I
have found this commentary that will help with your fears about the
current stock market conditions. Did you know I am a financial
planner? My clients are mostly in Michigan and I go there every 6
weeks to see them. My newest clients have mostly been stamp
collectors in Arizona.
Of Fires That Burn Out
On October 17, 2008 those who can even remember it will mark the twentieth
anniversary of the day the great Yellowstone fire was contained.
The summer of 1988 would turn out to be Yellowstone National Park's driest in
recorded history. But there was no way of knowing that in advance, as seasonal,
lightning-sparked fires broke out in May, and burned into June. More storms in
July brought more lightning; the fires spread and intensified.
Still, it wasn't until late July - when some four thousand people had to be
evacuated from Grant Village, a collection of lodges, restaurants and a visitor
center - that the nation's attention became riveted on Yellowstone. Hundreds of
reporters descended on the park, as more than 25,000 firefighters fought the
spreading blazes.
On August 20, which came to be known as Black Saturday, winds of up to eighty
miles per hour doubled the size of the fire to 750 square miles, and on
September 7 the historic Old Faithful Inn had to be evacuated. (It was saved
essentially by a sprinkler system installed just the prior year.) Four days
later the rains came, and by October 17, the fires were under control. In all,
1,875 square miles burned out - something like a third of the park -- in what
was universally regarded as an ecological disaster of epic proportions, perhaps
the greatest in American history.
No fewer than three separate Congressional hearings were held to review fire
management policies at Yellowstone and on other public lands, and the National
Park Service was pilloried for an alleged "let it burn" strategy - a
policy it had in fact never maintained.
Today, as the leaves begin to turn again in Yellowstone, you will find it a
renewed paradise. Trees have taken root everywhere among the burnt logs that
litter the forest floor. The fires, it seems, cleared out the overgrown forest
canopies, allowing new plants to bloom. Bird and animal life flourishes. And
people who know and love the park say that it's greener than they've ever seen
it. The fires weren't an ecological disaster at all; they were nature's way of
cleaning out and renewing one of the most beautiful places in America.
This autumn, we find ourselves in the later stages of a great credit
conflagration. Hordes of catastrophists on cable and the Internet decry an
unprecedented disaster burning out of control and engulfing one great financial
institution after another. In their view, the fire is beyond the capacity of
nature and man, is constantly getting worse, and will surely end in the
long-term destruction of the financial system.
It will do nothing of the kind, any more than the Yellowstone fire of 1988 did.
Nothing that is occurring today is unprecedented - though it may be happening
on a larger scale - and nothing is unnatural. This is nature's way of cleaning
out the rot. And it will lead to a healthy renewal of the global financial
system in ways that today's doomsayers cannot even imagine.
Between 2000 and 2002, the world unwound the greatest equity market bubble of
all time. Last year and this, we have been unwinding the greatest credit bubble
of all time. These are horrific processes as one goes through them, but it is
useful to remember that they burn out - that the rains do come again, even
after the driest summer, and that, as John Kennedy said, no human problem is
beyond the capacity of human beings.
While waiting for the rains, it will be useful to ask oneself: if this is an
unprecedented long-term destruction of the financial system, why does the
equity market refuse to burn down?
From its false dawn last October, the broad equity market declined about 24%
peak-to-trough through the close on September 15, 2008. A 24% decline over
nearly a year is hardly a walk in the (national) park, but neither is it an
indicator of Armageddon. Indeed, the October before the great Yellowstone
conflagration, the equity market went down nearly that much between a sunup and
a sunset. (This event, too, sparked any number of equally spurious
Congressional investigations, to equally negligible effect.) But as the leaves
turn yet again - even in this season of despair - the equity market stands
nearly five times higher than it did that evening.
Perhaps it's time to turn the television off, and to make a weekend of it in
Yellowstone. At the very least, this exercise might restore some very important
long-term perspective.
But be sure to pack your slicker and boots. The rains are coming.