even major stock markets.
In Pavlov's research, he discovered that if he gave the sheep
a mild electric shock, it would bother them very little and their
life would go on pretty much as if nothing had happened as
long as the shocks were random. Warning the sheep in advance
of a shock by ringing a bell, however, affected their behavior
and it changed radically. The sheep were just smart enough to
realize that if they heard the bell, the shock was coming. After
repeating this exercise a few times, the poor sheep lost control
of bodily functions and after a few more warning bells, they
started dying of heart attacks.
What Ben Bernanke and the Federal Reserve Governors should know,
and are likely to find out the hard way, is that markets driven
by speculation will react just like Pavlov's sheep. Indeed, the
major market participants and speculators, particularly greedy
retail investors, are there to get "sheared at market tops".
Somebody has to buy when the smart money wants to sell and
take their winnings out of the casino. Moreover, to keep
the herd of retail investing sheep grazing on financial investments
including commodities, there needs to be a steady stream of "feel
good" press for stocks about how great productivity is and
how the nomination of the new Treasury Secretary, Hank Paulson,
will be good for the dollar. All the while, stock analysts and
market touts are claiming "there has never been a better
time to invest".
With fears about a rising core inflation rate and slowing economic
growth, Bernanke and the Federal Reserve Governors understand
too much money was printed up over the last decade. They're not
alone. The central banks in Europe are not done raising interest
rates either and Japan is just beginning to raise their rates
from zero to drain excess liquidity. After 16 rates hikes, the
Fed announced it is not done raising rates. This "ringing
of the bell" has the sheep sensing that more shocks are
coming. This could be downright ugly for the financial markets!
We would recommend that the Fed have plenty of tranquilizers
and lots of liquidity available to bail out the markets if they
keep on scaring the sheep.
The market participants that started running like lemmings for
the edge of the cliff are led by the market professionals!
They have been heard shouting "get out before the sheep
panic!" Over the last few months, easy money trades are
down, and some Middle Eastern markets have crashed while other
emerging markets are in a bear market. Commodities are also in
a serious correction, including gold and silver.
All too often central banks tighten until the financial markets
suffer a significant failure. The Federal Reserve and Treasury
have regular practice "fire drills" on what to do during
a market crash, and given their behavior and what Pavlov taught
us about sheep, they will more than likely create an opportunity
to fight a real financial market fire. However, when the Fed
has to fight a market event - and cuts interest rates in an effort
to save the lives of some of the sheep - you can kiss the dollar
goodbye. So, while the dollar has gotten a technical lift over
the past week or so, my cash is still going into "non-dollar
cash". The U.S. trade deficit is so massive, and our debt
is so large, we believe the dollar will have to fall much lower.
While a general stock market crash may pressure all stocks (including
precious metal stocks) to go lower, precious metals and precious
metal stocks are being offered now at significant discounts (much
of the excess that causes sharp drops in price has been washed
out).
In the years ahead, the high prices we have all seen in gold
and silver will be surpassed many times over. In addition, leaving
your money in short-term cash with no price risk while receiving
5 percent, looks a lot better than losing money in stocks or
real estate! Suddenly, risk is a four letter word and cash is
not trash.
Richard Benson
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President
Specialty
Finance Group, LLC
Member FINRA/SIPC
2505 S. Ocean Boulevard
- Suite 212
Palm Beach, Florida 33480
1 800-860-2907
email: rbenson@sfgroup.org
Richard Benson, SFGroup, is a widely-published
author on securitization and specialty finance, and a sought after
speaker at financing conferences on raising equity for mid-market
companies.
Prior to founding
the Specialty Finance Group in 1989, Mr. Benson acted as a trading
desk economist for Chase Manhattan Bank in the early 1980's and
started in the securitization business in 1983 at Bear Stearns,
and helped build the early securitization businesses at Citibank
and E.F. Hutton.
Mr. Benson graduated
from the University of Wisconsin in 1970 in the Honors Program
in Math, and did his doctoral work in Economics at Harvard University.
Mr. Benson is a member of the Harvard Club of New York and Palm
Beach.
The Specialty
Finance Group, LLC is a Florida Limited Liability Company and
is registered with FINRA/SIPC as a Broker/Dealer.
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