';



Wednesday, February 15th, 2012

Marc Faber: Rate Cuts Could Make Crisis Worse

Posted on: Oct 13th, 2008 | By Contrarian Profits | Filed under Politics & Economics

Gloom, Boom & Doom report editor Marc Faber last week cast doubt on the effectiveness of the coordinated interest-rate cuts by international central banks. He said “artificially low interest rates” were the main cause of the credit-market turmoil in the first place. Mr. Market may have different ideas. Stocks are way up today.

This from a report by Bloomberg last Wednesday:

The slashing of interest rates will not help very much,” Faber, who manages $300 million, said in an interview in Manila. “They may cushion somewhat the decline but make matters worse.”

The Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, Bank of England, Bank of Canada and Sweden’s Riksbank each cut their benchmark rates by half a percentage point in a bid to unfreeze global credit markets. The deepening credit crisis caused a worldwide sell-off in stocks that has dragged the MSCI World Index down by 35 percent this year.

The Bank of Japan, which didn’t participate in the move, said it supported the action. Switzerland also took part. Separately, China’s central bank lowered its key one-year lending rate by 0.27 percentage point.

Today’s decision follows a global meltdown that sent U.S. stock indexes heading for their biggest annual decline since 1937. Japan’s benchmark today had the worst drop in two decades. Policy makers are aiming to unfreeze credit mark2ets after the premium on the three-month London interbank offered rate over the Fed’s main rate doubled in two weeks to a record.

Speculative Investments

Policy makers are reducing rates as economies weaken around the world. The International Monetary Fund said the global economy is heading for a recession in 2009 and increased its estimate of losses from the financial crisis to $1.4 trillion.

The Fed cut its key rate to 1.5 percent, a level last seen in September 2004. Low interest rates on deposits have pushed consumers to speculate on higher yields in other assets including stocks, real estate and commodities, Faber said.

“Had central banks around the world kept interest rates that encourage saving we wouldn’t have these problems today,” the investor said.

Faber, publisher of the Gloom, Boom & Doom report, told investors to sell U.S. stocks a week before 1987’s so-called Black Monday crash, according to his Web site, and recommended buying gold at the start of its six-year rally.

More on this topic (What's this?) Read more on Marc Faber at Wikinvest

Tags

, , , ,

Related Articles



Leave Comment