Rats, I had this eloquent retort to Dick's "Phil Gramm defanged the SEC" argument and I lost it in cyberspace. Dick, there were complaints about Madoff's unreal returns throughout the 1990s. The SEC had a complaint filed as early as 1999 and did nothing about it. Whatever Texas Senator Gramm did in the 2000s, it had little to do with Madoff's fraud.
Jeff,
I am doing fine, thank you. Panics have existed throughout the history of mankind. Tulips, stocks, commodities, etc. Markets are highly imperfect and volatile. They are just a whole lot better than the alternative. But if you have some reasoned, interesting, relevant information on the ones you mention, I am all ears.
I would also be curious to know what level of the economy you believe the government should account for. Is a third enough? Is half better? How many "public servants" can the economy reasonably sustain? Do you think that half of us can depend on the government for our livelyhood and the economy will somehow continue to chum along?
John Kirk,
If I gave the impression that I believe the money supply is too tight today that is certainly not my intention. The opposite is the case. My only reference to a tight money supply was to the post-1929 time frame when the Hoover administration failed to provide liquidity in the midst of the stock market and banking collapse.
As to brokers not being able to beat the market, you can believe what you want, but given that the maket is an average which reflects both good and bad picks, I think it is reasonable to conclude that there are some brokers who pick more winners than losers and beat that average. To believe otherwise would lead one to only buy index funds or, as in current times, to remain highly liquid. But, as I am sure you know, there is even considerable risk in just sticking your money under a matress.
HenryE,
You are right about not having much of a defense ("other smart people did it too"), and that is why a good attorney is a necessity. A lazy, incompetent, but otherwise honest man can do little for restitution sitting in jail. I hope I am wrong, but I bet these advisors don't have the insurance or assets to make Madoff's "victims" anywhere close to whole.
Richard Choi,
I could not disagree with you more vis-a-vis the present level of regulation. It is not Madoff's fraud that collapsed Fanny and Freddy or that drove gasoline prices to unsupportable levels. It is the noise that government creates in each and every transaction, big and small, which eventually overwhelmed us.
Adding to this noise is the new administration's promises to increase taxes on the productive, force trillions of dollars of additional costs on our economy (to prevent purported modeled/theoretical consequences of global warming), and placing nearly a third of the economy (health care) in the hands of the government. If you think that the path to salvation is paved by government programs you may wish to heed Senator Clinton's advice about suspending disbelief. It is all about the math and human nature.