Year: 2005

The Bear’s Lair: Housing’s froth and bubble

Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan referred this week to “froth” in the U.S. housing market; others have debated whether it is a “bubble” at least on the two coasts. Whether froth or bubble, the secular rise in house prices over the last 5 years has made long term changes in American life, most of them for […]

The Bear’s Lair: Cracks in the euro zone

At the time the Euro was introduced in 1999, its opponents prophesied a dark future of increasing currency strains within the euro zone, as disparate economies struggled together in a single currency. Later, in 2002-03, the fears appeared to have been ill-founded, and the euro was hailed as a stunning success. However, today it seems […]

The Bear’s Lair: The African problem

Professor George Ayittey of American University presented his new book “Africa Unchained” at the Cato Institute last week, which demonstrates that Africa’s problems primarily result from that continent’s appalling political leadership. This view hasn’t been widely enough vented, and may provide the germ of a solution. I would however add a rider: the West is […]

The Bear’s Lair: The lights are going out

“The lights are going out all over Europe. We shall not see them lit again in our lifetime” famously intoned British Foreign Secretary Sir Edward Grey in the gathering dusk of August 4 1914 (there is now a fair consensus that Grey’s alliance with France and encirclement of Germany bore much of the responsibility for […]

The Bear’s Lair: Lashed by dragon tails

In ancient Chinese mythology, dragons live in the center of the earth, and when they awaken and shake their tails, earthquakes result. The Chinese economic dragon has very clearly awakened; dealing with the lashings of its tail will be no mean feat.

The Bear’s Lair: The bell tolls for thee!

They don’t ring a bell at the top of a bull market, goes the popular aphorism. Well, last week the U.S. stock market broke decisively through its 2005 lows and my advice to those with long positions is: seek not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee!

The Bear’s Lair: Do we want the Tories?

As Britain heads into a General Election May 5, the question naturally arises for supporters of the “Bear’s Lair” free market, sound economy approach: do we want the Tories (Britain’s “Conservative Party”) to win this time? It’s a surprisingly close call.

The Bear’s Lair: Education’s Gold Standard

As education policies in Britain, the United States and elsewhere focus attention and resources increasingly on “graduating” the lower half of the intellectual Bell Curve the private sector has produced a response that benefits its top quartile. The International Baccalaureate is increasingly becoming an international “Gold Standard” of education for the cognitive elite.

The Bear’s Lair: Beware of singularities

As the Fed raises interest rates quarter point by quarter point, the financial environment may seem to be changing little, but in reality it is becoming increasingly at risk of singularities, financial tornadoes that appear from a clear sky and produce economic devastation.