NYT: Misplaced Anti-Bear Snark

By Paul Kedrosky · Monday, January 21, 2008 ·

Somewhat snarky piece in the NY Times Dealbook late today pointing to the speaking presence of two well-known market bears at Davos this year. Both Morgan Stanley's Stephen Roach and my friend Nouriel Roubini are there, which the NYT can't seemingly help offering (via unsourced snark) is another sign that if you are bearish long enough you will eventually be right.

While I admittedly skew bullish, I think that's giving both Roach and Roubini short shrift. They're both thoughtful guys, and while both were early on this recession call, there was much bears could learn from their arguments and data, especially from Roubini's housing/credit take. Dismissing it so blithely strikes me as further sign we have more to fall.

Roubini, always marshaling the latest statistics on his blog in the name of recession, stagflation, or some combination thereof, has argued for some time that the United States is headed for a recession.

Roach, speaking mostly through the press, which he has consistently furnished with lively quotations, has consistently warned about the dangers posed by American consumers, who drew on rising home prices to finance a buying spree with little precedent in economic history.

Of course, as other economists are inclined to point out, if you predict disaster for long enough, the odds are that it will eventually come to pass, and make you look like a seer. And get you some attention in Davos.

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