βIt is difficult to make predictions, especially about the future.β
People think that the Fed knows something, right? You know, why are they talking about this??
They don't know anything. All you've got to do is look at what they have said for the last 20 or 25 years and then what happened. I mean, Bernanke was completely clueless about the subprime and the real estate bubble.
Greenspan said specifically real estate could not get in a bubble, because real estate wasn't an arbitrage between Portland, Maine and Portland, Oregon. I'm not making this up, he said that.
I remember. So they don't know anything, and if you have any doubt go, read the Fed transcripts - I don't mean the minutes, I mean the transcripts - that get released after five years.
I don't think they have any special knowledge, and you can kind of see from them that they kind of flail around, and they have been the cause of tremendous amounts of financial dislocation and misallocated capital in the last 25 years, and they're still held up with some reverence, which is completely mind-blowing to me.
So I have a very low opinion of the Fed, and I have very low opinion of their ability to get things right.
βWhile it's true that a record high 58% of American households do own stocks via mutual funds or as individual shares, in the aggregate the amount of stock most of these folks own is tinyβ¦While bullish surgesβ¦are welcome to pretty much all investors, the fact is that the majority of the gains go to the richest stockholders.β
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