Excerpt and photo from Article:
”Would Big Rate Cuts Really Help Stocks? History Offers Warnings.” - by Randall Forsyth in “Up and Down Wall Street” -
Barron’s, January 15, 2024 issue
”There will be cuts in the spring, to paraphrase Chauncey Gardner in the classic satire film Being There. He was, in truth, Chance, the gardener, a dimwitted savant played brilliantly by Peter Sellers. His simple utterances about growth in the spring and other matters horticultural were taken by Washington’s elite, including the president, to be profound statements about the economy.”Typically a skeptic, Forsyth doesn’t buy the growth argument advanced by Chauncey. It’s a complicated analysis citing prominent economists. But, in a nutshell, the Fed has rarely lowered interest rates in periods where core consumer prices were rising faster than the unemployment rate. It’s happened only 5 or 6 times in history. And when it did, short term optimism was followed by poor stock and bond performance as the Fed reversed course and eventually raised rates to correct its earlier error.
Comments
His suicide note read: "I am going to put myself to sleep now for a bit longer than usual. Call it Eternity."
Painted Bird is a remarkable book, as is Being There. Fascinating man, but not everyone's cup of tea
“I like to watch” with Shirely McClain in a bedroom. Chauncey likes watching cartoons.