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#375 | |
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A Sunny Moo
Aug 2007
USA (GMT-5)
3·2,083 Posts |
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#376 |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
7×137 Posts |
Ewmayer, please look at the date you bought those 1/3 silver nickels and the dollar amount you spent. Now tell us if you had put the same dollars in a bank CD earning 5%, how much money would you have today vs the metal value of your coins.
While I agree that the laws Phil Gramm sponsored were a factor in today's brouhaha, I would be far more likely to place blame on greedy mortgage lenders who made the loans. The legislation enabled securitization of mortgages which in and of itself is not a bad thing. The lenders who misused the law have far more responsibility in my opinion. You might argue who has more responsibility, the person who opened the barn door, or the person who led the horse out. Not defending Gramm btw, just interested in your response to my effort at helping some blackbirds come home to roost. DarJones |
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#377 |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Luckily, the original receipt was still in the box with the bulk bag-o-nickels ... cost was 4x face value [including shipping], this was in 1995. You do the math.
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#378 | ||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Record 2008 deficit - Bush Administration official: A budget deficit headed to $490 billion, as revealed by top Bush administration official, would easily overtake 2004 record.
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FDIC shutters two more regional banks Quote:
Bloomberg | Lehman Hit by Biggest Rise in Debt Yields Since 2000 Quote:
Also, "Business model of acquiring assets with borrowed money" - that neatly sums up the current mortgage crisis as well as Wall Street's business model, doesn't it? There is of course no inherent problem with borrowing to acquire assets, as long as the assets are fairly valued and the borrowing costs are reasonably well-correlated with the risk of default by the borrower. The latter is where the Fed's decade-long easy-money policy comes into play. That the assets either produce added value [e.g. a growing business borrowing money to fund an expansion in capacity] or appreciate in value at a rate at least as great as the borrowing cost is also crucial. That's where the "hosuing will always go up" myth enters into the equation. National Australia Bank writes down 90% of US AAA CDOs Quote:
And lastly, our insanely popular chart-of-the-day segment - This one is whimsically titled "Ascending delta function*": Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-07-28 at 20:07 Reason: * [Yah, yah, I know it's really not a function, but rather a "distribution." But you can't expect the modern-art-buying crowd to know that.] |
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#379 | ||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
170148 Posts |
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Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2008-07-28 at 20:05 |
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#380 | ||||||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
2D7F16 Posts |
McCain's son resigns from Silver State Bank board
Another one of those "In great shape! All is well! Business as usual! Nothing to see here, folks!" Arizona banks. [See my post of yesterday]. Given McCain Sr's role in the 1980s S&L crisis, it seems that once again, the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. [Heh - one of Mish's readers refers to Daddy McC as "McCain't". But I digress...] Merrill Sells $8.55 Billion of Stock, Unloads Money-Losing CDOs Quote:
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MER shares are [or at least briefly were] *up* on all this fabulous news - only on Wall Street... I honestly don't know why we see this pattern over and over, bank/brokerage takes huge writedown, issues dilutive share offering in desperate attempt to raise cash, stock goes up. I don't know if it's a form of mass-market delusional "worst is surely over!" psychology, or a set of organized short squeezes, which force a brief [but often quite fierce] short-covering rally, which then allows the insiders to dump their shares at a better price than market would dictate. Then the slide inevitably resumes, and the delusional fools who bought the covering rally are left holding the bag. Interestingly, Wall Street Big Finance may be shooting itself in the foot by getting the SEC to restrict naked short selling of the Group of 19 "special" financial firms - if the ban on naked shorting proves effective [which is dubious, but possible], that would mean no more short-covering rallies for the insiders to exploit in this way. Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-07-31 at 15:28 Reason: Added Seekingalpha "Through the Looking Glass" link |
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#381 | |||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Bennigan's Restaurants File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, Face Liquidation
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We should start a "chain restaurant dead pool" to try to predict which MASS BARF chain will go bloated-belly-up next. Will it be Chili's? Applebee's? Hobee's? Olive Garden? Outback Steakhouse? Red Lobster? Bombay Bicycle Club? Ponderosa Steakhouse? TJ's? Cheesecake Factory? Where will we Americans go to find our four-thousand-calorie meals in the coming years? Dear me, this looks dire indeed. Speaking of unemployment, Paul Krugman has an interesting chart which exposes a classic Republican econo-myth: Annual rates of employment growth, by president And reader comment #8 to that exposes a second such myth: Quote:
The Wall Street Examiner's Russ Winter has an interesting little history lesson pertinent to the current "profits are private, losses are socialized" spate of government bailouts of financial and mortgage firms: A Modern Day Alexander Hamilton Quote:
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#382 | ||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
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#383 |
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6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
231648 Posts |
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#384 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
But different-themed fat-bomb-a-rama crapFood.
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And hard on the heels of Bennigan's... Mervyns files for bankruptcy: The retailer files for Chapter 11 protection; its stores will remain open as the company reorganizes. Note that in Mervyns case, it's Chapter 11, i.e. a reorganization attempt, versus Bennigan's Chapter 7 liquidation. I'd better hit the Cupertino store in the next few days to see if I can order a couple dozen of my favorite style of their High Sierra jeans [which are really quite good for the price], just in case the reorg fails to stave off an eventual Chapter 7. Of course that would require me to keep my waistline constant in the years to come, but with the ever-dwindling number of MASS BARF purveyors, that should be easier to do. [Lucky for me I seem to have a genetic aversion to fast food, so the fact that Mickey Dee's is doing quite well during this economic downturn isn't a worry.] Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2008-07-29 at 22:22 |
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#385 |
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A Sunny Moo
Aug 2007
USA (GMT-5)
186916 Posts |
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