Showing posts with label Nouriel Roubini. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nouriel Roubini. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Gloom, Doom, and Boom

Marc Faber and Nouriel Roubini on CNBC today. Must see videos.














Nassim Taleb, principal of Universa Investments and author of 'The Black Swan,' discusses, the markets, the economy and whether Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke should be reappointed.

Taleb says,
We still have a very high level of debt, we still have leadership that's literally incompetent.















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Thursday, July 9, 2009

Brown Manure, Not Green Shots


Economist Nouriel Roubini sees unemployment rising to close to 11% by the end of the year and that this will have a knock-on effect for the rest of the economy. He also says that job losses are even worse than what's being reported.

He also had this to say about the housing market:
It's already estimated that by the end of this year, there will be about 8.4 million people with a mortgage who have lost jobs, and therefore have little income. Therefore, the number of people who will have difficulties servicing their mortgages is going to rise very sharply.

Home prices have already fallen from their peak by about 30%. Based on my analysis, they are going to fall by at least 40% from their peak, and more likely 45%, before they bottom out. They are still falling at an annualized rate of over 18%. That fall of at least 40%-45% percent of home prices from their peak is going to imply that about half of all households that have a mortgage--about 25 million of the 51 million that have mortgages--are going to be underwater with negative equity and will have a significant incentive to walk away from their homes.

He had this to say on the budget deficits:
...deflationary pressures are going to be dominant this year and next year.

But eventually, large budget deficits and their monetization are going to lead--toward the end of next year and in 2011--to an increase in expected inflation that may lead to a further increase in 10-year treasuries and other long-term government bond yields, and thus mortgage and private-market rates. Together with higher oil prices driven up by this wall of liquidity rather than fundamentals alone, this could be the double whammy that could push the economy into a double-dip or W-shaped recession by late 2010 or 2011.

Read the whole article here.

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