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When Will Risk Return To The Market?
By Boris Schlossberg | Published  10/19/2008 | Currency , Futures , Options , Stocks | Unrated
When Will Risk Return To The Market?

“Never underestimate Americans ability to do the right thing...eventually.” -- Winston Churchill.

What do Hank Paulson and Joe the Plumber have in common? They were both completely wrong. By the end of this week, Paulson had to apologize for his original misguided idea of TARP as he adopted the much more sensible direct capital injection plan of UK PM Gordon Brown. Meanwhile, Joe the Plumber had to admit that the Obama policies would actually lower his taxes instead of raising them since he never stood to make than $250K net from his would be "plumbing business."

To some, the two men on the opposite ends of the socio-economic spectrum, represent everything that is wrong with America today. An infantile nation of intellectually incompetent, hypocritical, self-absorbed citizens that have neither the educational foundation nor the moral fortitude to face the problems that are about to challenge them. The litany of woes is well known.

1. We teeter on the verge of bankruptcy having run chronic current account deficits for more than a quarter century.
2. The demographics of our country are such that greater and greater amounts of our resources will have to be allocated to the least productive part of our population -- the elderly, who through the advances of modern medicine are now living longer but have less assets to pay for their nursing care. The young, therefore, already burdened with stratospheric debts from their college education will be forced to pay more of their income to support the bulging elderly population resulting in a massive generational conflict.
3. The latest orgy of credit has resulted in nothing more than endless rows of useless and now worthless McMansions without expanding the economy’s productive capacity one bit.

No doubt, the picture is bleak and the problems are real but Americans ability to adjust and adapt, is unsurpassed in the history of mankind. When given lemons, Americans always try to turn them into lemonade. The pragmatism of Americans has always been stronger than their "fundamentalism." Despite utter cultural primitivism, Americans have always embraced invention and innovation with open arms and that’s been our saving grace. Thus, robotics may solve the nursing problem. Bio-engineering the food and energy shortages. Stem cell research a hots of medical problems. And the productivity waves that these industries trigger should be able to pay for all excesses of the past. That’s the long view and I hope it comes true.

Meanwhile, in the short term we are likely to see more economic pain. The news this week, was nothing if not bleak. Industrial production saw the biggest drop since 1974. U of M consumer sentiment survey sank like a stone in the wake of troubles in the financial sector and Retail Sales were twice as bad as forecast. Yet the markets stabilized with most traders betting that the worst was behind us.

Does this new calm mean the return of risk? I doubt it. As I wrote on Friday, "The docile pace of trade is unsurprising given the fact that volatility is far more mean-reverting in the markets than price. Indeed, if the credit crisis conditions ease, the next few weeks may bring on a frustratingly rangebound environment as traders begin to assess the impact of the financial meltdown on the real economy. There is little doubt that some sort of contraction will occur and the only question facing the market is will the recession be shallow or deep."

Perhaps, as turbulence passes, the new environment will usher the return of the micro trade. As we well know, during the past month economic data has not mattered at all. Traders only cared about one question -- risk or no risk. As markets return to normal, micro economic events may start to exert a greater influence on the FX market with focus shifting from carry vs. safe haven bets to relative strength/relative weakness trades. I’ll be watching carefully if the end of fear brings micro economics back to the markets.

Boris Schlossberg serves as director of currency research at GFT, and runs bktraderfx.com.