Despite all of the concerning news and potential black swans, I note in talking to a variety of people that they just assume Europe will muddle through, Spain and Greece will not be a major issue, and the US will also muddle thru. They completely ignore Iran, Syria, Egypt and the rest of that part of the world as though they could not even have any influence on America. While it is clear that finally the Europeans and the IMF are seeming to wake up, and are discussing some new, and possibly good solutions, they are far from solutions, and even if they do create a European FDIC, or some other Europe wide bank pool, or if they create some way to better integrate fiscal decision making, it will take time to make any real difference. As we have seen time and again, muddling along only exacerbates a crisis, and then fixing it is that much harder. Just look at the deficit in the US, the tax code mess, jobs and all the other issues that are not getting addressed for many years here. Now the US creeps nearer to a similar crisis to Europe. In short, this attitude of some of my friends to make believe and assume all will be OK is what the US did in World War I, World War II, and many other crisis situations. Eventually things explode and the bubble of happy thinking ignorance blows up in your face.
There are no magic bullets. Muddling along is not helpful to the US economy and so not helpful to US real estate values or financing. Muddling does not make new job growth. It is stagnation. That equals high unemployment and greater pressure on the middle class. It may mean low rates for a few years which is nice if you are a borrower, but I prefer to pay a little higher rate and have a good solid growth economy which drives up values. It seems pretty clear we are not going to have another Lehman in the US maybe for 20-30 years, but there will be more financial crisis. There always will be a new crisis, and there always has been since there was any form of money and lending. The major US banks are in good shape now, and will stay that way, even though making profits is getting much harder and will get even harder if the current regulatory bent continues. For small banks it is getting near impossible for them to make real profits and many are going away by merger or close down. Less liquidity for small business and homeowners in small cities and towns. Not good. A country’s standard of living only increases when the economy is growing and the middle class shares in that employment and income growth. It seems to me there are a lot of people with the view that somehow it will all work out. Well it will, but you need to be alive to enjoy it. In the interim muddling is very painful for most and does not make many people rich.