It is time to either panic or take advantage of opportunities; the real skill is in detecting the most appropriate moment to invest or play the liquidity card..
Ukrainian Nicolai Gogol (1809-1852) authored many books. Among them was Taras Bulba, an adventure novel with a Cossack protagonist, widely read by Spanish teenagers in the 1970s.
In Dead Souls, undoubtedly his best work, he wrote that "panic is more contagious than the plague and is communicated in an instant."
Stock market panics are as feared as they are legendary because they have caused — in exactly what proportion, no one knows — both dreadful ruin and sudden fortune. It is a matter of taking advantage of opportunities and being cool-headed. But undoubtedly and most important of all, it involves having no debts, the knot in the hangman's noose. Panics, moreover, are theoretically twofold, with the fears of either losing everything or missing an opportunity being foregone conclusions.
Currently on Wall Street in the U.S., but also in many markets — the European market, including Spain, is no exception — FOMO prevails: the fear of missing out, so named by Americans with their close-to-unhealthy obsession with acronyms. It is the fear of being left out of the party that will take place when the real recovery arrives. The problem is that the American stock market is still giving off alarm signals. On the other side of the Atlantic in the eurozone, inflation has shot up to 10.7%, almost unheard of since World War II, which for many is prehistory.
Today, Wednesday, the Federal Reserve — the central bank of the U.S. — is very likely to raise interest rates another 75 basis points. Everything indicates that in a few months the price of money will be around 5% there, which means that in the eurozone it will also rise again. It may be painful, but it is the long road to normality, because the price of money in the negative is a contradiction in terms.
On the other hand, it is also a time to either panic or to take advantage of opportunities, because as always everything is possible, with and without "FOMO." The real skill is in detecting the most suitable moment to invest or to play the liquidity card. Now they call panic "FOMO," and as Ukrainian Nicolai Gogol used to say, it is as contagious as it can be.
It is the "FOMO" in New York.
Es un momento para el pánico o para aprovechar las oportunidades y la verdadera habilidad es detectar el momento más adecuado para invertir o jugar la baza de la liquidez
Nicolai Gogol (1809-1852), nacido en Ucrania, autor entre otras cosas de Taras Bulba, una novela de aventuras con protagonista cosaco muy leÃda por los adolescentes españoles de los años setenta del siglo pasado, escribió en Almas Muertas –sin duda su mejor obra–, que «el pánico es más contagioso que la peste y se comunica en un instante».
Venezuela is likely to become another wasted crisis, resembling events that followed when the U.S. forced regime changes in Libya, Afghanistan and Iraq.
We are faced with a "scenario" in which Washington's exclusive and absolute dominance over the entire hemisphere, from Greenland and Canada in the north to the southern reaches of Argentina and Chile.
The message is unmistakable: there are no absolute guarantees and state sovereignty is conditional when it clashes with the interests of powerful states.
American consumers will face higher prices, increased inflation, fewer available goods, and a drain of money from the global economy due to these unnecessary taxes.