Today was obviously not a good day for anyone who is apart of this country's financial system in any way. From those employed to oversee it, to those who work for it, and finally (and probably most importantly) those who invest it. With the DJIA dropping more than 500 points, it was the worst day since just after the September 11th attacks.
I actually think that today's bloodletting was a good thing, not only for the stock market, but for the economy as a whole. Over the weekend, a couple of major things happened, first, Bank of America purchased Merrill Lynch, and the Federal Reserve decided they were not going to bailout Lehman Brothers.
Let's be clear, it's never a good thing when banks the size of Lehman and Merrill simply go away. People lose jobs and insane amounts of money. But the decision of the Fed not to bailout Lehman (and inconsequentially, they probably telegraphed the same signal to Merrill) is a sign that they think the economy may be on the mend.
Let's face it, back in March when the government bailed out Bear Stearns, nobody had any sort of accurate clue about how deep or severe the current housing crisis would be. This weekend's decision not to help Lehman, is a clear signal that the government thinks the financial community and the economy as a whole is strong enough to withstand a major investment bank going out of business. 6 months ago, this just wasn't the case.
I'm no finance expert, but I think it's safe to assume that there might be more banks that go under in the next 6 to 12 months. The important thing to remember is that the responsibility for these defaults is not the general public's, but that of the banks themselves, who got themselves in this mess to begin with.
Monday, September 15, 2008
The Bloodletting
Read More: Frankly Speaking, Stock Market
Posted by Ben Wilkinson at 7:52 PM
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