Is Chairmen Bernake Incompetent?

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by mahram, May 23, 2006.

Is Bernake Incompetent

  1. yes

    48 vote(s)
    57.1%
  2. no

    36 vote(s)
    42.9%
  1. misha7

    misha7

    Ivanych..

    leave the thread to 'da experts'
    :D

    EDIT: Moderators, would you PLEASE at least correct the name of the Federal Reserve Chairman in the poll?
     
    #31     May 25, 2006
  2. ilganzo

    ilganzo

    Greenspan took one of the worst market dive in history. Was he a scapegoat too?
     
    #32     May 28, 2006
  3. ilganzo

    ilganzo

    I doubt it. It's the market job to determine value, not the Fed Chairman job to argue with them and admit the lapse later. He has other instruments to move the markets.
     
    #33     May 28, 2006
  4. I find the fact that you and many others wants government officials to be more than rule following agents kind of scary. If the fed is data driven to keep inflation steady at least it can’t do as much harm as it otherwise could if it should use its judgments based on the big picture.
     
    #34     May 28, 2006
  5. listen, whats the point in havin' a fed chairman if there's no need to look at the big picture, sure data is important but not the most relevant thing in the decision makin' process. there are so many variables that have to be kept into consideration it is just silly and useless to reiterate what numbers have already revealed when they change every week, and that's what bernie has done since he took over; as i said why not build a new W.O.P.R. and sleep peacefully. greenie was capable of seein' right trough mkt and gettin' to his own conclusions about rates...he's sure done a pretty good job in the last couple of yrs, nobody can deny that, even includin' the handlin' of the housin' bubble. bernie has proven to every1 hes got no authority imo.
     
    #35     May 28, 2006
  6. I’m really not sure how much point there is in having a fed chairman, but how can any person constantly have better judgment about the economy than the market? The market judgment is based on those who have proved to have good judgment and have voting power according to their past success.
     
    #36     May 28, 2006
  7. "hike a few more BPS..... while the yield curve flips.... I'll be watchin'.. you"
     
    #37     May 28, 2006
  8. I say cancel all the Fed Governor's cryptic speeches, where they go across the country, one by one, and drop subtle hints about this or that. In the course of a few weeks, you can oscillate between one member discussing no more rate hikes needed to another talking hawkish as if there is no end to the rate hikes. It's bad enough having a clandestine system with so much control and authority over the money supply, lending standards, credit growth, restriction. At the very least stop all this bs intra-day "Fed Governor so and so thinks the rate hikes are over".
     
    #38     May 28, 2006
  9. Fed being more data-driven sounds ok, but what about the data?

    Like they leave out Energy and Food and call it "core" inflation. Why - because it's volatile? So what - it's not like none of us use them. Volatile or not it still hits your wallet...

    Maybe data can help make small course adjustments, but since it's always post-facto, that could be like a small correction for the Titanic.

    As far as Bernanke, next time they should seat him next to Anna Nicole Smith. She could get him to spill the beans... (and he WAS warned by a Senator during his confirmation hearings that his every word uttered anywhere would be scrutinized).
     
    #39     May 28, 2006
  10. do u guys trust those figures comin' out every week?
     
    #40     May 28, 2006