Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,058
Many many bulls talked ridiculous nonsense that was both off the top and factually incorrect, yet this is never used as a reason not to be bullish on property.
I pay little or no attention to anyone who speaks or writes in a sensationalist manner. It doesn't matter what they are saying. Whether they are bullish or bearish. Whether they are suggesting building houses or knocking down houses. Whether they are supporting socialism or supporting capitalism.I don't get this point. What difference does the language make if the point is correct?
The analogy of setting fire to 1.5 Billion is a good one I feel. Realistic or not that is what it feels like to most of us
Because you're the only one bothered by that comment?An interesting profile of Morgan Kelly in today's [broken link removed]
They list his quotes, but not the one about burning €1.5bn in St Stephen's Green.
Brendan
An interesting profile of Morgan Kelly in today's [broken link removed]
They list his quotes, but not the one about burning €1.5bn in St Stephen's Green.
Brendan
More sensational stuff from Morgan Kelly in yesterday's Irish Times:
[broken link removed]
Apparently we are going to be demolishing houses now instead of building them.
But I suppose it gets headlines.
I suspect if we were to look objectively at people's analysis over the last 4 years or so and fact-check it for accuracy and perception, Prof Kelly would be No 1 on the list of commentators. Honourable mentions would go to David MacWilliams, Alan Aherne, Constantin Gurgdiev, Brian Lucey
The spoofers who insisted that Irish banks were well-capitalised and well-regulated, that the fundamentals of the economy were sound, and who roundly criticised Prof Kelly and his ilk were proved horribly incorrect.
Really?
[broken link removed]
I am sure I could track down stories from the others if I had the time.
I also hate this 'I told you so attitude' and think it is pointless. Morgan Kelly might have been right about the property bubble. He could be completly wrong about NAMA and Anglo. Who knows.
I know a fund manager who called the tech bubble correctly but was actually advising people to buy Lehman Brother shares a week before they collapsed.
interesting that you link to an article where Lucey - shock, horror - admits he was wrong about something. Some other people could do with a dose of the same humility.
It's hardly 'pointless' to credit people for correct analysis and to discredit people for incorrect analysis - which group would you rather take advice from?
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