
Presidents
come and go, but America’s lord and savior Sir Alan of Greenspan is forever. For
the sake of full disclosure, the photo above comes courtesy of respected money
manager Bill Fleckenstein, who does not worship at Greenspan’s altar the way I
do. I have to give Mr. Fleckenstein credit. His slogan based on his years of
experience predicting stock market movements is “Often wrong, but never in
doubt.” For Alan Greenspan, it should be “Often right, but always doubted.” I
have never seen a man face so much criticism from people who were not as smart
as him, and admitted they had no idea what he was saying.
Alan
Greenspan spoke in such cryptic language that it became known as “Greenspeak.”
Senators would grill him, tell him he was wrong, and he would politely address
their concerns. The one irony is that for all the senatorial bluster, they could
not do anything about it. Greenspan would politely respond to their idiotic
questions all the while thinking that the imbeciles questioning him had most
likely flunked economics 101.
His
successor Ben Bernanke got off to a rough start by answering questions in a
clear manner that was easy to understand. If the answer was deemed
unsatisfactory, the markets would be roiled. Greenspan was ambiguously confusing
enough to not cause too much damage.
One of
his famous phrases “irrational exuberance” was meant to warn that the buying
frenzy of the 1990s was spinning out of control. Now had he just said that the
buying frenzy was spinning out of control, people would infer a coming collapse,
and there would be panic selling. Instead, traders and brokers worldwide turned
to each other and asked “Did this guy just say irrational
exuberance?”
Never
has a guy with such a perceived lack of charisma been treated like such a rock
star. When I worked on a trading floor, and Bill Clinton would speak,
the traders would laugh, knowing that some meaningless proclamation would be
announced. It would be said in a serious voice to convey gravity, as if the fate
of the free world depended on school uniforms. When Alan Greenspan spoke, the
Earth shook. The traders would stand quietly, hang on every word, and then run
around in confusion. They did not understand exactly what he said, but they knew
he said something of consequence.
What
most people do not know is that Alan Greenspan saved America. In 1987, after the
stock market crash, the entire United States financial system was dangerously
close to a nervous breakdown. To prevent 1987 from becoming 1929, he took
decisive steps, including triggering stock market circuit breakers. When the
market had another violent down day in 1989, the system was much stronger. Even
after 9/11, the economy and the financial markets responded and rebounded. Yes,
it took time, but it did happen.
While
I do not agree with Greenspan on every issue, and still disagree with him over
his arguments against “dynamic scoring, (supply side economics),” one cannot
deny that for 20 years, the American economic engine was in full party mode. Our
economic expansions are getting longer and our recessions are getting milder and
shorter. No, we have not defeated the business cycle, but the Phillips curve
myth has been shattered (the idea that the economy cannot have low inflation and
low unemployment).
As
hard as this may be for some to believe, Alan Greenspan even had a wry sense of
humor. Before one critical senate committee meeting, a senator found Greenspan
in the hallway and asked him how he was doing. Mr Greenspan responded “I can’t
tell you.”
For
those of you who think that a monkey could do his job (and I do concede that the
monkey above does look ready to give a serious lecture on monetary policy), the
Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, aka the Central Banker (in case you
wondered what his titel was) is always one mistake away from destroying the
world economy. In 20 years, through stock market crashes, the Asian Flu of 1997
and 1998, the internet bubble and subsequent collapse, and of course 9/11, his
steady hand guided the world to a better global financial well
being.
As we
celebrate the 20th anniversary of the year he was hired by Ronald Reagan (yet
another fabulous decision by the Gipper), it is important to recognize him for
the wealth he has helped bring to this nation…not just in real dollars, but in
economic knowledge.
If a
monkey can do this job, then I want that simian to be blindfolded and given
darts to throw at the Wall Street Journal so that I know what stocks to trade.
Yes, this experiment did beat most S & P 500 mutual fund money managers, but
they were not Sir Alan of Greenspan.
The
next time you get that first home with an affordable mortgage, or your stock
portfolio provides you with dividend income, or you get a higher paying job
because the rising tide does lift all boats, thank Alan
Greenspan.
He may
not be that charismatic, and he may not be a rock star, but this guy sure knows
how to throw a great 20 year party.
Good
luck Mr. Bernanke. You have gigantic shoes to fill.
As for
Mr. Greenspan, the day something happens to him, the financial markets will be
fine for only one reason. He will be kept alive like the character in “Weekend
at Bernies” that was not allowed to ever die…he pumped up the health of the US
economy, so the least we can do is return the favor.
Mr.
Greenspan may be retired, but make no mistake about it. Every respected
economist and politician (perhaps an oxymoron) had him on speed
dial.
Thank
you Mr. Greenspan. Thank you very much indeed. One day it would be an honor to
know what you actually “did.” I could even pretend to understand, which would
make me qualified to be a US senator. Then again, I might be bored to tears with
the explanation. I don’t have to understand it. Just know I am
appreciative.
eric