Originally posted by porter
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The challenge today for anyone in the crash forecasting business is that there is no boom to go bust, no 7% nominal GDP growth and 5.5% inflation for the Fed to tame with 4 full points of rate hikes in parallel with an asset bubble like we had last time. Today we have asset bubbles but without the economic growth that has in the past been conflated with asset inflations themselves. They are largely the result of asset price inflation policy and which policy was undertaken to reflate the real economy, to stimulate demand via wealth effects.
Chairman Bernanke’s Press Conference June 20, 2012
ZACH GOLDFARB. Thank you. Mitt Romney recently said that QE2 had a relatively little impact on the economy. He said that was in part because of the President’s policies, and he said that QE3 was unwarranted and could have negative effects. Do you agree that QE2 had little effect on the economy?
CHAIRMAN BERNANKE. Well, I’ll just say first that we think that both of the asset purchase programs, so-called QE1 and QE2, did have significant effects on asset prices and financial conditions.
CHAIRMAN BERNANKE. Well, I’ll just say first that we think that both of the asset purchase programs, so-called QE1 and QE2, did have significant effects on asset prices and financial conditions.
Today we have major economies that are running on a perverse admixture of organic and inorganic growth inputs compliments of central banks, bond markets that aren't really markets because fixed income market participants have to judge the risk of underestimating the willingness of central banks to put their magical balance sheets to work to get the bond yields they want, and a global economy that is moving forward with so little momentum that the Fed might knock over just by saying the wrong thing.
That leaves us to concentrate on those long-term trends that we have confidence in, such as PCO and Fortress Americas policy, to describe a 10-year portfolio strategy without trying to time the inevitable crashes and reflations that will occur, more or less at random from a forecasting standpoint, along the way.

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