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Monday, March 05, 2007
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Wall Street spooked by shoddy reporting
by Donald Lambro
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The global economy is a complicated entity that relies on accurate information about financial trends, something that was missing at strategic times during last week's market meltdown.

Indeed, the trigger for the domino effect that plunged stock markets from Asia to Wall Street began in China where the sell-off resulted from rumors the government was going to impose stringent measures to slow down its overheated economy. But those rumors appeared to be unfounded in a supersecret authoritarian bureaucracy where transparency is nonexistent.

China has been attempting to slow its economy for years, something, ironically, we've been pushing them to do. But as Bear Stearns economist David Malpass noted last week, the China sell-off was "valuation related" and resulted, understandably, in cooling down its overvalued stocks.

A memo by Bear Stearns' Hong Kong-based strategist Michael Kurtz on Jan. 16 warned "China (Underweight): Valuations now excessive, stocks are over-owned, and liquidity support may be moderate."

Back in the United States, the markets were spooked by the spreading global sell-off but also by a variety of less-than-accurate reports -- the most egregious being the story that Alan Greenspan was predicting a recession later this year.

Dow Jones Newswires ran a headline, saying "Greenspan: Recession in U.S. 'Possible.'" Bloomberg News Service said, "Greenspan says U.S. may slip into recession."

In fact, he predicted nothing of the sort, and even a cursory reading of what the former Federal Reserve chairman said in remarks via satellite at a global business conference in Hong Kong shows that quite clearly. Story after story, even after the markets' steep decline Tuesday, flatly reported that he saw a possible recession in the near future, without all of the caveats and modifiers for which Greenspan is famous when he talks about hypotheticals.

Here's what he said: "While, yes, it is possible we can get a recession in the latter months of 2007, most forecasters are not making that judgment and indeed are projecting (growth) forward into 2008 ... with some slow down." He went on to describe conditions in the global economy as "benign and stable," a view that is consistent with economic forecasters here and abroad. And he said both the United States and global economies were far more resilient now than ever before, partly as a result of increasing global liquidity.

In short, Greenspan's "widely reported comments weren't nearly as negative as the headlines portrayed," Malpass told his clients. But the r-word he uttered dominated the headlines and, in the 24/7 news world we live in, that message contributed to Wall Street's jitters and helped to push it into the tailspin we saw last week.

To be sure, other factors contributed to Wall Street's fallback, including a 7.8 percent plunge in manufacturing orders, January's steep decline in new housing sales and the terrorist attack on a U.S. base in Afghanistan from newly resurgent Taliban forces.

But Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has been telling Congress for the past two weeks that the global economy remains strong and he expects continued growth in the U.S. economy this year and next. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Kimberly
WRAMC is still an Army installation commanded by an Army General and he is the one directly responsible for the operations of this hospital, not the president -- this one or any other.

Your reaction and the actions of Democrats on this issue really demonstrate my point that politicians -- of any political party -- do not care about military personnel or veterans except to the extent they can be used as a political issue, in this case another cheap shot at President Bush.

As far as I am concerned, the president has carried out his responsibility by firing the Secretary of the Army and the Hosptial Commander. The marching orders to the new commander should simply be, "Correct the problem."

I have not had the opportunity to hear very much of the testimony, but what little I had heard seems to be directed toward military personnel.

Clyde9

Kimberly,
Please go to a psychologist. It seems to me you blame Bush for everything that's wrong in this country while giving no credit when things are good. I bet you blame Bush when your dog gets sick. It must be difficult to carry on day to day with that mindset.
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