AUG
16
Important Lessons From the S&P Downgrade and Market Reaction.
By:

Lessons LearnedNot even a week after the S&P down­grade of Amer­i­can gov­ern­ment debt, and the finan­cial mar­ket reac­tion to it, and a very clear set of lessons for prep­pers is emerg­ing clear­ly. As the sce­nario unfolds more analy­sis can be applied and more con­clu­sions drawn. But right now there are a few lessons that are glar­ingand need to be dis­cussed.

Tim­ing

Notice the tim­ing of this event. That is, it is not by acci­dent or coin­ci­dence that S&P made its announce­ment on Fri­day evening long after the mar­kets closed for the week and most Amer­i­cans have start­ed their sum­mer week­end get-aways.

By the time the announce­ment was made there was lit­tle chance for peo­ple to go to their bank and make big cash with­drawals (though I’m sure many ATM’s were emp­tied over the week­end). Or call their mutu­al fund or stock bro­ker and cry “Sell! SELL! SELL!

By the time Mon­day morn­ing rolled around and the banks and mar­kets opened, the bankers and bro­kers and mar­ket movers and shak­ers and gov­ern­ment pol­i­cy wonks had a whole week­end to think this through and come up with their own strate­gies and respons­es. They already decid­ed what trades to make, what con­trols or pol­i­cy changes to imple­ment, what their con­tin­gency plans were if this or that hap­pened next, etc.

For them it was a smart move. Deci­sions made in haste are rarely good ones. Try­ing to man­age a sit­u­a­tion to keep it from becom­ing too much a pub­lic pan­ic. Not an unrea­son­able goal.

But the les­son here is the tim­ing .

The next time there is a major eco­nom­ic events (and there will be anoth­er major event – That I will bet the farm on!) if the pow­ers that be have any con­trol over it, the event will hap­pen over a week­end. You won’t be able to go to the bank or your bro­ker or mutu­al fund for a with­draw­al (or at least be very lim­it­ed).  This also includes vault ser­vices. If banks are closed (a declared emer­gency “bank hol­i­day”) access to your doc­u­ments in the bank vault won’t be avail­able.

 

Speed

Take notice of the rate of change that events unfold­ed from the start of the S&P announce­ment. The fact as men­tioned above that it hap­pened on a Fri­day night helped slow the rate. But once the world came back to work on Mon­day events took of at over­drive speed off the start­ing line.

If this event hap­pened mid-week or even just mid-day the rate of esca­la­tion could have been at warp speed. That means you abil­i­ty to respond, even if you are total­ly planned and ready at a moment’s notice, is cut that much short­er. More­over, you (and prob­a­bly the major­i­ty of the unpre­pared pub­lic) will be in “shock & aw” over the rate of event change.

This means that when the next eco­nom­ic event comes you will notsee it com­ing and will lit­er­al­ly hit you from out of the blue. And you have to quick­ly over­come the shock of the event, even to take advan­tage of their shock paral­y­sis to pur­chase extra sup­plies, go to the bank and oth­er insti­tu­tions you need to col­lect, even evac­u­ate if you feel nec­es­sary.

 

Wake Up Call

The events of the past week are like­ly not the piv­otal moment of col­lapse. (Then again, what do I know?!)   If this is all that hap­pens the nation will sur­vive. Black&blue but it will sur­vive and clean­ing up the mess for a gen­er­a­tion to come at least. But will go on.

But if this is the piv­otal moment, the sin­gu­lar event that peo­ple will look back on and say was the start­ing moment of the eco­nom­ic col­lapse, then time is tick­et­ing down fast.

If you believe as I do then take this week’s events as moti­va­tion to renew your efforts for prep­ping .

If you believe but haven’t start­ed prep­ping then take this as your kick-in-the-ass to get up and get start­ed.

I think the alarm clock has been heard by more peo­ple than you think. I hope so.

 

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4
COMMENTS
By: MasterPo
aug
17

More and more the D‑word (Depression) is being used in the media.

That can go both ways:

a) It can be a final recognition of how bad things really are.

or

b) Some kind of long-shot strategy to make people *think* things are really bad then next year when the elections really heat up things start getting better and you-know-who gets the credit.

By: suburban
aug
16

In reply to Arsenius the Hermit .

Sorry about the Captcha thing… WAY too many spammers that clog the system up without it… Appreciate the comment, however! 🙂

By: Arsenius the Hermit

Man, this captcha thing is a b**ch! I can’t really make out the numbers and if I get them wrong it deletes my comment and I have to start over. >;(

Well, what I hope will post is that I look at that imbroglio last week as just another “leading indicator” of disaster on the horizon. I can’t lose much, I already lost a bundle in 2008 and I’ve made other arrangements since then. Still, I’m not naive enough to think if the economy tanks permanently or we go to “Grapes of Wrath II” it isn’t going to effect me.

By: millenniumfly
aug
16

Each time I turn on the new is motivation to prep. Thanks for the wake-up call.

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