Yale’s Shiller Warns Of Major Global Correction

Somehow, I missed this story. Didn’t see it in the mainstream financial media, as it was probably deemed too gloom-and-doom to print. On November 18, ArabianBusiness.com talked about this year’s Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) Week. At the gathering, Robert Shiller, the Stanley B. Resor Professor of Economics at Yale University and author of the New York Times bestseller Irrational Exuberance, warned that a sharp downward correction is due in the global markets as real estate, stocks and energy soar to record highs. You may recall that in his bestselling book, Shiller waned that the U.S. stock market of the late nineties had become a bubble that would eventually pop. These past few years, he told anyone who would listen that the U.S. housing boom that came on the heels of the bust on Wall Street also shared the characteristics of a bubble.

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According to the website, Dr. Shiller told attendees that while emerging markets like China, India, and Brazil continue to grow, speculative “bubbles” are appearing in the global markets, which could pop and cause a major global recession. He explained:

Perhaps we have gotten a little too confident in the global economic growth. The problem is high oil, stock and real estate prices. I believe that a substantial part is speculative bubble thinking. We have gotten too confident of the prices in these markets.

The global credit crunch has curtailed the lending and borrowing frenzy that fueled price run-ups in energy, stocks, and real estate. As a result, the markets could face significant corrections ahead. Professor Shiller said, “The unwinding of these markets is the most serious risk facing these markets today.”

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