Tag Archives: Christopher Wood

The Central Banks Are Stuck With Quantitative Easing

By Robert Lenzner, Forbes StaffQE will go on forever and it’s going to mean a very long and powerful bull market for stocks,” the former chairman of a major trust bank in New York told me today over lunch. He was articulating a growing theme you hear these days among some investors– bowing to the powers and authority of the Federal Reserve Bank— which is using its balance sheet to maintain a low interest rate environment and so to make more valuable than government bonds the shares of public corporations and the value of residential homes. This sentiment could be underscored in Tokyo today after the Bank of Japan disclosed it would copycat the Fed– and double its monetary base and holdings of Japanese government bonds over the next 2 years. Talk about playing catch up ball. It took the Fed 4 years to triple its balance sheet– and it’s clearly not through yet. The Japanese must think QE will spike its long suffering stock market; indeed the Topix, a Japanese index, is up 20.3% over the past 3 months, Some positive action finally. China, as well, desperately trying to fend off a slowdown that could lead to social unrest, has already increased the money supply by 60 trillion remimbis, the equivalent of $10 trillion dollars. This $10 trillion in Chinese currency means that over the past 4 years monetary credit in China has ballooned to 116% of Chinese GDP. That beats the Fed’s marker for assets held and suggests the Chinese better read their Ken Rogoff findings that a high amount of debt in relation to GDP translates into a slower rate of economic growth. The trend is clear; central banks are using their muscle in a prolonged attempt to bind up their national economies by driving up asset prices, most especially common stocks. In the short to medium period, the momentum is picking up worldwide to follow this guideline– which has never been attempted for such a long time period by many nations at the same time. To my way of thinking it would be more dangerous to cease and desist from QE than to keep this unconventional cooperative policy making going without a fixed finish date. My old friend Christopher Wood, who writes the GREED & fear commentary for CLSA in ASia, captured perhaps the worst unseen danger, when he wrote “The sheer prospect of an exit from quantitative easing would cause such trauma in equity and credit-related markets that the most likely consequence would be that the exit never happens until it is forced by market circumstances. And that sort of crisis probably means the end of the fiat paper currency system as currently constituted.” That last sentence is uncomfortable for even to write. But, I have to tell you that Wood predicted the collapse of Japan in the 1990s before it happened– and was quite conversant with the dangerous deterioration American banks before they became insolvent and had to be bailed out. So, a fair warning. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

911 call released: California woman loses control of car, submerges in river

A 911 recording has been released of a California woman who lost control of her car and went into the Sacramento River.

The driver, 57-year-old Mussarat Chaudhary, told dispatchers that she couldn’t get out of the car. Authorities said a language barrier slowed down response efforts. When crews pulled the car out of the water, the mother of seven was found dead inside.

Chaudhary’s relatives later retained a lawyer. The family’s attorney, Christopher Wood, said they hold no ill-will toward the dispatcher and know emergency crews did all they could.

Chaundhray bought her used 2009 Toyota Camry about three months ago. Prior to owning the vehicle, Toyota recalled some 2009 models to fix two issues with the accelerator: one that caused it to get stuck under the floor mat and another where excessive wear could cause it to malfunction.

But even if a gas pedal were stuck open, the power of the brake system will always override the engine, Toyota has confirmed.

“We sympathize with anyone in an accident involving one of our vehicles,” Toyota said in a statement. “We can’t comment further at this stage except to say that we are committed to working in close partnership with law enforcement agencies and federal regulators with jurisdiction over accident scenes whenever requested.”

Wood said he has not confirmed with the manufacturer whether the vehicle had been recalled or fixed under a previous recall.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News