One of the analysts who predicted the current economic crisis doesn’t think we’re out of it yet:
The man who predicted the current financial crisis said the US recession could drag on for years without drastic action.
Among his solutions: fix the housing market by breaking “every mortgage contract.”
“We are in the 15th month of a recession,” said Nouriel Roubini, a professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business, told CNBC in a live interview. “Growth is going to be close to zero and unemployment rate well above 10 percent into next year.”
Echoing a speech he made earlier in the day, Roubini said he sees “no hope for the recession ending in 2009 and will more than likely last into 2010.”
(…)
“We could end up … with a 36-month recession, that could be “L-shaped stagnation, or near depression,” Roubini said. He puts the chance of a severe U-shaped recession at 66.7 percent, and a less severe L-shaped recession at 33.3 percent.
(…)
Finally, while he says there will be “a light at the end of the tunnel”, it’ll probably get worse before it gets better. Those who believe in a second half recovery this year “are delusional” he says.
In fact, based on Roubini’s calculations, we could conceivably see the S&P 500 at 500, the Dow at 5000.
Basically, Roubini thinks we’re looking at a replay of what Japan went through in the 1990s, and it took them a decade to recover from that.
Here’s the video:

Professor Roubini said much the same thing in a Forbes op-ed he wrote. He stated:
“… while this crisis does not imply the end of market-economy capitalism, it has shown the failure of a particular model of capitalism. Namely, the laissez-faire, unregulated (or aggressively deregulated), Wild West model of free market capitalism with lack of prudential regulation, supervision of financial markets and proper provision of public goods by governments.”
He may be right about what we’re going to see in the near-term, but I’m not convinced he accurately knows why.