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11/23 |
2013/8/29-11/7 [Finance/Banking] UID:54734 Activity:nil |
8/29 Applying for a home loan now. The loan officer keeps asking why I wrote large amounts of check, and what they're for, and fax her proof to support what I said. She said loan regulations have tightened a lot to prevent money laundry. What is the max amount of money I can transfer these days without triggering annoying audits? I am not a terrorist. \_ Banks have to file a SAR for any amount over $10k. \_ What if I do a couple of $10k a day? Is that ok? \_ Not only will that still trigger the reporting, it's illegal. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structuring \_ Just do 10k/day \_ See above: this is illegal, and also probably won't work. \_ How about bitcoins? \_ Does that include transferring between accounts owned by my and/or my wife, all of which in US institutions? \_ from the aspect of loan approval, they just want to make sure you aren't playing funny games like making private unreported loans or trying to artificially increase your apparent assets by shuffling money around. |
11/23 |
2013/5/13-7/3 [Finance/Banking] UID:54676 Activity:nil |
5/13 Does FDIC ever matter? How likely is it that your deposit of over $250k going to be screwed over in a major US bank? \_ Was Washington Mutual a major bank? \_ Was Washington Mutual a major US bank? \_ Hahahahahahahahahahaha. Good one. \- As with nuclear weapons, this insurance produces much of its value just by existing rather than being used. FDIC insurance is largely to prevent bank runs. Note also the FDIC supervises/assists with healthy banks taking over ailing banks. There is a really funny THIS AMERICAN LIFE on this. As for history, read about the 1980s Savings and Loan crisis. Small banks tank all the time. --psb \_ k thx. so if I have 2 accounts of ~= value at the same bank, I have double the FDIC coverage? \- if you have more than $250k in a single bank, you probably should not be getting financial advice from me/motd, but unless things have changed recently, the limit is per person + per bank + per "account class" ... the last is not totally intuitive. a personal saving/checking account are the same account class, but your IRA is a different class. so $200k CD + $200k savings = $250k cap. $200k IRA + $100k checking = $300k coverage. i dont know all the nuances about this ... like how spouses are treated (this may get weird if you are a homosexual due to state law varying on gay marriage) everything in the vague category of individual demand account etc. --psb \- hmm, apparently spouses are not treated specially ... the special treatment applies to real persons, so not fictious persons like corporations ... or things like estates ... so the situation may change if the person you shared the account with dies. --psb \_ thank you psb, it is extremely helpful! \_ !psb --psb #1 fan, hoping for a comeback |
2013/3/9-4/16 [Finance/Banking] UID:54621 Activity:nil |
3/9 In a 15/30 year loan, the amount of payment stays the same but the payment on interest decreases while the principal increases. Suppose I decide to pay off a huge chunk of principal, will the amount of interest I need to pay decrease drastically, or do banks still want to take out a huge chunk of interest rate? \_ You don't actually have separate "interest" and "principal"; you just have a balance. Every month your balance goes up because they charge you interest (a percentage of your current balance), and it goes down when you make payments. So yes, if you make a big payment, your balance will go down and they'll be adding less interest each month. \_ This is not entirely true. When you make extra payments, or when you make a bigger payment than the usual amount, you should specify that the extra money should be applied to the principal. Otherwise, the bank is free to interpret that you intend to apply it to either the principal or the interest, and most banks Otherwise, the bank is free to interpret whether you intend to apply it to the principal or the interest, and most banks will apply it to the interest since it is to their advantage. The difference is that: when you apply it to the principal, your remaining principal (i.e. "balance") goes down and the bank will charge you less interest. When you apply it to the interest, your remaining principal remains the same and the bank will charge your the same interest, and you're just paying your next month's or next-next month's interest extra early. \_ Wait, really? You're saying when I send the bank a big check, instead of crediting it to my account (which would reduce my balance), they might just hold it in limbo and credit it months later? How is that legal? I guess I'm glad my bank doesn't do that. \_ I tried paying off a HELOC (it was only $15K). I owned something like $12312, so I wired in $12312. The next month I still got a principal to pay and I was like, WTF? It turns out that they put in $12112 into principle and then put in ~$200 into next month's interest rate, and when time comes to pay, I still owe them principal! FUCKING sneaky Bank of America. \_ No, they will cash it and credit it to your mortgage account right away. But they will consider it an early interest payment instead of a principal payment unless you specify that it's a payment towards the principal (e.g. by checking a checkbox on your payment stub, or by writing "payment towards principal" on your check.) If you use automatic payment, you'll need to specify that in the automatic payment authorization form. \_ Wow, that's pretty sleazy. Thanks for the explanation. \_ This is an amortized loan. If you pay off principal then you will pay your loan off faster but your payment is fixed. I am not really sure what your question is. \_ What do you mean by "your payment is fixed"? You can pay as much as you want each month (above the minimum), and if you make big payments, you'll end up paying less in total. (Banks hate this, which is why they sometimes have prepayment penalties.) \_ i think the op means "the minimum is fixed" -!op |
2013/3/6-4/16 [Finance/Banking] UID:54620 Activity:nil |
3/6 When I first joined my company, I got a sign-in bonus which was deposited into my savings account the first month. I also got my moving fees reimbursed, which was also deposited into my savings account a few months later. However, neither entries show up on W2 or any other official records (not even ADP). I asked my boss if I should talk to someone about this, and he said "don't worry about it, it's all good." Is it normal for companies to make deposits without them showing up on any records? Should I be worried? Is this common or legal? \_ Ask an accountant. You are probably required to report them on your taxes. \_ Ask an accountant. You are probably required to report them on your taxes. \_ When I need a job done, I go to Home Depot and pick up a bunch of amigos. At the end of the day, I pay cash. I have no idea if they report their earnings. The question of legality is moot if there is no accountability in our financial system. |
2011/11/27-2012/1/10 [Finance/Banking] UID:54243 Activity:nil |
11/27 Whoa, since when did FDIC coverage go up to $250,000? That's cool. So is this coverage per customer per bank, per account per bank, total per person, etc? \_ I believe that it is per customer per bank. Not 100% sure though. \_ Yes, and you can get even more with joint accounts, etc.: http://www.fdic.gov/deposit/deposits/dis/index.html But if any of this matters to you, you can probably afford better financial advice than the motd. \_ $250,000 is not a lot of money these days. \_ To the 99% is still is. |
2011/11/12-30 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:54225 Activity:nil |
12/12 What percent are you? http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2011/10/19/what-percent-are-you \_ A newer article on the same site: "The Myth of 'Record-High' Inequality" http://www.csua.org/u/uqd (blogs.wsj.com) "But by the latest measures, inequality is actually lower than it was four years ago, and well below its recent highs." |
2010/1/27-2/8 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:53669 Activity:low |
1/27 Fear the Boom and Bust, Keynes & Hayek http://econstories.tv/home.html Simply awesome \_ "Free market sucks, SOCIALISM RULES!" -general message \_ So you didn't watch the second half? \_ link:www.csua.org/u/q0s all I needed to see. \_ That is a bizarre non-sequitor. \_ I read "Bust" and "Hayek" and I thought it's about something else. |
2009/11/21-30 [Finance/Banking] UID:53538 Activity:moderate |
11/21 I'm trying to figure out how much I save. Does money I contribute to debt (student loans and car loan) considered money I "save"? \_ "I'm trying to figure out how healthy I am. I normally smoke 2 packs a day but now I've cut it down to just 1 pack a day. Does the reduction count towards health that I hope to 'gain'?" \_ When you have more going into a bank/CD/investment than what you spend, then you're saving. If you pay just the minimum fee (interest only) and put that extra cash into an investment that earns more than the interest rate, then you're saving even more! Obviously, it's not easy to find an investment that 1) earns more than the interest rate and 2) is stable/consistent/predictable. So if you're not confident that you can use that extra $$$ to earn a higher rate than the interest rate, then paying the principle will reduce your loan. You are in essense saving as much as you can. \_ WTF? Fuck no. I can't believe I'm hearing this. You have asset, and you have liability. Your loan is your liability. So is taking a mortgage even if it's worth a lot. When you pay off some principle, you are decreasing your liability. People who have a lot of cool shit aren't rich. They usually have a lot of liability. The more liability/asset ratio you have, the less likely you'll save due to having to pay off interests. In another word, if you have a bunch of loans (car, student, house, etc), you are in debt. You are POOR, and trying to get by your life by trying to decrease your debt. If the loan rate is significantly higher than say, CDs, then it's usually a better strategy to maximize paying off your car loan + student loans than trying to put them in CDs. In another word, by taking loans esp. on items that have no room for appreciation (cars, boats, etc), then your are throwing away money. You are poor. \_ That was hilarious, thanks! Btw, my student loans aren't cool shit. All I got for it was attendance at Cal, which in the end just got me an account on this server, putting me in touch with a complete poser like you. \_ I have asset. You have debt. Enuff said. -poser \_ Your English language comprehension ability has been rated as: pathetic. \_ My mother spends a lot of frivolous things. She goes to high end stores, looks at the price (let's say, $1000), then goes to the lower end stores and buys a bunch of things (let's say $200). Then she rationalizes that she just saved $800. This is the exact reason why uneducated women are stupid and cause the whole family finance to go down. I vowed to never marry someone like my mother. I'm tired of paying off her loans. \_ you're an idiot. \- You're a dick and an idiot. -!pp \_ I'm on the same boat, except that it's both of my parents instead of my mom alone who are like this. \_ moral of the story: don't marry into a good looking but very white/bimbo/trash family \_ my mother just called me to borrow money, but IT'S OKAY! "My adjustable rate just went down and I'll save some money 1 "My adjustable rate just went down and I'll save some money so everything will be fine!" Someone PLEASE kill me. \_ I think he is "saving". Saving is a concept from analyzing your cash flow. If you have more income than spending, you are "saving". How that flows to your balance sheet, by paying off debt or accumulating assets, is a separate issue. |
2009/9/29-10/8 [Finance/Banking, Industry/Jobs, Industry/Startup] UID:53412 Activity:moderate |
9/29 So let's say I have some money, about $100k. What are some things I could do with it? What do you guys recommend? \_ Hookers and blow \_ Guns, ammo, MREs, to prepare for the coming apocalypse! \_ I am thinking about buying some gold. \_ Gold is a bad idea right now. The inflation hedge is already factored into the price. There are other assets that are also a good inflation hedge that aren't in a bubble. Such as real estate. (The bubble there having just burst.) \_ quit your job, move back home, and do your own startup. Realize that the sooner you stop working for DA MAN, the less likely you'll run into mid-life crisis in your 30s. \_ I would like to start my own business, but probably not a startup. \_ So, like, restaurant would be in your opinion your own business, but not a startup? A startup doesn't necessarily mean a TECH company less than 100 person. \_ Let's say I bought a McDonalds franchise, would that be a startup? \_ uh, no. If you don't know and don't care, it's better than you stick to working for THE MAN. \_ What? \_ Wait a couple more months, then use it as down payment for a rental property. \_ This is on the short list. \_ Keep it in a savings account as a contingency fund and for a down payment for the next time you sell and buy a house? |
2009/5/19-26 [Finance/Banking] UID:53014 Activity:nil |
5/18 What's a good bank with decent interest rate for savings or MM? I'm looking for something that's not too inconvenient (with tellers within 20 miles of major cities) and with higher interest rates than BofA and Wells Fargo. \_ Isn't there a canonical approach to keep a small amount of money ~$1000 in a large bank with prevalent ATMs and keep the bulk of savings in a bank with nice interest rates and you can just transfer back and forth as needed? I have it all in a BofA account right now, but I don't have a lot of money so that makes things easier. Just pick any bank with nice interest rates and online tools for money management and you should be set. -mrauser \_ i think the problem is there aren't any decent banks with decent interest rates |
2009/5/8-14 [Finance/Banking] UID:52969 Activity:nil |
5/7 Does Goldman Sach's really rule the world? http://tinyurl.com/c67jdu |
2009/4/9-13 [Finance/Banking] UID:52830 Activity:moderate |
4/9 Wife and I have about $5000 combined savings. We're poor. What's a decent checking or savings account to open? \_ http://gmacbank.com is a pretty good value. \_ http://gmacbank.com is a pretty good value. they almost always pay a pretty competitive rate. one of the account types offers limited check-writing and ATM fee reimbursements. the other doesn't, but pays a higher rate. i have both, and just transfer funds as needed. their website is decent and no-nonsense. the only thing i don't really like is the lack of electronic statements. \_ A credit union. They don't do stupid things like buy Credit Swaps, so your money is safe. I like Patelco. \_ I'm a Patelco member. Know why? My credit union went belly up and Patelco ended up with the corpse. \_ Your money is pretty safe anyway as long as it's federally insured. A lot of credit unions have pretty crappy rates. |
2009/4/3-5 [Finance/Banking, Politics/Domestic/California] UID:52791 Activity:nil |
4/3 LA homes are affordable again! 500K -> 200K. LA is where your American Dream comes true! http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/04/02/foreclosure.dream.homes/index.html |
2009/3/19-23 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52730 Activity:kinda low |
3/19 Can someone explain how this does not end up as Weimar or Zimbabwe? http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/03/18/business/fed.php \_ Because hyperinflation is not the same as inflation. The idea is to create some inflation to fight the deflationary trend. (Note: this scares me too, but let's not unrealistic Chicken (Note: this scares me too, but let's not be unrealistic Chicken Littles) \_ I realize the plan is to create an inflationary trend to prevent deflation. However, this seems to me to be flapping our arms to avoid hitting the ground. -op \_ The alternative being? \_ A different analogy. -op \_ Because the total money supply (credit plus currency) is currently contracting and this extra $1T is less than the amount of credit that has been withdrawn from the economy. \_ The Jan & Feb CPI updates both say that inflation is occurring, after 6 months of deflation. How do we know when enough money has been injected vs. not enough? -op \_ That is a good question, but I am sure the Fed has an answer. Probably when the inflation rate is "high enough" which is at least 2%/yr, probably more like 3-4%. There is a risk of overshoot, of course, but the deflationary forces are so strong worldwide, worrying about hyperinflation is pretty silly, imho. The BOE, BOJ and EU banks are all doing the same thing, btw. |
2009/2/20-22 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52613 Activity:high |
2/20 Interview with Peter Schiff (economics, 2008) http://blog.mises.org/archives/008039.asp \_ gee, a government-is-evil site has an interview with a government-is-evil guy. how useful. -tom \_ How's that hedge fund going Petie? OOOOPS. \_ Peter wants to go back to the Gold Standard. I agree with that. \_ You mean you agree with Mr. My Hedgefund Completely Imploded? Yeah, he sure seems like a *smart* guy. \_ You can be right about some things and wrong about others. You can also be right but get the timeframe wrong. Hedge funds make bets that are inherently uncertain. \_ He was a consistent bear from 2002 until now, so he was dead wrong for five years. A stopped clock is right twice a day. -tom \_ One could correctly recognize the dot com bubble, oil bubble, and housing bubble. It's much tougher to know when it would pop, and what the world reaction would be. \_ Exactly. I thought <DEAD>dot.com<DEAD>s were overpriced and yet they kept going up and up and up! Eventually, I was proven right but the devil is in the details. \_ Well, I guess that justifies being a fringey Austrian econonomics nutcase. \_ Peter Shiff Was Wrong http://tinyurl.com/ca3gkr (Mish's blog) \_ Yeah, basically, Schiff was wrong about just about everything. |
2009/2/19-25 [Finance/Banking, Politics/Foreign] UID:52607 Activity:nil |
2/19 I believe in the latest edition of dictionaries, next to the definition of "batshit insane" there is a picture of Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-obviously): http://tinyurl.com/btd698 "We're Running Out Of Rich People In This Country" |
2009/2/19-25 [Finance/Banking] UID:52601 Activity:nil |
2/19 http://freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/02/18/let-the-human-capital-exodus-begin \_ Suppose you are a damn good executive. Someone gives you the chance to come in to a ailing firm that has a long history and some serious pluses going for it. If you manage to turn things around in a 5-10 year time frame you will be heralded as a brilliant mind and even the elite will treat you like royalty. Would you walk away from that oppertunity because you will "only" get 500k a year until things get better? If so I don't think you are the kind of person that these companies need right now. (why the fuck did you delete this?) \_ The words banking, innovation, talent, used together is nothing but an oxymoron. Give me a break. We used to think that energy derivatives was a brilliant idea. Ditto with 0% down 0% interest loan. Yeah, we made TONS of money because of 0% down 0% interest, it's such an innovative financial product! WHOOPY!!! \_ Finding new ways to use renewable energy = innovation. Finding new ways to make money by giving out unsound and unsustainable loans = innvation? Give me a fucking break. \_ I think the post above is agreeing with the three comments above. |
2009/2/19-25 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52599 Activity:moderate |
2/19 "There is no scenario under which you would claim the government was not involved ... -tom" \_ Apparently there is no scenario under which you would agree government policy has a hand in creating financial crises. My point isn't about getting rid of the government itself but the banking system supported by governments around the world. These crises keep happening around the world and yet people always find something to blame except the actual system. It's like building your house next to a flood zone and then blaming the rain when your house inevitably gets trashed. On the surface, you can blame banks in these crises because we always get these situations where banks create massive amounts of debt based on overvalued assets. This is natural because greed is natural. The problem is a) they are shielded from the consequences and b) the govt-sanctioned system allows them to pyramid debt upon debt in a tremendous explosion of newly created money, and a tremendous skewing of the economy's fundamentals (trade balances, capital allocation). In a conservative system (not talking GOP or Dems here) a series of failures would simply not be able to cause such deep problems. After you unwound the failures then you'd still have the same basic money supply in the economy. With the current system, you are putting an impossible regulation task onto the government. The current crisis is really an extension of problems that have been building up for decades. In the latest episode the Fed kept interest rates too low for too long. \_ Not a "conservative system", a "free market system". The free market cannot work unless there's profit AND loss. Oh, and the government shouldn't tell the companies to do something unprofitable and then blame them for it. \_ http://tinyurl.com/c83pfd (The Economist) Your lefty fellow travelers over at The Economist don't seem to agree. Financial crises are as old as capitalism. \_ That article doesn't even touch on the issue of the banking system itself. It's mostly ignored by all mainstream sources as if it must be, always has been, and always will. There's no proof that this credit expansion system is really a benefit. This isn't really a left/right issue either. The only people who talk about this kind of thing are, I guess, libertarians. \_ What are you talking about? Every macro econ class talks about money supply. Read Chapter 13 of Keynes General about money supply. Read Chapter 17 of Keynes General Theory for the first modern discussion of it, but so did Friedman, Von Mises, Krugman, all the greats. It might be true that libertarians (and their fellow travellers, the Austrians) are the only ones who seriously consider that fiat money and franctional lending are a bad idea. Do you notice that no one in the world is on the gold standard? That is because it is a crappy way to run an economy, full of booms and busts far worse than what we are experiencing today. \_ There's no evidence it's a crappy way to run an economy. The real reason is very simple. Government inflation of the currency is a hidden tax on holders of money. Govts used this repeatedly in times of war, though they usually returned to gold afterward. This is just a fact, look at the history of about every major British or US war. They inflated the currency tremendously in WWI, then tried to deflate it again afterwards which was doomed to failure. This is also orthogonal to fractional reserve banking where demand deposits are treated as bank assets, and the money supply is exponentially expanded via debt. There is no evidence this is needed or even beneficial. Most of the historical problems, if you look into it, were either a) not really crises or b) not actually a free market gold standard. The deflationary spiral problem is endemic to fractional reserve inflation, so is the risk of widespread bank failures. Banks today, in general, are not allowed to fail. We pay for their mistakes via the government bailing them out in one way or another. It's private profits socialized losses. But actually this has been the case for hundreds of years... because it wasn't nipped in the bud, it's always been too painful to undo. Govts bailed out banks many times in history. \_ You imply that having a hidden tax on holding money is a bad thing. I would argue that we don't want people hoarding money a'la Scrooge McDuck. \_ Let's see you argue it then. \_ If you are not familiar with the historical poverty of humanity and the many long periods of depression and famine before 1900, then I cannot hope to type enough words to educate you. Go read a history book or something. The explosion of human wealth since the invention of capitalism is really unprecedented. \_ Capitalism is not synonymous with central banking. There are no periods of famine and depression that can be blamed on a lack of central banking. You're also placing credit on "capitalism" when there are so many other technological advances in the same time frame. \_ What do you think that the "capital" in capitalism represents? \_ Not central banking, that's for sure. Why, what do you think it represents? Is this a joke? \_ Do you even know why we went off the gold standard? \_ So that the gov't could inflate the currency whenever they wanted. \_ It all sounds like funny money to me. \_ Is it better when completely random effects inflate the money supply? (Someone discovered gold!) Or, even worse, business as usual deflates the money supply? (Hold amount of gold constant, increase GDP, automatic deflation!) \_ You don't need a gold standard. The money-is-debt, fractional reserve thing is mostly orthogonal to having a gold standard. You could still have fiat money but make it non-debt based (i.e. just directly create X amount of money by fiat). A gold standard is a separate debate. Many arguments against it are bogus though. We left the gold standard so that the government could finance wars without worrying about taxes or voters. \_ Are you getting paid by the word? -tom \_ I should be. My day job is boring, I guess. \_ what is this quote from? \_ an earlier motd thread |
2009/2/13-18 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52566 Activity:nil |
2/13 Bubbles have repeatedly plagued Western finance since its origins in the Italian Rensiassance: http://tinyurl.com/c83pfd (The Economist) (and an explaination why the CDS trades should "net to zero") \_ They won't net to 0 if some people go bankrupt, drops out of the system and can't pay up. Finance is not a zero sum game. \_ Top people to blame for the financial crisis: http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1877351_1877350,00.html http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1877351_1877350_1877320,00.html http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1877351_1878509_1878508,00.html |
2009/2/11-18 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52555 Activity:high |
2/10 Why tax cuts are a bad way to stimulate demand in a deflationary environment: http://tinyurl.com/ccatun (Freakonomics Blog at NYT) \_ Oh sure, you can't trust people with their own money. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zISKoQegbxM \_ No, you can't, when the collective interest is diametrically opposed to the individual's interest. We, collectively, need the economy stimulated. However, we, individually, don't want to spend our However, we, individually, want to save our money money to maximize our personal financial security. So, right now, you can't trust people with their own money. \_ Is this why the fed has racked up debts that work out to over $30,000 per capita? \_ How large are the debts that the private sector has racked up? \_ People know what they need and don't. We've been living in a mode where people spend way beyond their capacity. Retreating from that is normal. Deflation is good. We have tons of immigrants and an inefficient culture of buying tons of cheap crap. "Deficient aggregate demand" isn't a problem. We still have a huge trade imbalance so there are plenty of jobs we could theoretically be doing instead of importing all that shit. But the only way that would happen is if we let conditions move towards equilibrium instead of borrowing trillions to prop up the status quo. \_ You almost make some sense. Good thing you aren't running the Republican party or I'd have to vote for you. \_ Do you think that people knew what they needed and what they didn't need when they decided to leverage up buying McMansions, flipping houses and buying SUVs? How about when they bought all those exotic financial instruments which bet on the housing bubble? Do you know what a deflationary trap is? What you are advocating would put us in one, the same as Japan post-bubble, and would give us our own "lost decade" or two. \_ People did that because it was what makes sense to do given abundant cheap credit. The government's policies steered the market towards cheap imports and housing instead of real industry -- not only our direct policies but how we allowed e.g. China to manipulate our own economy. See: http://blogs.cfr.org/setser/2009/02/02/it-wasnt-just-the-market/#more-4618 Of course long-term deflation is not good. But if it wants to happen there's no point going around trying to ignore the laws of gravity. We should look for ways to cushion the fall and set things up for long term success. The previous economy (dot com then crazy mortgage bubble) was based on a tremendous amount of imaginary wealth. To keep on pretending just prolongs and exacerbates. The ideas you're talking about is the thinking that lead us to where we are. \_ No, it was a deliberate decision by the GOP to deregulate the financial sector which led to the blow- up in available credit, more than anything. There were certainly other contributing factors, but that was number one. To lower the Debt/GDP ratio, you can try to lower debt or raise GDP. Your plan would try and lower debt, but probably lower GDP even more - that is what has happened in the past when debt bubbles have been allowed to pop without any attempt to clean up the mess afterwards. There is a chance that by reallocating capital to more effective uses, we can grow GDP and reduce overall debt that way. Most of the increase in govt debt recently has just been a shift from private to public hands, so has not increased the overall debt burden to the US economy. This is not guaranteed of course, a lot of it depends on how good a job govt does in allocating capital to productive uses. It is hard to imagine that they would do a worse job than the private sector has over the last decade, but anything is possible. \- you can blame the GOP for some crazy tax policies gutting enforcement funding or "capturing" regulatory agencies and most of deregulation, but there is a lot of blame to go around on dereg and mkt fundamentalism. i'd be ok chaining robert rubin and phil gramm together and sending them off into interstellar space. \_ Please see the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000. \_ Even given the deregulated system, there were clear lapses on the part of the regulatory systems that did still exist. And failures on the part of private regulators like S&P. I believe part of that is simply a lack of competition -- the need for government oversight is directly related to market health. Markets don't know what's productive, they just tend to maximize utility in terms of profit. If the environment is skewed the result is skewed. It's like when "kind" people put out food for animals; the animals will base their "economy" on maximizing this free benefit. They don't understand why there is free food, so they can't understand that it might go away, or that the humans might round them up and gas them. Low interest rates, perpetual borrowing, and China's market manipulations are our free food. Even now China keeps investing in overcapacity and trade surplus. The deregulated financial industry made mistakes, but basically it was drunk on the free shit. Cheap credit was influenced by the trade deficit. The Fed also maintained relatively very low interest rates even while the housing bubble was growing insanely fast. Greenspan denied that there was a bubble. The government was basically telling people that housing was the place to be. \_ Look, you ideological nitwit; the housing bubble is *not* the cause of our financial crisis. \_ I rather think it is. If housing recovers then all of these problems instantly go away. Loose credit and low interest rates combined with fraudulent mortgage lending practices and dishonest borrowers are at the heart of the problem. If you want to know where most of the $$$ went, it went to anyone who sold a property in the last 5 years that they had owned more than 5 years prior. Some of it when to speculators and some of it went to people like you and me whose house value doubled in a few years. When salaries and real estate prices match more closely then this will all blow over but not until then. Leverage just made things worse by wiping out capital, but those speculators had a good run prior to that so some should weather this. Some won't. C'est la vie. \_ We have had credit bubbles that did not involve housing and we have had housing cycles (bubbles?) that did not bring down the financial sector. Unregulated and overly risky speculation is what brought down the financial sector, mostly the IBs and hedge funds leveraging 30:1 on their bets. the financial sector. \_ S&L crisis? This isn't the first time Citi has borrowed from the gov't either. Was 1991 the last time? This crisis is more severe because the bubble was bigger, partly because interest rates were lower and other instruments were underperforming or viewed as risky. That's all. CA has had housing bubbles that popped, but this is new to most of the country. Financial institutions leveraging themselves ridiculously is the cause of our financial crisis. Oh, if only the government didn't exist, the invisible hand would have made sure that the banks acted safely! Here's a news flash: The financial crisis *IS* THE FUCKING INVISIBLE HAND. The free market is perfectly happy to drive off a cliff and destroy a society. Government's job is to make sure that doesn't happen. -tom \_ Leveraging wasn't THE cause; misclassifying risk was the cause, and is directly related to the housing bubble. And the mother of all the leveraging is the fed's low interest rates. The financial crisis is not the invisible hand because government was riding shotgun the entire way. Or more accurately, the government was building a bridge to the promised land out from the cliff, but actually it went into thin air. In any case you are arguing a strawman: I am not arguing that gov't regulation is unnecessary. I'm saying it didn't do its job. \_ Yeah, whatever. How about this: Could you describe a possible scenario where the free market, by itself, could cause a financial crisis? Or is that impossible? -tom \_ Obviously yes, with banks: bank runs. Although modern banks are completely married to the government via the central bank, and via the laws that allow them to create money and lend money that they simultaneously owe to their depositors. That's not really the free market; it's inherently unstable, and supposedly the govt is managing this in order to be able to easily stimulate the economy. It is theoretically possible to have banking which is not based on the current scheme. http://mises.org/Books/mysteryofbanking.pdf You can't honestly have a free market without a hard currency and a situation where actors are held accountable for their dealings. A market run on an arbitrary government fiat currency is inherently not free. If banks were required to lend money out of their own capital instead of their customers, or else enter specific contracts with customers to lend their money, you could not have bank runs. \_ Go sell it at Top Dog. -tom \_ The model of modern corporations is too conducive to disaster. Responsibility is abdicated onto a non-person legal entity, and management transfers between speculators who individually do not have full understanding of the business, but neither stand very much to lose. The executives and employees stand to profit greatly from short term schemes which are measured by quarterly results. Then you have the abomination of "government sponsored corporations" like http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fannie_mae How can you say that the fin. crisis is not directly related to the actions of this agency and the govt that created and controlled it? \_ Fannie Mae was a drop in the bucket (and late) compared to the total amount of CDOs written. You should have stopped at "bank runs have happened long before there was government regulation of banks." Tell us how Tulip Mania was big ole' gubmints fault. \_ Fraud and speculation are not limited to the govt, no, but the govt allows for a special depth of scope. Nothing's wrong with a periodic recession. But the govt banking scheme creates vast money supply variances which is what creates a crisis. \_ Prove it. "Whether the U.S. had a central bank or not, the banks were _/ assured that if they inflated together and then got in trouble, government would bail them out and permit them to suspend specie payments for years. Such general suspensions of specie payments occurred in 1819, 1837, 1839, and 1857..." US banks are on the government's credit teat, and mommy government always saves them, or at least the vast majority of them. And it lets them multiply credit exponentially. There's no real benefit to all that credit. It just inflates prices and gives the fed. government a backdoor tax method. Here, listen to FDR trying to explain away banking fraud. http://www.fdic.gov/about/history/FDR_Fireside_Chat_Banking_Situation_03-12-33.mp3 Money as debt. http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-9050474362583451279 Mystery of Banking http://mises.org/Books/mysteryofbanking.pdf \_ that's not proof of anything; it's pure assertion. And it very specifically does not address the question, which is whether a crisis can be created without government intervention. (Hint: it is completely obvious that a crisis can be created without government intervention.) -tom \_ I don't need to prove anything, I'm not your slave and your question isn't "the" question. Hint: all the major crises in US history were entangled with the government. Your Tulip example was not a crisis and is anyway half legend. You're going around calling people idiots making assertions but demanding that others "prove" things (hint: no economic theories have ever been "proven"). But you have the status quo mainstream theories which you accept as gospel even though repeatedly they have failed to prevent massive crises. I don't claim that you can't have economic problems, that's not a relevant question; an alternative system does not have to involve 100% protection from recession for example; in fact it's likely that recessions are necessary for healthy economy. Only if some fail is competition meaningful. \_ I didn't mention tulips. "All the major crises in US history were entangled with the government" is tautalogical; the US has a government that ideological morons like you blame for everything. There is no scenario under which you would claim the government was not involved, therefore, the government is always involved, therefore, the goverment is bad. QED. Or not. -tom \_ How ironic that you blame government response to financial crises as being responsible for creating these crises. Do you blame the fire department for fires, too? \_ If you weren't an idiot, you'd realize that's not what I said. |
2009/2/9-17 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52543 Activity:nil |
2/9 motd finance whizzes, if the total value of CDS last year was 62 trillion, and now it's basically worthless, does that mean somewhere, somehow, someone collectively has lost 62 trillion? thanks \_ Yup. Somehow, somewhere, $62T of money just went with the wind. And what's more, if people suddently decide that CDS is worth something again, that money comes right back. \_ These things are supposed to net out, so for every loser, there should be a winner. Some of the losers are bankrupt though and won't be able to make good on the claim. Your second proposition "now it's basically worthless" is dubious, btw. \_ Who are these 'winners'? Also I'm asking a real question, not being an ass. thanks. \_ I understand that you are not being an ass, but you are repeating some common misperceptions here. If I buy a CDS from you, giving you some cash up front in return for your promise to make me whole if GM goes bankrupt and I lose the money on a bond I just bought, and then GM goes bankrupt, you are the loser and I am the winner. Is that clear enough? Now if I go to redeem my claim and you declare bankruptcy, then we are both losers, which is what people are afraid of now. We don't know what this "counter-party risk" really tallies up to right now, which is why the economy is in such a mess, but it is certainly less than $62T. \_ I disagree with you about this being a "zero sum" game. Here, I definitely think there are losers without there being any winners. Suppose suddenly all stocks are worthless. Who wins? People who just got out of stocks might consider themselves lucky, but they didn't directly benefit from stocks going to zero: they won "otherwise". Short sellers might win, but that's a small fraction of the loss, not a zero sum. \_ Stocks aren't very much like CDSs. If I redeem my CDS to you and you honor it, you lose money and I gain it. The only way there can be an overall loss if via counter-party risk e.g. you don't make good on the contract. \_ Why do you think they are worthless (URL, please)? They are still enforceable contracts, unless written by Lehman. They also aren't "supposed to net out." That was the undoing of the ibanks. They're supposed to be underwritten by people who can price the risk of default accurately. They're like tradeable insurance. \_ Yes, for every person losing a dollar, another person gains a dollar. That is what "net out" means. The $62T didn't just disappear, except in bankruptcy cases, where it can be argued that it never really existed in the first place. \_ Correct me if I am wrong, but the costs of insuring debt fluctuates because these things are traded. Worse, derivatives based on these things were traded. \_ Yes, but their book value is not $62T, just the nominal value. \_ I would argue that most of the value of the 72T CDS market is/was imaginary, and therefore all of the profits and jobs and stock fluctuations based on CDS trade profits are a load o'crap, and this is a huge contributing factor to current financial woe. |
2009/2/3-8 [Finance/Banking] UID:52504 Activity:low |
2/3 Need advice on where to put cash for 1 to 2 years. I only have maybe $50K (I'm not a rich old geezer like most of you). CD is at an all time low. So is money market/savings. Gold? Silver? Foreign investment? Don't tell me to buy a home, I need a job for that. \_ teak rainforests! \_ If you are expecting to need it in the next 1 to 2 years, CDs are the way to go. If this is your only cash (you don't have six months of expenses saved up) then you probably want to keep most of it in savings even. How do you plan to pay your bills until you get a job? \_ How safe is safe? At this point probably only deposits (checking, savings, CDs) and US treasurys (you might look into i-bonds or TIPS) have a high probability of no loss of principal over the next 1-2 years. \_ Just because you don't have a job, doesn't mean that you can't invest it in realestate. I have a property that I'm about to purchase which I need to go all cash in on...I can offer you 10%. -scottyg \_ If you're 100% sure that there's positive income, no accidents, no renovations required, no eviction, etc, then obviously you don't need a full time job. But everyone needs some cushion, and 50K isn't a lot of cushion to do any real estate transaction in California. It only takes one bad tenant and 0 income to really screw your life up. \_ No, I mean I will offer you 10% on a 1-2yr loan of 50k. \_ IngDirect checking gives 2.2% if you have $50K. FDIC insured, that's what I'd do. \_ link:dollarsavingsdirect.com is still maintaining 3.5% http://provident-direct.com is down again to 2.82% \_ Gold is up 5-8% in the last 3 weeks \_ http://www.bankrate.com/brm/safesound/thrftmm.asp?fedid=137915 I'll stick with ING, thanks. \_ http://www.bankofinternet.com looks pretty good at 3.10% and *** Sometimes I wonder about these outfits, if they will maintain a good rate over time. There are some 5-star banks on bankrate's list with better rates than ING. I do wonder about a bank whose name is basically Engrish. (bank of internet?) but apparently it's been around a while \_ What do you really care as long as it's FDIC-insured? In case you haven't noticed how bank failures are handled, there is typically no interruption in availability of funds, except maybe over the weekend. \_ Not true in IndyMac's case. If you had $10K you'd get it right away, but for larger amounts, they'd give you a little upfront and then you had to wait for the rest. \_ Gold \_ heroin! \_ ammo \_ Ammo doesn't have good resale value. \_ pre-owned ammo? \_ when the zombies come.. ammo will be worth its weight in gold \_ who said anything about selling it? yer supposed to give it away, at high velocity... |
2009/1/31-2/3 [Finance/Banking] UID:52493 Activity:nil |
1/31 A different way of thinking about fiscal stimulus: http://www.interfluidity.com/posts/1233118501.shtml (heavy on the econ) |
2009/1/28-2/4 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52483 Activity:very high |
1/28 Pork bill passes the House, no R's vote for it. \_ which pork bill? \_ Yay, fair and balanced NPR: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=99919378 Also, GOP apparently unclear on definition of pork. \_ Even Chris Matthews called it one big earmark. \_ The fact that you think he represents informed liberal opinion says a lot about you. \_ Pell Grants are pork? \_ Apparently the R's haven't heard that old adage about holes, shovels, and digging. \_ Apparently, you're an idiot. \_ Thanks for playing anyway. \_ I think Democrats should of tied the "Pork" bill along with should've or "should have" -- ... TARP and Auto bail out. I failed to understand why money to investment bank / commercial bank (e.g. TARP) is not considered "pork" by Republicans while putting money into infrastructure is. \_ Bankers donate money to the Republican party, but construction workers do not. \_ I wasn't particularly pro-bailout, but there are a few important differences. The bailout money was often used in ways that might come back. (Loans, stock, etc.) The bailout was also a targetted attempt to have an immediate effect on a vital piece of the economy. No capital and capitalism doesn't work. Infrastructure may take years to even begin construction, that's not a quick action. The stimulus bill also also is not particularly targeted. It seems to chuck a billion or two to anyone the dems like. \_ As opposed to $18.4 billion for bonuses for the investment bankers who got us into this mess. -tom \_ tom prefers life in the mud. \_ Yawn. Justify your side's naked corruption by pointing out the other side's flaws. How exciting. \_ what in the stimulus bill is naked corruption? -tom \_ I already told you. Pell Grants. -!op \_ I see: funding golden parachutes for millionaires is OK; funding higher education for the poor is naked corruption. Great. Enjoy losing in 2012. -tom \_ This number is bandied about, but what does it mean? I read it is about 50% less than last year. What is the average size of the bonus awarded and what is the base pay? For instance, if total payroll is $1T (say) then $18.4B in bonuses seems small. Or even if total payroll is $18B then $18B in bonuses can still be small if it is spread over 1M employees. I don't sympathize with the banks, but this number is thrown out there without much explanation. Were these bonuses all cash or was there stock or options also awarded? It costs the bank no cash to award someone $1M in options, for instance. all cash or were stock/options also awarded? It costs the bank no cash to award someone $1M in options, for instance. \_ http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/29/business/29bonus.html The number is based largely on personal income tax collections. It excludes stock options. -tom \_ It almost doesn't matter what it means, other than this: the guys who ruined our economy, destroyed their companies and lost trillions of dollars are being rewarded with bonuses. \_ I think the word "bonus" is what trips people up. It's just salary. It's more in good years and less in bad years, like you might expect. It will never really be zero any more than you can expect those people to work for free no matter how poorly they are performing. Certain professions earn a significant amount of salary each year in a lump sum "bonus" and it's not quite the same thing as if you or I get a bonus at work. For example, my sister's ex-husband worked for a law firm and every year they got a "Christmas bonus" of 1 week's salary. It's common in law just as in banking. Eliminating the bonus is equivalent to cutting salary. Would it make you feel better if they said they were reducing their "base salary" 50%? That's essentially what is happening. Their salary is tied to performance, but that doesn't mean their poor performance = zero salary any more than yours should be. If they perform poorly enough they will be fired and many have been. BTW, the average bonus was $112K, which was down 36.7%. Sounds like a big pay cut to me. Did you get a 37% pay cut because your company's revenues went down in the poor market? many have been. \_ What was the average base pay? The bonus could go to zero and these losers would still get paid more than enough. Using taxpayer dollars to give incentive-based pay to people who drove their companies into bankruptcy and the entire economy into crisis is absolutely, completely indefensible. And then to attack Pell Grants! I suppose the conservative strategy of asserting things too ridiculous to argue against is still in force. -tom \_ 1. I didn't attack Pell Grants. 2. I like how you say their pay would be "more than enough", comrade. I think you could survive on half your current salary and in a studio apartment instead of a house, but the market values your services more than that. I read that the average Wall Street salary is around $300K with a base salary of $100-250K. So it's reasonable to think a typical package might be $150K base salary and a $150K bonus. If you eliminate the $150K bonus entirely then base pay is still more than enough to live on, but likely far less than what it would take to retain top talent. Heck, you can barely get a sysadmin for City of SF for $150K. Lots of these guys are Harvard Business grad with years of experience who fell prey to the whims of their CEOs who decided to use a lot of leverage. The CEOs should suffer. The rank-and-file traders and bankers are suffering enough if you pay attention to how many are out of work now. \_ No, they haven't suffered enough. The banking sector is still bloated and overpaid. There is no particular reason that a Harvard MBA should make $300k, unless he is contributing that much to society. For the last 10 years, the bankers have disastrously misallocated capital. If they don't like mere $150k salaries, good luck finding an industry that will support them in the lifestyle they think they deserve. \_ http://tinyurl.com/ajf25h (WSJ) \_ People aren't paid according to "what they contribute to society". Most of those guys are very smart and will find something else to do, which would leave the banks run by people less capable. You think it's bad *now*? \_ I don't think there's any evidence that the people running the banks are very capable. If they're so fucking capable, why are they all going bankrupt? The argument about "that's what it costs to retain top talent" is 100% bullshit. The system is rigged. CEOs, VPs and hotshots get to decide who to pay what--and, surprise surprise, they decide that it's vital to the interest of the company to pay CEOs, VPs and hotshots more and more as a function of total revenue and earnings. Until the whole thing comes crashing down and they ask the government to bail them out. The absolute first thing that should happen before any bankrupt institution is bailed out is that all performance-based pay should be immediately suspended until the company is solvent. If that means that executives leave for other companies that managed their assets better and therefore aren't going bankrupt, that's fine; isn't survival of the fittest one of the tenets of the market economists? -tom \_ Lots of free-market cheerleaders seem to forget the basic econ 101 stuff that says what is needed for markets to function. Namely competition and low barriers to entry. What is it about these banks that makes them able to keep fat profits year after year? \_ Somehow society was able to function with a banking sector that was half the current size - as a proportion of the economy - for many decades. All those Ivy geniuses can go find another way to game the system (and ultimately rip off the taxpayer, no doubt). Almost every "invention" of the financial sector in the last 10 years was crap. Is it seriously your contention that these guys deserve lifetime employment on the public dime at $300k/yr, even though what they produce has no value to society whatsover? \_ Somehow society was able to function with a banking sector that was half the current size - as a proportion of the economy - for many decades. All those Ivy geniuses can go find another way to game the system (and ultimately rip off the taxpayer, no doubt). Almost every "invention" of the financial sector in the last 10 years was crap. Is it seriously your contention that these guys deserve lifetime employment on the public dime at $300k/yr, even though what they produce has no value to society whatsoever? \_ I don't think they deserve lifetime employment on the public dime forever. I never said that. However, letting the big banks BK would be a disaster. This whole thing about bonuses is a PR stunt as is Obama's outrage. Banks are going to need $1T and we're worrying about $20B in bonuses that were earned? Do you really contend that banks have no value to society?! A bank that does a good job of allocating _/ capital to productive uses has a value. Do you think that the primary inventions of the financial sector of the last decade or so (CDS, CDOs, SIVs, etc) have had a net positive value? If so, why are all the banks collapsing? If anything, the total contribution to society by the financial sector over the last decade has been strongly negative. This is reflected in the change in their equity value, and in the collapse in value of all the stupid things they allocated capital to (most exurban McMansions, but also the mostly speculative paper instraments used speculative paper instruments used to gamble on them). \_ http://tinyurl.com/ajf25h (WJ) Check out the comments. Even the WSJ readers are getting restless. \_ Just the media stirring up shit and now the rabble is roused. What about bailing out auto workers who made shit cars? I know a lot of people are against that, too, but at some point you have to place blame where it is due, which is management. The auto workers were just building the cars they were told to build. Likewise, the bank employees were just selling the products they were told to sell while the government cheered from the sidelines about how many more people could now afford home ownership while keeping rates insanely low and wasting $$$ in Iraq. Blame Bush for this mess. \_ It is funny that you think that the readership of the WSJ is "the rabble." You can imagine what the actual rabble think of the bank bailouts. \_ Doesn't matter what they think. They don't realize what will happen without lending or credit. For instance, most hospitals use large lines of credit to cover bills during the period between when services are rendered and the insurance companies finally pay. The average consumer relies on banks for a lot more than they realize. \_ In a democracy, what the people think matters. Especially when you coming to the taxpayer, hat in hand, asking for a bailout. The current overleveraged banks could all fail and all that would happen is that new bunch would crop up to take their place. No doubt the economy needs credit. Why do we need Citibank, JPM and all the other crooks? \_ That's why we have a republic. We don't need uninformed citizens making these decisions. \_ I am mostly unimpressed with what our elected representatives have done so far, but you are probably right, a directly democratic response would probably be even worse. \_ automaker bailout is what, 1/100th of the bank bailout? \_ In other industries, you are awarded a bonus for doing well or if the company has done well in that year. There is no sane person who can claim the banking industry did well in 2008. So why did they get bonuses? That's what bugs me. \_ This is not "other industries" and Wall Street and law firms work differently. \_ They work differently because they've stacked the deck in favor of lining their own pockets. The role of government is to protect taxpayer assets, not performance-based compensation for executives of bankrupt companies. Let them try to convince the bankruptcy court that the first priority is to pay them their bonuses. -tom \_ Bankruptcy courts are genrally in favor of companies making payroll. \_ Bonuses != payroll. \_ Except that in the case of certain firms (like banks) they really are almost the same thing. Bonuses are not some optional incentives based on merit or something, although they can be tied to it. Think of bonuses more like tips for a waitress. Sure, you make more if you're good but they aren't really optional. Even bad service results in a tip (or should anyway) because the payscale and taxes are based on that. \_ Bankers don't make $2.80/hr. \_ This is back to the "They make more than *I* think they are worth" argument. We can say that about software engineers or any job, really. However, that's not how salaries are determined in this country. Go back to Soviet Russia. It's much more equitable there. \_ Except software engineers are not asking for handouts from the Federal government. You keep "forgetting" that part. \_ Tangential. You can argue that companies shouldn't be receiving aid, but that's not your argument. Your argument is that the government should dictate salaries in turn for aid. That will leave those companies without any employees, because paying them 50% of market rate for salaries will have them leaving in droves. How will that help anything? The banks may as well BK then. \_ OK. -tom \_ So let's be clear that your issue isn't "bonuses". It's that the banks are receiving any money at all. Why beat around the bush for 6 paragraphs? \_ So let's be clear that you love to beat up straw men rather than paying attention. Fine. I'm not particularly pleased that the banks are receiving money, and I'm outraged that the money they're receiving is going incentive-based pay for the assholes who caused the problem. And it's totally typical for the Republican typical of the Republican disdain for the American public. -tom \_ I seriously doubt that the employees will be leaving in droves, even if they were paid the starvation wages of will be leaving in droves, even if they were paid the starvation wages of $300k/yr. Especially since 100s of thousands of others in their field will be out of work. But it is a risk I am willing to take. \_ Exactly... this is ridiculous. where exactly are they all gonna go? The best they might do is start a new company, or perhaps use their genius to go to one of those other lucrative $500k careers out there, which would be such a terrible loss for America I know, our capital would be so misallocated. \_ One obvious place is to the hedge funds and regional banks, growing them into megabanks of the type they work for now. Of course, only the best will leave. The bad ones will remain to handle the delevering, valuation of assets, and spending of TARP funds. My fear is that the best ones are leaving *anyway*. Wouldn't you? \_ And if they go to a regional bank (probably not making $300k/yr) and grow it into a well-run company that efficiently makes loans, has a well-run risk management department and is not sucking off the taxpayers teat, this is a bad thing how, exactly? \_ The Bad Thing is what happens to the banks they left. Most hedge funds are closing, not hiring, btw. \_ Many are folding b/c investors are withdrawing, but this is a blip on the radar. Mutual funds, pensions, and even hedgies still manage a lot of money. \_ Hedge funds are closing because the returns on their strategy have dropped to 20% of the original, rather small percentage. In fact, according to DeLong it was a large hedge fund getting out of the business, which hosed a number of other highly leveraged hedge funds, which acted as the trigger for the whole liquidity crisis. -tom http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123353536455237761.html "It's just a tough, tough time, and there are a lot of good people out there looking for work." \_ Right, but they aren't going to work for $6.50/hour. Let's not confuse "looking for work" with "looking for any work at any price". \_ I have a friend who does ibanking for UBS, 1st out of biz school, didn't get fired in the 4 rounds of layoffs, I was adding up her base salary (120k) to the bonus she got 140k and wondered what the hell she did that was worth 260k a year. \_ Is she hot? picsP |
2009/1/21-26 [Finance/Banking] UID:52435 Activity:nil |
1/22 What happens when the government takes over your bank? http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123258304319904345.html \_ given the choice, I prefer bank being nationalized, and break up those are "too big to fail." The alternative is asking tax payer to buy up all the bad investments from without much consequences on these private bankers' part really sicken me. \_ The alternative is to stop the government from making these stupid central planning decisions and let the economy recover on its own. \_ so, you are also against any of the bail out, right? |
2009/1/6-9 [Finance/Banking] UID:52321 Activity:nil |
1/6 http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/28/business/28wamu.html?_r=2 wamu, mariachis and drugs. |
2008/12/20-28 [Finance/Banking, Politics/Foreign/Canada] UID:52288 Activity:nil |
12/20 "Canada offers $3.29 billion in loans Detroit Three - Yahoo! Finance" http://www.csua.org/u/n5h |
2008/12/18-2009/1/2 [Finance/Banking] UID:52278 Activity:low |
12/18 wtf is happening to my money market yield? http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=^IRX&t=my \_ spend spend spend! Only *YOU* can save the economy by spending. \_ I'm actually increasing my spending to some extent over usual. \_ Bargains to be had? \_ No, I just feel sorry for everyone. It's tough times and I have cash and don't need credit to buy shit. \_ I am spending more too, but that is mostly because I keep seeing great deals on things like single malt scotch, that I can't pass up. \_ The Fed is printing money. The dollar is worthless, hence the 0& coupon auction recently. We are in for some serious inflation eventually. \_ The Fed is only "printing money" (through their new loan facilities) in markets that are desperate for liquidity. This money supply is probably preventing _deflation_ right now (which is much worse), and can be quickly soaked up again to keep inflation under control. \_ The Fed is only "printing money" (through their new loan facilities) in markets that are desperate for liquidity. This money supply is probably preventing _deflation_ right now (which is much worse), and can be quickly soaked up again to keep inflation under control. \_ We hope. I don't think the Fed can inject $1T into the economy and not cause inflation. \_ This is because practically everyone in the world (including op) is buying safe T-bills, driving down yields. Demand is outstripping supply, which raises prices and depresses yield. Nothing to do with the money supply. is buying safe T-bills, driving down yields. The Fed is only "printing money" (through their new loan facilities) in markets that are desperate for liquidity. This money supply is probably preventing _deflation_ right now (which is much worse), and can be quickly soaked up again to keep inflation under control. \_ What you say is all true except for the last sentence. |
2008/12/9-14 [Finance/Banking] UID:52216 Activity:nil |
12/9 Oops, rescuing borrowers didn't help much http://ridingtheelephant.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2008/12/08/news/economy/mortgage_summit \_ What is the default rate of those who do not have modified loans? |
2008/12/6-10 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52184 Activity:nil |
12/6 Interesting finance/business story: http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/08_49/b4111040876189.htm |
2008/12/5-10 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52177 Activity:nil |
12/5 http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Bank-Julius-Baer-CEO-dies-rb-13755979.html 52-year-old CEO of Switzerland's largest wealth mgmt fund kills self \_ "wealth management." Nice euphemism. |
2008/11/24-12/1 [Finance/Banking, Finance/CC, Finance/Investment] UID:52089 Activity:nil |
11/23 http://blog.mint.com/blog/finance-core/a-visual-guide-to-the-financial-crisis \_ bahahahaha most hilarious \_ Whatever happened to all the FREE MARKET IS BETTER vote for GWB drones on motd? |
2008/11/21-28 [Finance/Banking] UID:52074 Activity:nil |
11/21 U.S. Bank acquires Downey Savings & Loan. No losses on deposits. Losses on mortgages, etc. shared with FDIC. |
2008/11/20-27 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:52054 Activity:nil |
11/19 Remember the 100-age investment rule we learned in grade school? For example, if you're 65, you should put at least 100-65=35% of your savings in stocks. Let's say I'm retiring at 65 today, then effectively I'd have 1/2 of that much than say, 2004-2005, or 35%/2. I've lost nearly 17.5% of my savings because I retired at the wrong time. Buy and hold works well when the market is stable (post 1940 and pre 2008). In the end, do you think the 100-age rule is still applicable in the turbulent market of the 21st century? \_ The average return you get is directly related to the amount of risk you take on. Come back when you've groked that concept. -tom \_ Hell. My 401(k) balance went from $200k a year ago to $120k today. YetI still think stocks is the way to go. Yet I still think stocks is the way to go if you don't need the money in a short time. I've never heard of that investment rule since I didn't attend grade school in this country, but I guess its idea is that you don't need all your money today even if you retire today. \_ We are in basically the same boat here. \_ I think you should be about 75% in equities (25% in bonds) throughout. I don't plan to change that mix just because I'm 60, although I might cash out to buy some property once I can do so without any penalties. \_ No. Even at a relatively young age (under 35), you should be invested >= 50% into safety (CDs and Treasuries). I think this is particularly true for those earning the median or less where they live. For those earning more, you can afford to risk more. particularly true for those earning the median or less for where they live. For those earning more, you can afford to risk more. \_ You are on crack if you put >50% of your retirement into CDs at age 35. You might not even beat inflation. |
2008/11/17-20 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:52029 Activity:nil |
11/17 sub prime loans doesn't automatically mean total crap loans http://www.slate.com/id/2204583 \_ LOL |
2008/11/14-26 [Finance/Banking, Politics/Domestic/Election] UID:51985 Activity:nil |
11/14 An overly long article directed to Obama on how he should fix the farm/food system. I actually agree with some of his points, but he does go little overboard toward the end. http://csua.org/u/mxv (NYTimes) \_ Forget the government, count on saving yourselves! This is a GREAT time for you savers to wait it out, and in a few years, everything will be super cheap and you'll buy properties and stocks that'll go up tremendously when Obama-socialism is over. This is the secret recipe that wealthy folks have used for ages. Of course, if you never had a lot of savings, then it's a different story. \_ savings? what is left will be taken by the government \_ Yes dear. That's nice. Now have some tea. \_ What does this have to do with the farm bill? \_ lulz |
2008/11/12-26 [Finance/Banking, Academia/GradSchool] UID:51942 Activity:nil |
11/12 Harvard looks to tighten its belt http://www.boston.com/news/education/higher/articles/2008/11/11/harvard_looks_to_tighten_its_belt Why is a Uni with a $30B+ endowment worried about spending cuts? \_ For the same reason that companies with $30B in the bank are worried about the economy; the fact that you have that money is already factored into your plans, so loss of other money is a problem. -tom |
2008/10/22-27 [Finance/Banking] UID:51620 Activity:nil |
10/21 (Bloomberg) The Federal Reserve will provide up to $540 billion in loans to help relieve pressure on money- market mutual funds beset by redemptions. ... JPMorgan Chase & Co. will run five special units that will buy up to $600 billion of certificates of deposit, bank notes and commercial paper with a remaining maturity of 90 days or less. |
2008/10/18-21 [Finance/Banking] UID:51572 Activity:nil |
10/17 Laid Off By Lehman: One Broker's Story http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mjX6aKLy2N4 |
2008/10/12-15 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:51485 Activity:nil |
10/12 Fannie and Freddie originated only 15% of subprime loans in 2006 Private firms made nearly 83 percent of the subprime loans to low- and moderate-income borrowers that year. http://www.mcclatchydc.com/251/story/53802.html \_ But those horrid dark skinned people ruined our economy by letting the Democrats force them to take home loans they knew they couldn't afford. I think it was terrorist plot by all those muslim sleeper agents that have been infiltrating our elected government for a generation now. |
2008/10/10-15 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:51472 Activity:nil |
10/10 http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/10/opinion/10mulligan.html The Economy is just fine, really. |
2008/10/8-9 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:51429 Activity:kinda low 80%like:51427 |
10/8 Coordinated intl rate cuts Ten year note up significantly even though equities down -> potential "game over" (or ass-raping) scenario In case anyone didn't see it yet, please see "Stock tip 3" from two days ago \_ I asked and he doesn't know what he's talking about. Now what? You didn't give a single advice. \_ well, my advice from 3 weeks ago was for the desired safe part of your portfolio to be out 33% at 11388. I said back then that this market could shitnap at any time so it was time to sell the pop the next day. My advice in "Stock tip 3" is: Don't go "all-in long" now in case you're thinking about it. Should you sell now, now that we're down to 9,270? It's your call, but do your research and ask me a fundamentals question. At this point I won't tell you to sell (but I will tell you to "don't buy" index funds or the equivalent). Actually, I will say I would go 80% into safe money right the fuck now, but I'm not going to tell you to do that. It's your money. \_ I think it's time to buy. The market has overreacted. \_ dude, the tip is: LEH CDS settlement in TWO FUCKING DAYS. you don't hear this in mainstream news. i haven't been playing a game with you guys for the last three months. \_ what is LEH CDS \_ lehman credit default swap settlement financial institutions (including insurance co.'s) will need significant cash to pay off insurance on Lehman debt and other securities as a result of LEH bankruptcy. these swaps are held around the world. \_ oh i thought that all got sold to barclays \_ only brokerage piece, because that has a whole bunch of regular-investor money, I believe \_ This is already priced in, imho. \_ okay, I'm glad you're thinking though. IMO you stand a better chance than people who haven't done enough research to confidently say that. \_ do you think the solvent finance firms will ask for a gov. loan to help cover the costs of buying the former assets of Lehman at firesale prices? that would be ironic. \_ if no one objects, sure! solvent financial entities will be getting a whole lot of free money. -op \_ Well, I thought so last week and I was obviously wrong. I am about 90% in right now and really itching to go "all in" but the 10% that is still out is my wife's IRA and she won't give the go ahead. At some point I will start selling bonds and buying stock, but I will probably wait until Q1 for that. To clarify, I mean "all in" for the 65% of my capital that I risk in the equity markets. I always keep about 6 months cash (that works out to about 10%) 10% in US Bonds and 15% in CA munis. \_ marital bliss >> possible equity gain besides, you already are 90% in. you'll be a hero if you can sell at a good price. a hero if you can sell at profit. \_ I am pretty sure that by the time I retire the stock market will be higher than it is today. \_ ^will be higher^return better than CD rates -op \_ Since the dividend yield on the SPY alone is equal to current CD alone is close to current CD rates, it is hard to imagine how I could go wrong. I guess all the companies in the S&P 500 could cut or eliminate dividends. |
2008/10/6-9 [Finance/Banking] UID:51401 Activity:nil |
10/6 Prosper update: right now I have 15 delinquent loans. If they all go into default, my profit this year will be 0.3%, which will make this my best performing investment. \_ How many loans do you have in total? \_ Look at /tmp/prosper* if you're interested in some analysis I did earlier this year. |
2008/10/6-9 [Finance/Investment, Finance/Banking] UID:51397 Activity:nil |
10/6 Stock tip 3: Ask your professional financial advisor how "LEH CDS settlement this Friday might affect my portfolio". If he doesn't know what you're talking about ... |
2008/10/3-6 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:51363 Activity:nil |
10/3 House passes bailout by significant margin. Guys, THINK about your long-term equity investments. You'll have PLENTY of people to blame in the near future, but where will your money have gone? Please consider the advice of a professional financial advisor, too, but in the end, it's YOUR MONEY. Practical advice: If you're not sure, move part into safety. \_ Coherence isn't your strong point is it? \_ WHAT is your problem dude? \_ At 3% CD rates, subtracting taxes and inflation, you are losing about 2%/yr with your cash position. This is a guaranteed way to end up poor in your old age. Is that what you want? I have gone from 0->$1M in 10 years, how have you done? \_ Past performance is not a predictor of future results. The specific reasons why have been what all my posts for the last two months have been about. I won't argue with you if you are confident in what you're doing. Good luck. I sincerely hope you do well in your investments. \_ Good luck to you, too. I think you should spend some more time thinking about how to hedge against what imho is the inevitable dollar devaluation to come. Sitting in Treasuries is not going to cut it. \_ thanks. fyi, that's exactly what I'm working on. \_ I am buying lots of TIPS and have for a while now. If the dollar falls then inflation should rise. \_ This is not a bad call, but I assume you know about the "upfront tax" costs of a TIP. This is not an issue in a IRA. |
2008/9/25-30 [Finance/Banking] UID:51310 Activity:nil |
9/25 Chase buys WaMu deposits, branches, whole mortgages and HELOCs (all consumer and business accounts safe, even over $100K) Pays $1.9B to FDIC Debt, common stock, and preferred stock left in WaMu holding company WaMu holding company taken over by FDIC All WaMu branches will re-open tomorrow at normal business hours (although now owned by JP Morgan Chase) |
2008/9/25 [Finance/Banking] UID:51302 Activity:nil |
9/25 WaMu deposits and branches to be owned by Chase Unclear what will happen to WaMu mortgages and debt - some say Chase is taking that too If I were to guess, JPM got another non-recourse loan from the govt! |
2008/9/25-30 [Politics/Domestic/President/Clinton, Finance/Banking] UID:51291 Activity:kinda low |
9/25 In 1999 the Clinton administration pressured Fannie Mae "to expand mortgage loans among low and moderate income people." The NYTimes warned "But the government-subsidized corporation may run into trouble in an economic downturn, prompting a government rescue similar to that of the savings and loan industry in the 1980's." http://tinyurl.com/4ulb87 \_ CLINTON AND BROWN PEOPLES FAULT! \_ This American Life has already found the culprits: http://www.thislife.org/Radio_Episode.aspx?sched=1242 \_ And in the same year, the LA times talked about how great it was http://articles.latimes.com/1999/may/31/news/mn-42807 \_ http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/08/20040809-9.html \_ Most non insane economists believe this month's troubles are from the crazy securitization of home mortgages, not the actual defaulted mortgages themselves. I am not quite smart enough to tell if they are right. Here in NYC Michelle Malkin keeps ranting in the NY Daily News that its all the fault of illegal immigrants getting mortgages. \_ McCain should have picked Malkin as his Veep, at least she is articulate and no less batshit insane than Palin. |
2008/9/24-29 [Finance/Banking] UID:51281 Activity:kinda low |
9/24 http://tinyurl.com/4qd8j3 [nyt] "These two entities -- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac -- are not facing any kind of financial crisis," said Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts, the ranking Democrat on the Financial Services Committee. "The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we will see in terms of affordable housing." (said in 2003) \_ yawn, Barney Frank is a slimebucket. maybe not as bad as Lieberman, but up there. -Dem \_ yep, Barney Frank is a slimebucket. maybe not as bad as Lieberman, but up there. Frank is also BFF with Hank Paulson. -Dem \_ in 2003 were they? \_ Read the article. Yes. \_ What did Barney Frank do besides be extremely gay? \- BFRANK isnt awesome like GOPAT but he is a far far far far cry from LIEBERMAN who is basically a traitor [which is the Occam's from Lieberman who is basically a traitor [which is the Occam's Razor explanation of his behavior]. Just like CDOs have problems, FMae and FMac have problem too, but the REAL PROBLEMS are CDS which is insurnace not regulated as insurance [i.e. with reserve requirements] and "new unregulated entities" entering into which are insurnace not being regulated as insurance [i.e. with reserve requirements] and "new regulated entities" entering into the securitiezed mortgage mkt. If you want to understand this stuff read the economists, not random journalists with undergrad econ or english degree from Princeton who then went to CJS (clearly there are some journos who are very good and look at the data and read the research (in other fields say david cay johnson or laurie garrett, or the boston dood who did the signing statement story on BUSHCO) but most of them are just echo chamaber hacks ... e.g. the all the journos who missed the boat on the entitlement problem being focused on medicare not social security]. ok tnx. --jsl read the economists, not random journalists with undergrad econ degree from Priceton who then went to CJS (clearly there are some journos who are very good and look at the data and read the research but most of them are just echo chamaber hacks ... e.g. the number of journos who missed the boat on the entitlement problem being focused on medicare not social security]. ok tnx. \_ http://www.businesspundit.com/sub-prime |
2008/9/23-29 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:51267 Activity:nil |
9/22 Roaring 20s --> Great Depression Roaring Millenium --> Great Depression II \_ does our state have a BUDGET yet? More concerning is we are about to hand $700B to one person and our Fed chief Ben Bernanke fully supports this idea--and if you Dems, Republicans, and libertarians haven't figured out by now: He who controls the money has the power. \_ Oh, I get it! In our crisis, we're appointing a Dictator. \_ but he knows much more about finances than you do and he wants to help you \_ Right after he helps himself and his former i-banking buddies. \_ but Ben Bernanke supports the plan, and he has a Ph.D. in Economics from MIT, did his dissertation on the Great Depression, got his B.S. in Economics from Harvard, was class valedictorian and got the highest score on the SAT in his state when he took it. He wrote three books on macroeconomics! He chaired the Princeton Economics dept for 7 years before joining the Fed! \_ Obviously smart and probably knows much more about economics than I do. Perhaps not very wise, though. \_ the idea that turning ONE knob in a stereo system to make it sound pleasing to everyone, is ridiculous. \_ huh? \_ Hey, we could have had Harriet Miers. \_ Should he have seen this coming? He sure didn't seem to from his past comments. Not that I'm blaming him per se, since this is really complicated and unpredictable stuff, but I don't feel like any of these guys are sure how this plan is really going to turn out. So it's basically a $700 B hunch/prayer. \_ "Large amounts of risk, particularly credit risk, have become concentrated in the hands of relatively few derivatives dealers, who in addition trade extensively with one other. The troubles of one could quickly infect the others.... [leveraged] derivatives severely curtail the ability of regulators to curb leverage and generally get their arms around the risk profiles of banks, insurers and other financial institutions. Similarly, even experienced investors and analysts encounter major problems in analyzing the financial condition of firms that are heavily involved with derivatives contracts. The derivatives genie is now well out of the bottle, and these instruments will almost certainly multiply in variety and number until some event makes their toxicity clear. Central banks and governments have so far found no effective way to control, or even monitor, the risks posed by these contracts. In my view, derivatives are financial weapons of mass destruction, carrying dangers that, while now latent, are potentially lethal." --Warren Buffett, 2002 [Yes, he should have seen it coming. -tom] \_ Predictions are all fine and good, and someone is bound to get it right, but I don't think anyone really saw it coming to this extent. \_ Buffett wasn't making a prediction; he was describing a risk. A large portion of his business is managing risk, and he's very good at it. He didn't say "in fall 2007, some weird activity by hedge funds will trigger a liquidity crisis which will eventually cause multiple major financial institutions to fail during calendar 2008." He simply pointed out that the proliferation of derivitive contracts in a deregulated financial market set up a situation where numerous institutions were taking on risks they could not measure, and declaring assets they could not quantify, and that it was likely that some trigger event would cause massive problems for the entire industry. And it's not like there wasn't any warning; the LTCM bailout was a foreshock that was pretty much ignored. -tom \_ He described a risk and predicted it would cause pain in the industry. I'm just saying no one really thought it would cause this much pain. Anyway, back to the real point -- if the guys on top didn't clearly see this coming, then they probably don't clearly see a way out. \_ Or more likely, they just didn't care, since it's "not my problem." \_ The Invisible Hand will take care of it. |
2008/9/22-23 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:51254 Activity:kinda low |
9/21 Krugman on the Paulson "Plan": http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/22/opinion/22krugman.html "... it will be crippled by inadequate capital unless the federal government hugely overpays for the assets it buys, giving financial firms  and their stockholders and executives  a giant windfall at taxpayer expense....if the government is going to provide capital to financial firms, it should get what people who provide capital are entitled to  a share in ownership, so that all the gains if the rescue plan works don’t go to the people who made the mess in the first place." \- i dont think PAULSON is too bad, but this clearly has to be decided by more than 1-2 people no matter who they are. and this is one case where diversity would be a good thing, i.e. not ideal if the dems say shoved RRUBIN into the process [also a GS elite then to citgroup] ... better to have LSUMMERS, NROUBINI, PVOLKER, JSTIGLITZ and various other non-tainted, not-super-ideological finance or macro academics ... probably cant involve people now in the private sector like MDELRAN]. \_ I'd be all for this if they included a provision limiting the pay of every employee of these firms to 100k, just this year. |
2008/9/17-19 [Finance/Banking] UID:51202 Activity:nil |
9/17 WaMu being auctioned for sale by Goldman Sachs for last several days. \_ 50 dollars! |
2008/9/16-19 [Finance/Banking] UID:51195 Activity:kinda low |
9/16 Fed to loan $85B to AIG while it sells its assets, since no one else wanted to lend $85B. Hopefully the Fed gets back $85B--it's not clear how long that may take (loan is for 2 years but may be extended). \_ How the hell does the Fed have the power to make $85B loans without congressional approval? \_ exigent circumstances necessary to maintain stability of the financial markets \_ 85 BILLION! That's a pretty amazing amount of money. \_ We spend more than that in Iraq every year. The Pentagon as a whole spends that every two months. \_ Financial markets are too fragile. We should clamp down on this money is debt shit like from that one video. Is the inflated money supply from bank credit really worth the fragility introduced by their complex webs of interdependent debt relationships? So much of the economy is built on top of speculative vs. real assets. \_ The Fed is a private entity, and is arguably the most powerful organization on earth (even more so than the US gov). \_ No one else has $85B to lend. \_ correction: up to $85B, it's like a HELOC. Interest rate is 11% on outstanding balance. regardless, Fed gets 80% equity (diluting existing). -op \_ URL? \_ http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/other/20080916a.htm \_ BAIL OUT IS THE NEW IPO! Company in trouble? No problem! Just keep spending. We'll get a bail-out... perfect exit strategy. The more companies require BAIL OUT, the hotter it gets. It is just like the dot-coms. BAIL OUT NOW! \- i'm not an expert on this, but based on recent and not so recent history BEAR STERNS almost certainly "deserved" a bail out less than LEHMAN [BS played a very "me first" role in various past episodes like the LTCM intervention (speaking of people who didnt derserv a bailout) as well as in the lead up to the eventual collapse]. LEH was a slightly better citizen. But unfortunately "just deserts" has little to do with the decision making. AIG is a quite evil company too, but its hard to be gleeful over this ... although I am pleased to see the self-serving probably criminal HGREENBERG taking a bath.] |
2008/9/15-19 [Finance/Banking] UID:51176 Activity:nil |
9/15 Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis was just asked in an interview how many banks there would be after 5 years, down from ~ 9,000 today: "Gosh, I haven't, I haven't really thought about that. But, uh ... maybe half." Keep in mind the conversation took into account mergers. |
2008/9/15-19 [Finance/Banking] UID:51173 Activity:nil 58%like:51169 |
9/15 Fed now accepts equity (stock) as collateral for loans. Fed now allows banks to use checkings/savings accounts to fund investment banking side. Yay! \_ "In this present crisis, government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem." -Reagan \_ BRAIIIIIIIIIIINS! BRAINS! |
2008/9/15 [Finance/Banking, Industry/Startup, Finance/Investment] UID:51169 Activity:nil 58%like:51173 |
9/15 Fed now accepts equity (company stock) as collateral for loans. Yay! |
2008/9/12-18 [Finance/Banking] UID:51151 Activity:nil |
9/12 When an agent tells you "This buyer is putting down 40% even though he is willing to pay less than what you asked for..." Why would I care about how much $ he's going to put down since the bank will just cover the rest? Why should I care if he's paying cash or 0% down? -real estate dumb \_ a mortgage loan can be declined before the sale closes, even if the loan was pre-approved by the bank \_ Ah, risk factor. I get it, thanks. |
2008/9/6-9 [Finance/Banking] UID:51076 Activity:nil |
9/6 http://tinyurl.com/6rnwlh (bloomberg.com) "Growth in the economy in this decade will be the slowest of any decade since the Great Depression, right in the middle of all this financial innovation" - Paul Volcker \_ Is volcker an idiot or respected? i can't remember. \- ben stein: idiot. pvolker: respec \- bstein: idiot. pvolker: respec |
2008/8/20-26 [Finance/Banking] UID:50918 Activity:nil |
8/20 1985 savings rate = 10% 2008 savinngs rate = 0.7% <DEAD>retirementplans.vanguard.com/VGApp/pe/pubnews/WhyAmericansDontSave.jsf?SelectedSegment=BuildingWealth<DEAD> \_ more consumption is better! Savings don't create jobs! \_ Trickle down economy works! The rich spends while the poor profits from trickled down money! And if the poor gets poorer, it is totally their fault. \_ poor people want to be poor! \_ 0.7%? A couple months ago I read on Yahoo News that the rate was negative 0.x percent. \_ الله أَكْ! |
2008/8/18-19 [Finance/Banking, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iraq] UID:50899 Activity:nil |
8/18 It's the War Economy, Stupid: http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/topstories.aspx?ID=BD4A824439 |
2008/8/7-10 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:50808 Activity:nil |
8/6 The Financial Times has published an excellent series of articles on the root causes of the current financial crises and suggestions of what to do next (not light reading): http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a09f751e-6187-11dd-af94-000077b07658.html http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/cc160f46-624f-11dd-9ff9-000077b07658.html http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d13db7bc-638a-11dd-844f-0000779fd18c.html http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/794801a8-63e8-11dd-844f-0000779fd18c.html \_ didn't the FT publish an article a few months ago about ROGUE COMPUTERS that forced Moodys to grade bonds as AAA ? \- people you want to read and listen to who are not as well-known as WBUFFET: Bill Gross, Martin Wolf, Md El-Erian. \_ root cause == real estate bubble, infection of monetary institutions with bonds backed by real estate solution == stuff the bad bonds and future mortgages into FNM/FRE and bill the taxpayer for any losses who benefited == finance guys, real estate agents, mortgage brokers \_ also: conservative ideologues who use the governmental debt they manufactured as an excuse to cut government services. -tom \_ There are more government services now than ever before. |
2008/7/30-8/5 [Finance/Banking] UID:50737 Activity:kinda low |
7/30 Financial aid question: If a wife applies for financial aid do they consider the husband's salary? \_ yes salary? What if the woman is partially through the program already What if the woman is partially through the program already when she gets married? Does that affect anything? Would it be in \_ Doesn't seem to affect loans, except perhaps the ratio of sub vs. unsub loans. Parental income (or more importantly lack of income) can have an effect, even if the student is independent of parental support and is married. And yes, for med school you apply for fin aid in March every year. -sony \_ don't you apply for financial aid every year? when you get divorced, you won't be around the next time she applies for financial aid \_ What do you mean "I won't be around"? I don't remember applying for aid every year, by the way. I seem to recall just applying up front, but it's been a long time. their financial interests to get divorced? \_ sounds like a lot of work just to scam the gov. out of a few thousand dollars. \_ It is probably worth more than just a few. Our marraige tax \_ It is probably worth more than just a few. Our marriage tax is a few thousand dollars alone. -!op \_ 1. It could be tens of thousands. 2. It's not a scam. If she has no income then she has no income regardless if I make a good salary. The loan is her responsibility to pay back, not mine. \_ I don't think the IRS sees it that way. Real Accountants please chime in, but if your wife is working, and you are, you are pooling your income to provide food please chime in, but if your wife is not working while in school, and you are working your high salary job, you are pooling your income to provide food shelter savings trips to see the 'rents in the suburbs. i dont think she really has no income. at the end of the month do you bill your wife for shared expenses like toilet paper and internet? \_ does it work out that way if you're married? really? i don't think so. so you're going to kick your poor bankrupt wife out on the street later? i'm not trying to be annoying, now I, not the op, am curious. \_ You mean you don't itemize your wife? \_ Her debts that she acquires after you are married are community responsibilities. So yes, you have to repay them. \_ I don't believe this to be true. Why would you be responsible if your wife goes wacky and applies for $3M in debt in her name using only her income on the application? Addendum: The above is true (husband is responsible regardless) in community property states, which are: Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Idaho and Arizona, California, New Mexico, Nevada, Idaho, Washington, Texas, Wisconsin and Louisiana. In Alaska, couples can opt in for community property. You can file in community property states to make property Sole and Separate (and back again), but I wonder if you you can do that with debts. \_ Many, many spouses "go wacky" during a divorce and ruin both parties credit out of spite. \_ Sounds like you need to move to a state not on the above list if that happens. 3. So is the lesson here not to marry a medical student until she's finished school or you'll hose her aid? That could be years. |
2008/7/25-30 [Finance/Banking, Politics/Domestic/California] UID:50696 Activity:nil |
7/25 not exactly WaMu: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080726/bs_nm/banks_fdic_dc_4 |
2008/7/24-28 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:50680 Activity:nil |
7/24 Hope none of you or your relatives have > $100K in checking+savings+ CDs or any bonds/stock in Downey S&L or WaMu. Friday night is bank failure night. \_ URL? \_ http://preview.tinyurl.com/6m9suj (NYT) S.E.C. Warns Wall Street: Stop Spreading the False Rumors \_ This says nothing about Downey or WaMu. More URL? |
2008/7/14-23 [Finance/Banking] UID:50564 Activity:nil |
7/14 If you have any bank deposits over 100k, I would say now is the time change that ASAP. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121605305718551305.html \_ This sentiment is 100% correct. I'm not worried about you fools-- it's your parents and relatives. Small business owners have it roughest because payroll can easily be > $100K. \_ Just put your money in a bank like Well's Fargo or BofA. \_ Wells is definitely a safe bet, but I'm not so sure about BofA. Are you certain they aren't exposed? Keep in mind that they bought Countrywide as well. \_ I think they are both "too big to fail" though WFC is certainly the stronger institution. I don't have $100k in cash anyway, so it is all moot. \_ What about Charles Schwab? Is it safe? \_ I am buying KBE (seriously). \_ Reversion to mean strategy? I'd say that's probably a good short term bet and an extremely lousy long term bet. \_ I actually think it is a good short and long term strategy, though I will certainly take some profits on any move up. \_ Why are you long on financials? Just playing devils advocate, or do you have a good macro justification? The problems with financials are not purely sentiment, they have a solvency issue. \_ No, I actually got 100% out of financials back in Dec, when my stops got hit. I have been itching to get back in and am starting to buy now. I think this is a selling climax right now, brought about by the IMB failure. I am sure some more banks will fail, but not too many of them. I am looking at a recently released (today) research report from Citibank. They are saying that they are revising BAC 2009 profit forcast down from $3.57 to $2.91. This is a huge drop, to be sure, but implies a forward P/E of 7. The banking sector will probably recover in 2010, making it an even better deal then. Buying on drops has worked our pretty well for me, though I admit I am often early, like most contrarians. Check out the chart on these three the last time we had a housing meltdown: http://tinyurl.com/6pgkpm \_ Update: the BAC I bought for 20 and change a week ago is now up over 30. |
2008/7/11-13 [Finance/Banking] UID:50539 Activity:high |
7/11 IMB taken over by FDIC. Largest single S&L failure. \_ Thanks Chuck Schumer for causing a run on the bank! "The banking regulator said it closed IndyMac after customers began a run on the lender following the June 26 release of a letter by Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., urging several bank regulatory agencies that they take steps to prevent IndyMac's collapse. "In the 11 days that followed the letter's release, depositors took out more than $1.3 billion, regulators said." http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080711/ap_on_bi_ge/indymac \_ You have a strange way of placing blame. \_ Schumer tipped it over the brink. You dispute this? \_ IndyMac was going to die no matter what. You dispute this? \_ American Savings and Loan in Stockton was bigger, according to the WSJ. \- i'd be very surprised if indymac was bigger than continental illinois ... factoring in inflation and all that. continental illinois was a money center bank in the top 10 by assets. --psb \_ Indymac is the #2 largest behind Continental Illinois. \_ Not to be pedantic, but wasn't Cont. Ill. a bank, not an S&L? \- not to be pendatic in return :-) ... that is a fair point, but since ~1980, the S&L vs (commercial) bank distinctinction is basically trivial, i.e. S&Ls may offer the same range of services and have comparable regulations on investments (and have moved more and more in the covergent direction since like getting rid of the separate FSLIC). YMERA(barfin jake garn-st. germain, DIDMCA, Regulation Q). See e.g. FMISHKIN book on post-New Deal regulation of depository institutions. --psb that is a fair point, but since ~1980, the S&L vs bank distinct is basically trivial. YMERA(garn-st. germain, monetary control act 1980) i.e. S&L may offer the same range of services and have comparable requirements investments. See e.g. MISHKIN book. bank distinct is basically trivial. YMERA(garn-st. germain, DIDMCA, Regulation Q). i.e. S&L may offer the same range of services and have comparable regulations on investment. See e.g. FMISHKIN book. regulations on investments. YMERA(barfin jake garn-st. germain, DIDMCA, Regulation Q). See e.g. FMISHKIN book on post- New Deal regulation of depository institutions. --psb \_ Thanks Bush! Ownership society, indeed! |
2008/7/8-10 [Finance/Banking, Reference/Tax] UID:50494 Activity:nil |
7/7 Mother, age 70, is thinking about putting money into fixed annuity. I have absolutely 0 experience with annuity, and I'm guessing they should be better than CDs since compounded interest is tax deferred. Does anyone have old family members who have annuities? Are they good? Are there other products similar to annuities in terms of safety and slightly higher-than-CD interest rates? \- general/theoretical problem with annuities is it is a textbook case of asymmetric information/adverse selection. [FYI: The classic paper on adverse selection was by UCB Dept Econ professor GAKERLOF. In a bit of a coincidence, he co-won with JSTIGLITZ, the economist two threads up]. \_ useless advice. why even bother to write it? \_ It's not advice. It is an observation and some trivia. I'm not going to give somebody I dont know financial advice via the motd. BTW, if you know what "adverse selection" is, it is pretty obvious there will be some suboptimal pricing. (i.e. if somebody is selling you health/annuity-type income insurance with limited medical info). \_ Have you not seen psb's posts before? \_ I'm not the op, but psb's posts are usually in the following format: "There is an academic topic related to this" "It is interesting, I've read a little bit of it" <Stick some material and KEYWORDS in the thread> "I am cool and smart and if you are like me, you'd read it too." (optional) ok thx \- "Results 1 - 10 of about 97,600 for (annuity "adverse selection"). BTW, yesterday [?] the FRESH AIR program had a short discussion about annuities and adverse selection (without using the term "adverse selection" i believe), and sort of spells out why individually negotiated annuities may be "a priori" suspect due to overpricing. |
2008/6/25-30 [Finance/Banking, Politics/Domestic/President/Clinton] UID:50374 Activity:nil |
6/25 I'm not a big clinton hater but why is Obama asking his supporters to help her pay off her campaign debt? Her husband pulls in literally 100s of millions a year from speaking fees, why don't they just pay it off themselves and move on? \_ Or why doesn't Obama pay Hillary to do some stops for him out of his massive not-publicly-funded warchest? \_ So do you not care that McCain signed up for public financing in order to get loans backed by that money back when he wasn't sure he'd win the primary but then when once he won he said oh wait, I'm going to back out of that public financing thing haha, wait did I legally agree to do public financing. Well fuck that. I'm not! \_ Well first of all that wouldn't be legal... \_ dunno. I really don't think Hillary is funded by $$ concerns. \- First, the amount BCLINTON has access to is slightly exaggerated. Let's say 10s of million. Second, to some extent apparently helping with this kind of debt is to some extent "standard practice". Third, particularly given #2, it would probably have been "easier" to agree to it than risk the lying and untrustoworthy Clinton people making hay out of it (again, the inside story is the Obama people are constantly worried about what the Clintons might have up their sleave). Fourth, we'll see to what extent he's just going through the motions. I agree Hillary has some fucking gall to ask any body the exceptionally rich to do this ... but there are some weird legal issues covering your ability to raise funds for a campaign which is no longer really in effect. \_ Why don't you sign your name? \_ The psb needs not sign his name. --psb #3 fan |
2008/6/18-24 [Finance/Banking] UID:50285 Activity:nil |
6/18 http://tinyurl.com/5qckkp (telegraph.co.uk) Hope you're all well positioned for the deflation in equities The questions are: (1) when (2) how rapid (3) order (in various markets) (4) how deep RBS seems to think (1) mid-July peak (2) to September (3) in the S&P (4) for a 22% loss from 1350 to 1050 I think analysts underestimate coordinated action by intl govts to make sure big money gets their money out in time. \_ Bears will always be with us. \_ Bears will always be with us. Why would a European Bank be complaining about a looming recession? The answer lies in how bank profits rise when monetary policy is loose. |
2008/6/1-2 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:50109 Activity:nil |
6/1 No comment: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/01/fashion/01rich.html \_ Why does the NY Times not include their postal address so I can send them my feces? |
2008/5/19-23 [Finance/Banking, Reference/Tax] UID:49998 Activity:nil |
5/19 I have lots of student loans, all of which are in deferment due to economic hardship (aka I'm too poor to pay them off now). If I have a little bit of money available each money ($100-200), should I contribute towards paying them off or is it better to contribute that money towards retirement? Thanks \_ Deferment as in you don't accrue any interest and you don't have to make payments, or deferment as you don't have to make payments but interest accrues? Also, could you make the minimum payment if you were not on deferment? \_ Deferment meaning don't need to pay interest but it does accrue interest. -op \_ OK, if you start paying a minimal amount, are they going to start demanding you pay more and put you in a bind? Last, what, of any, of this is tax-deductable? \_ Nope, I can pay off however much I want at any time, and it doesn't affect anything else. But, I don't know about the tax question. \_ The tax question is kind of important to answer your question. \_ Well if it's anything like other student loans (and it should be), the interest accrued is deductible. \_ It's better than deductible. \_ OK, to summarize the deleted, the interest is tax deductable. Next question: if you save your $100-$200/m, can you make more than the interest on that $100-$200/m, when you discount that interest by your Fed tax rate? I.e., when you enhance that interest by your Fed tax rate? I.e., suppose your effective Fed tax rate is 15%, can you make >= .85x <student loan interest rate> on your $100-200/m? >= 1.15x <student loan interest rate> on your $100-200/m? \_ Or is this 1.0x? Or .85x? If so, then you are better off keeping the money and building up a nest-egg--from which you can pay the loan later if the interest rate goes up, etc. later if the interest rate goes up, etc. If you put the money into a Roth IRA, the question is can you make >= 1.0x <student loan interest rate> on your $100-200/m? \_ If it's accruing interest then you should pay it. Otherwise you will be paying interest on interest, which is *BAD*. \_ It depends on what the interest rate is on your student loans. If it is less than 5%, you should certainly invest first, and delay paying your student loans for as long as possible. If it is higher than 12%, you should certainly pay if off (unless you have some higher interest debt, like credit card debt). If it is in between, it kind of depends on how good an investor you think you are. You should probably error on the side of caution. -GS |
2008/5/1-5 [Finance/Banking, Politics/Domestic/President/Reagan] UID:49863 Activity:nil |
4/30 Youtube video on $600 stimulus check costing you -$900/year for a $200K mortgage (assuming you're getting a stimulus check) http://www.tickerforum.org/cgi-ticker/akcs-www?post=42476 \_ Don't worry, oil will be tax-free for a while!!! Americans rejoice! \_ This video is over 30 seconds, or 100x times over the threshold of an average American's attention span, and therefore, is a very ineffective message. Secondly, he's using 4th grade math, which is beyond the comprehension of 90% of the Americans, and therefore, this is a very ineffective message. Thirdly, he's trying to persuade people using logic instead of good looks and charm (Ronald Reagan), and therefore, this is a very \_ JFK ineffective message. \- i watched about 2min of that video. it is stupid. he spends all his time on arithmetic rather than economics. the question is "what will be the macroeconomic effects of the 'stimulus' plan". why dont you look for something about this by brad delong, paul krugman, even that semi-evil, smug greg mankiw, CBO etc. paul krugman, even that semi-evil, smug greg mankiw etc [i am assuming in the latter 2min of the video he doesnt talk about velocity of money, balance of payments etc]. of more relevance to mortgages is the part of the bill relating to conforming loans ... but again, the actual effect of changing the conforming loan cap is complicated].if we take "well known borderline communist" lawrence lindsay's estimate for cost of the iraq war in 2008 [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawrence_Lindsey] it will add more to the deficit than the stimulus, if you use the CBO's estimate. And of course the 2009 cost of the one time stimulus drops dramatically ... you think the 2009 cost of the iraq war will be <$20bn? the interest on the debt is already more than twice the cost of the stimulus etc. about velocity of money, balance of payments etc.] |
2008/4/16-23 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:49765 Activity:high |
4/16 You thought gasoline was expensive now? You ain't seen nothing yet! link:www.csua.org/u/las (Yahoo Finance, includes video) \_ The free market will solve our energy crisis -dimwit #1 fan \_ PEAK OIL alert. Also 'rationing by price' -- gotta love it. \_ If the govt doesn't step in and do rationing, rationing by price is how the market would do it. \_ How many of you recall the gas lines of the 70s? Without rationing by price we'll have lines *and* expensive gas, if you can get it. Or oh hey we can do that whole even/odd numbered plate thing again, yeah that was great. And don't forget to ticket/fine/arrest any private citizen who dares to give gas to anyone on the side of the road who runs out, that was good for a laugh back then too. \_ Dld that latter actually ever happen? I lived through this, though I was quite young, but I don't remember anything like that. \_ Huh? What's wrong with 'rationing by price?' That's what the market is FOR. \_ Because when you ration nesseccities by price poor people die. Old people die all the time in cold climates because they can't afford heating oil. \_ So how do you determine how much food/oil/whatever is necessary and how much is beyond necessary? If you are concerned about the poor then give them $$$ and let them choose where to spend the $$$. That's still rationing by price. I disagree with the idea that every American should get a similar bundle of goods that is "necessary". \_ that's because you're an overprivileged twerp \_ I forgot that you know what's best for people more than they do. It's the leftist way to boss people around. \_ How do you "know" that freezing to death is what is best for someone? Did they tell you that? \_ Can you read? "let them choose where to spend the $$$" -!pp \_ Nonono, the soviet style command economy is clearly superior to western style economics. \_ We actually live in a mixed economy. But you probably already know that. \_ Sorry, missed that. \_ Being able to survive a cold winter is pretty high on the list. \_ Some people have more tolerance for cold and would prefer to spend the heating oil credit on something more important to them like strippers or booze or HDTV or whatever. \_ Just wear a jacket at home. That's how I save on gas bill. \_ Cause where you live it regularly gets below 0F \_ No, sorry. Government rationing will cause even worse shortages and hurt even more people. Where do you central control command economy guys get the idea the government can actually make anything better? With gvt imposed rationing you'll get a Soviet style system where the rich and powerful get everything and the poor and middle classes get nothing. \_ And with no regulation, you get booms and panics like in the 1880s. Why argue against the Straw Man of a Soviet economy? Is your position so weak that can't make your point any other way? Is there more or less wealth inequality in Sweden or the US? \_ A system in which everyone is equally poor is a possible result and that wouldn't be a good system. We can see examples of that in the China of a couple decades ago, Soviet Russia, Cuba, and so on. I don't think it matters how much of the pie you get if it's a big enough pie. Everyone sharing a small pie isn't a great alternative. \_ That may be true, but it's a well known psychological finding that people (a) care about relative equality and (b) care specifically about inequality of transferable assets, much more so than other, much more 'unfair' and blatant kinds of inequality. (There are some interesting theories about how our attitudes about fairness may have evolved which explain (a) and (b)). -- ilyas \_ I think most people in the USA don't care or there would have been riots already. I think people here assume (correctly) that a rising tide lifts all boats. A wealthy, powerful USA is something most Americans desire and so far it has made us by far the largest consumers in the world. \_ Funny you should claim that right now. Here is a front page article from the WSJ that argues otherwise: http://www.csua.org/u/lbj (WSJ) (The rising boats opinion, not the wealthy powerful America comment.) \_ Do you think that people in Sweden, Denmark, The Netherlands, etc are "poor"? Do you think that they think of themselves as poor? The countries are much more egalitarian than the US and people are in general happier. And no one goes hungry or lacks for housing or medical care. Netherlands, etc are "poor"? Do you think that they think of themselves as poor? The countries are much more egalitarian than the US and people are in general happier. And no one goes hungry or lacks for housing or medical care. \_ The Netherlands is a wealthy nation, but the individuals are poor by American standards. I say this as someone with a Dutch mother and most of my family still living in Holland. Sure, they aren't lacking in necessities. On the other hand, they don't have any of the luxuries people here have. I wouldn't eagerly live their lifestyle nor that of my godfather's Swedish ex-wife. Of course, someone who is homeless would disagree. However, I think overall the middle class in the USA is better off than the middle class there. The rich are rich both places. GDP per capita US is #2 in the world behind Luxembourg. Holland is #16. Sweden is #25. I think our system, while "unequal" benefits the citizenry more than any other even though it's not "fair". \_ But don't Dutch people consistently have a higher "happiness" rating than Americans? Food for thought. I believe Switzerland comes out on top in that list, although America is pretty high at number 20. \_ Happiness can be acheieved with drugs. It's not really something I aspire to. YMMV. \_ -1 to you, +1 to me. \_ I am just saying that happiness is a state of mind. I wouldn't want to live in Third World conditions just because the people that do claim they are happy about it. \_ You were doing so good there for a while too, after you dropped the "a slightest bit of tax increase is exactly equal to Stalinism" line of argument, too. Though you may in fact be Stalinism" line of argument, too. Though you may in fact be another person, since your tone is so different. But do you really think that Swedes live in "Third World" conditions? I do not. The Dutch seem to have quite pleasant lives and I have been there many times. What you say about the relative prosperity of the middle class is no doubt true, but all that junk that Americans have doesn't seem to improve their lives any. say about the relative prosperity of the middle class is no doubt true, but all that junk that Americans have doesn't seem to improve their lives any. \_ That's pretty paternalistic. -- ilyas \_ I am one of those liberal elitists you keep hearing about. \_ Good luck in the next election! People LOVE elitists! \_ I am not running for office. \_ There may not be much of an oil trading system left by 2020 since the "global economy" might be totally wrecked by nonstop warfare. \_ Nonstop warfare? Caused by what? And fighting over what? \_ Time to get a high gas mileage vehicle before manufacturers put an SUV-like premium on them. \_ Haven't they already? \_ Yes on the hybrid ones, not yet on the regular engine ones. \_ Get a bike as well! |
2008/4/11-16 [Finance/Banking, Computer/HW/Drives] UID:49728 Activity:nil |
4/11 Countrywide 12 month CD is 4.25%. But some people tell me they're going out of business. Is it actually safe to deposit into Countrywide right now? Will FDIC pay me the full amount + interest should it ever goes out of business? \_ Are you really that concerned about 4.25%? I could see if it was 7% or something. How much more is that than the next best rate you can find? Anyway, the Countrywide web site says that is it is FDIC insured. FDIC will pay principal plus accrued interest up to a total of $100,000. \_ I'm putting down $20,000. Most rates are 3.00%, so by putting into Countrywide I'll gain an extra 1.25% interest rate or $250.00/year. That'll get me 2 good Chez Paniz meals. I'll take it. -op \_ Only if you eat by yourself and don't order wine, especially after tax. How long will it take for you to recover your money from Uncle Sam? Is $250 pretax really worth the risk? \_ Patelco CU ( http://patelco.org ) is having a new member special right now. 6.785% for 12 month CD. Existing members also have a special rate of 4% 12 month CD for new monies. \_ It says maximum amount of money you can put for 7% is $1000.00. UH DUH. \_ Ah, didn't see that the maximum is also $1000. Sorry about that. |
2008/4/7-12 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:49678 Activity:nil |
4/6 Famed Venice eatery offering discount to 'poor' U.S. tourists http://www.csua.org/u/l8c 'A sign posted outside the restaurant at the weekend reads: "Harry's Bar of Venice, in an effort to make the American victims of subprime loans happier, has decided to give them a special 20 percent discount on all items of the menu during the short term of their recovery."' |
2008/3/31-4/6 [Finance/Banking] UID:49618 Activity:nil |
3/31 Looking for a high-rate CD, recommendation please? \_ In the US? You won't find one, you can thank the Fed for that. \_ Ok fine. What's the highest CD in the US right now? \_ Check http://countrywide.com. You can also go to http://bankrate.com for CD comparisons. WSJ also lists highest CD yields at times. |
2008/3/24-25 [Finance/Banking, Reference/Tax] UID:49552 Activity:high |
3/24 Opinion: companies that require tax-payer funded bailouts should pay for this privilege in advance as a kind of insurance. -- ilyas \_ So you advocate a business tax? I don't think we need a new business tax. I don't think we need bailouts either. Let them take their lumps and retire with what they've already stolen. Ban them all from every working in finance again to prevent recycling these criminal idiots and let the markets recover without government tampering. No bailouts. No silly taxes. \_ No need for laws/rules, the free market will take care of it. Requiring anything extra will stifle competition and make US less competitive to other countries. No. \_ It's very simple, if you want free taxpayer money in case of a 'catastrophe,' you need to pay the taxpayers a premium. This isn't just about the latest financial meltdown, but also airlines, farming, etc. -- ilyas \_ Seems kind of redundant, given the presence of private insurance. So I guess what you're saying is that companies should not be bailed out. Which isn't very interesting but I agree. \_ I am prepared to admit that bailouts might be necessary in some cases, I just want to make the fuckers pay for this. -- ilyas \_ Yes, this is essentially what the FDIC is all about. It is obvious that these IBs need a similar level of regulation. What pisses me off is that the BSC shareholders are going to get billions from the taxpayers. I was okay with a $2 (fuck you) bailout, because I understand the risk to the financial system, but why $10? \_ I'm fine with the shadow banking system getting a bailout, so long as they're willing to submit to regulation and oversight (just like ordinary commercial banks). If you want to operate with impunity, that's fine, but you shouldn't expect the goverment to swoop in and save your stupid ass when you mess up. \_ The purpose of the bailout wasn't to protect the company, but to build confidence in our financial system and to prevent from market melt-down. Ultimately, the goal is to protect the American dollar, hence everyone wins. \_ It is more prudent to protect the American dollar by regulating dangerous behavior by financial institutions, than it is to let them screw everything up and then bail them out. -tom \_ I don't think anyone will disagree with you except the it doesn't change the fact that dangerous behavior already happened. It's as helpful as trying to preach safe sex to people who already got a bunch of STDs. \- "first you have at admit you have a problem^W^W^W^W there was a bail out". \_ What if there was no BSC bailout? Exactly what dire effects for all of us are we trying to prevent? Dollar devaluation, is that what you're saying? I think that would be temporary. The broader macroeconomic policies of the fed. gov't seem more important. In a larger sense, bailouts undermine the entire market. The only real accountability executives have is to their shareholders. The only way to force that accountability is to make the prospect of shareholders losing their shirts very real. \_ There are real concerns of a domino effect; a BSC failure would put liquidity pressure on all the other institutions which hold BSC debt, which could lead to more failures. Complete meltdown of the financial system is not outside the realm of possibility. Still, bailing out BSC sucks. -tom \_ Yeah I mean, I would think they should let BSC die ignobly, and even let a couple other dominoes fall perhaps. Bail out when it actually does seem necessary; let some smaller fish take over. I'm skeptical of a term like "complete meltdown of the financial system". I'm sure the most irresponsible entities would like to trumpet themselves as being key to the entire "financial system" and therefore must be saved from their own mistakes. Just like any corporate welfare is couched in noble terms. \_ Yes, and this is exactly the problem with the shadow system. Without any regulatory oversight or standards, who really knows what is lurking behind BSC? Maybe they really are the key! Or maybe not... I hate to drag out that hoary old quote from Buffet about derivatives being "financial weapons of mass destruction," but in this case it seems warranted. \_ Dire? Think of all the yachts that won't be bought that year! My God! Think of the yacht makers' children! \_ LANDLORD WITH A YACHT! \_ Go read up on the panics the economy used to routinely experience in the late 1800's, with unemployment in the 20%+ range and bank runs and get back to me with any questions. \_ http://www.usagold.com/gildedopinion/greenspan.html \_ The Financial Times agrees with you, as do I. -ausman http://www.csua.org/u/l4i \_ Why don't you point us to something? And also say what your point is. |
2008/3/18-21 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:49491 Activity:nil |
3/18 Tent cities springing up in LA: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CnnOOo6tRs8 \_ lazy people = poor people, proof that we shouldn't waste any more money on social programs and handouts! -Republican \_ You can go and give them your money. Why don't you? \_ America! Fuck yeah! |
2008/3/14-17 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:49457 Activity:high |
3/14 Fed provides emergency financing to BSC via JPM as other banks refuse to lend to BSC at fed funds target Fed to take on all credit risk for BSC collateral used to obtain financing http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120550108028136579.html On Monday, BSC said in a statement, "there is absolutely no truth to the rumors of liquidity problems" http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aa874wpC8wcg \_ Someone please translate this to plain English? \_ You went to Cal? \_ Read the WSJ article. WSJ = Wall Street Journal. If you have q's, come back. \_ The wsj article seems reasonable clear. In any event, here is my understanding: Bear Stearns Co. (BSC), a large NY investment bank, may not have enough money to meet its obligations. J.P. Morgan (JPM) has borrowed money from the Federal Reserve Bank (Fed) and loaned it to BSC to ensure that BSC has enough money to meet its obligations. JPM, unlike BSC, is not technically an investment bank, and therefore it may borrow money directly from the Fed. JPM is merely acting as a conduit for the Fed's loan to BSC. BSC has pleged its assets to the Fed as security for the loan. If BSC's asserts drop in value, then the Fed, and the loan. If BSC's assets drop in value, then the Fed, and the taxpayers, will take the loss; JPM is not taking on any risk. \_ Why would we care? I mean, we're already borrowing a lot of money and our deficit is huge, why can't we just borrow more? I mean, if you owe the bank $1 million dollars, the bank owns you. But if you owe the bank $100 trillion dollars, then you own the bank. \_ Which is why the dollar is doing oh so well on the international market right now. \_ 99 yen to 1 dollar! \_ Personally I am concerned about the level of debt the government takes on. I do not know if bailing out BSC is better than the alternative, which is to let if fail. I guess we have to trust that the Fed knows what it is doing. \_ The Fed is in panic mode: "The Fed's role in the deal suggests federal officials fear a systemic collapse of the U.S. financial system were Bear Stearns to fail. The fear stems from Bear central role in a multitrillion-dollar web of interconnecting derivative contracts." \_ Probably. Something about this situation reminds me of the LTCM fiasco a few years back. \- I dunno how old you were in 1998, but the funny part of this is Bear Stearns is the banks that part of this is Bear Stearns is the bank that refused to play ball ... the scrappy outsider... during the "genteel" bailout of LTCM. It's also amazing to read about the arrogance of the LTCM insiders dictating terms of the bailout. Just unfucking believable. \- I dunno how old you were when LTCM happened, but the funny part of this is Bear Stearns is the bank that refused to play ball ... the scrappy outsider ... during the "genteel" bailout of LTCM. It's also amazing to read about the arrogance of the LTCM insiders dictating terms of the bailout. Just unfucking believable. \_ I didn't remember that BSC was one of the hold outs during the LTCM bailout. That is so ironic. Re arrogance of LTCM insiders - Being a nobel prize winner and 'furd prof goes to some people heads. \- it's not just merton and scholes. YMWTR: http://tinyurl.com/rcrv8 \_ Deregulating the financial system was a mistake. \_ Libural socialist rant! Why do you hate America? \_ Yeah, me and FDR. Known America haters. \_ FDR hated America, not only did he sell out this country at Yalta, he also instigated the New Deal which was pratically communist. was practically communist. \_ Whoa! When the did the Birchers show up on the motd?! \_ Time to return to a gold and/or silver standard! -rpaul \_ Time to put Glass-Stiegel back in place. Though it is too late for this recession, at least it will keep the next one from being as bad. I fear we will see a New Deal style nationalization of the banking system before this is all said and done. |
2008/3/7-11 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:49382 Activity:kinda low |
3/7 http://www.ofheo.gov/media/hpi/AREA_LIST.pdf Conforming loan limits are now $729,750 for the San Jose-Sunnyvale- Santa Clara area. Even more for a duplex. Expiring end of 2008. Buy-buy-buy! \_ This only lasts till end of 2008 right? It's suppose to save the presidency or something. \_ How do I find out my area? \_ "housing, it only goes up!" "They aren't making any more land!" "Buy now, before you get priced out!" \_ I am glad I bought in 2002, before I got priced out... \_ Where would you have gotten priced out? \_ San Francisco, specifically Noe Valley \_ Just wait. Given real value decreases I'm sure we'll be back around 2002 prices fairly soon. \_ You are sure that Noe Valley is in for 50% drop in real prices soon? I am sure you are wrong. Are you one of those bitter renters, perhaps? \_ No. By the way, "bitter renter" accusations are essentially a Godwin equivalent at this point in the housing mess. The last thing that any renter is right now is bitter. \_ Nonsense. The bitter renters have been harping on the motd for years. If they had bought back then they'd still be above their purchase price and would actually be on their way to owning something instead of supporting their landlord's yachting adventures. \_ It is not really a yacht, just a 32 foot wooden sailboat... \_ Does that Koolaid taste good? \_ Nationally, home equity levels are the lowest ever. They'd be renting from the bank like the rest of America. \_ Up 50% after the all the drops. It tastes *great*! Thanks for asking. How is your landlord doing lately? Better than you I'd wager. \_ Nationally, home equity levels are the lowest ever. They'd be renting from the bank like the rest of America. \_ Which has nothing to do with prices and everything to do with individuals taking money out of their equity to buy toys. That has nothing at all to do with the economy, housing, or anything. Just people being dumb and greedy. I did not take out anything when I refi'd and every month I own a bit more. \_ So are you or aren't you predicting a real drop in Noe Valley home prices of 50% "real soon"? Can you define real soon a little more precisely please? \_ Hard to tell, but I'd expect within a time frame of 5 to 7 years. Depends a lot on whether the dollar continues to become more worthless, which I think is a good bet. \_ Home prices have traditionally done okay in a period of high inflation. Not great, but not that bad, especially if you have a mortgage that is getting inflated away as well. Where would you \- yes you are paying with inflated dollars, but some of you house apprecaition is nominal appreciation. rather keep your assets? Gold? And even if your rather pessimistic prediction comes true, I will have lived in a place for 10 years for the cost of mortgage + taxes + maint - tax break, which is already less than rent for me. \_ I'm sure you'll be fine, given that you didn't buy in the truly inane bubble periods and you probably have a pretty sane loan. And I'll be a perfectly happy "bitter renter" on the sidelines until I need to buy and prices are a little more realistic. But this conforming limit change certainly does not mean "buy buy buy." For more on the requirements for "jumbo conforming" see here: http://csua.org/u/kzo (calculated risk) The DTI, LTV, and re-fi requirements seem daunting to me. Won't be surprised if these end up costing more than a traditional jumbo. \_ I would not buy today either. Or in 2005-2006, when things were crazy. To tell you the truth, I was kind of nervous buying even in 2002. But I guess it all worked out, barring a huge deflationary period (that is when people with $1/2M loans really get screwed). \_ I was certain I was buying at the top in 2001 and boy was I wrong. It's hard to predict tops/bottoms so just buy when you can afford to. \_ Certainly home owners will do better than renters in an inflationary economy; mortgage payment relative to income will decrease, while rent will not. By the way, from what I can tell from the rules on these "jumbo conforming loans," the price savings in the end as compared to normal jumbos will be a wash. \_ Bitter renter? \_ Happy renter, but thanks for the generic troll. By the way, the DTI requirement on these new loans means they aren't gonna change much of anything, at least not in the Bay. \_ I say bitter renter because you cared enough to check. If you're so happy what's it matter what the requirements are or what effect they will/wont have on prices? \_ Curiousity, and a general fear that the economy is about to go in the dumper. There are other reasons to care about this stuff than house envy. \_ It doesn't matter what the economy is doing: so long as you have skills and some cash on hand, you'll be fine. |
2008/3/6-7 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:49368 Activity:kinda low |
3/6 Housing, Bank Troubles Deepen Foreclosures set record Aggregate equity drops to 47.9% http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120485071664018195.html "Housing, it always goes up!" "Buy now, before you get freezed out!" "They aren't making more land!" "We're special!" "... if you own something, you have a vital stake in the future of our country. The more ownership there is in America, the more vitality there is in America, and the more people have a vital stake in the future of this country." \_ So far anyway, this is actually true. "... if you own something, you have a vital stake in the future of our country. The more ownership there is in America, the more vitality there is in America, and the more people have a vital stake in the future of this country." future of this country." -Dubya |
2008/2/13-18 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:49135 Activity:kinda low |
2/12 What is the profile of a person defaulting home loan? I mean, are these type of people under-educated? Risk takers? High school drop-outs who desperately want to own homes? And why are they in certain areas (Inland Empire, etc)? \_ They run the gamut. If the loan officers were all of a sudden willing to give them a loan, even though they previously didn't qualify, and they want a house, who are they to object. "I sign my name saying I'll pay it back. But if they give me the money, that must mean I can pay it back. Because otherwise the government would tell them not to give me the money." \_ They run the gamut. If the loan officers were all of a sudden willing to give them a loan, even though they previously didn't qualify, and they want a house, who are they to object. "I sign my name saying I'll pay it back. But if they give me the money, that must mean I can pay it back. Because otherwise the government would tell them not to give me the money." \_ in another word people with lower than avg intelligence, who mostly congregate in SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA like our dimwit \_ There are fewer foreclosures in places like SF because the market is stronger. That's all. Look at Sacramento for NoCal "stupidity". \_ SF markets did not go up as much as in LA, mostly because people were not dumb enough to sign a bunch of loans they couldn't afford, so the bubble wasn't as bad here. Only in the NorCal burbs are people that stupid. \_ Southern California style left wing is not MAINSTREAM AMERICA. \_ one oddity about california is foreclosure laws here make it hard for the lender to persue assets beyond the property on which the loan was taken out. This takes a most of the risk out of defaulting on a loan for a 'underwater' property. \_^left^right \_ one oddity about california is foreclosure laws here make it hard for the lender to persue assets beyond the property on which the loan was taken out. This takes a most of the risk out of defaulting on a loan for a 'underwater' property. \_ unless you re-fi'd \_ They are San Jose engineers making $100K+ with a $740K mortgage \_ Yes, but being a state with trust deeds instead of mortgages mitigates that somewhat, as it is much easier to foreclose on a trust deed. \_ They are San Jose engineers making $100K+ with a $740K mortgage now who bought at $275K in 1995 http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/12/business/12credit.html \_ "... when he refinanced his home in Northern California to take cash out to pay for his daughter's college tuition." Yeah, blame it on the daughter. Stop playing good parent. Did he pay $465K+ for his daughter's college tuition? There's probably some European vacations and a BMW that he's not mentioning. \_ People have an amazing ability to rationalize away their mistakes and put the blame on someone else. Too bad, they lose a chance to learn something when they do that. \_ I know someone who bought a house in Berkeley *knowing* she was going to lose the house. 5 figure salary, really bad credit, not a very convincing person. Didn't matter. They gave her a huge loan knowing she couldn't pay it and she knew she couldn't. I just don't understand. \_ The market is broken because all parties involved are shielded from the consequences of their behavior by the government. \_ Tell that to JP Morgan and Citibank. The mortgage securitization conduits did not look at the paper they were packaging. Greenspan turned a blind eye, and did not enforce what little mortgage underwriting regulation there is. Or use FedRes' considerable influence to stop the BS. \_ Tell that to JP Morgan and Citibank. The mortgage securitization conduits did not look at the paper they were packaging. Greenspan turned a blind eye, and did not enforce what little mortgage underwriting regulation there is. Or use FedRes' considerable influence to stop the BS. \_ So what are the consequences? I haven't paid much attention honestly but I haven't heard of any high profile people getting fired or anything. \_ Oh Jees. Something like a dozen CEOs have lost their jobs in the last six months. But no one in the White House, it is a "responsibilty-free zone." \_ you mean they they found an excuse to take their golden parachute early. |
2008/2/6-11 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:49080 Activity:nil |
2/6 I want to open up a money market account, and I'm debating between an ING Direct acct and a ETrade one. Which one is preferable? Should I just go with the ETrade acct since it offers 4.4% interest (vs. the 3.4% offered by ING)? Thanks. \_ Are you worried about ETrade going belly up? \_ Go for Etrade, and when their rate tanks switch to another service. ING Direct has really low rates, I no longer use them. Make sure to check out other services like Emigrantdirect, GMAC, IndyMac, etc. I'd stick to Etrade since they're well established and their teaser rates (currently 4.4%) seem to last longer than any of the other places. Good luck and tell us what you ended up deciding! \_ I like GMAC because transactions post very quickly, you can write checks from the account, they have ATM fee reimbursements, and their rate is almost always quite competitive. |
2008/1/24-31 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:49003 Activity:nil |
1/24 Yay! Conforming loan limit to be raised to $625,500 for Santa Clara \_ What does this mean? -not a homeowner, but want to learn \_ Housing loans under X amount get goverment funded loans that are at lower intrest rates. A jumbo loan is a loan for over that amount and intrest is about 1 1/2 percent more. By raising the cap they are basically making more expensive houses cheaper to buy (cause the intrest rate is less, and loans are easier to get.) They are trying to reinflate the bubble. Yay? \_ I see, so what prevents stupid people from getting exactly $625,500 for the first loan and another $300,000 for the second loan? And how do you look up the rate limit for the area you live in? Thanks. -pp \_ Until recently the limit was country wide. Don't know how the look up works. As to the second, you could do that but because how second mortgages work they tend to be even higher intrest rate. (Basically if a house forecloses and is sold the entire first mortgage is paid off before the second mortgage gets a crack at it, I'm not sure how liens work.) Some people do manage to get a cheaper deal by doing what you suggest, but it still more expensive than not needing a jumbo loan. \_ piggyback loands are done ALL THE TIME. it's cheaper than one huge jumbo. of course, if you have the down payment, then a single conforming is best of all. the conforming limit is currently $417K countrywide except hawaii and alaska (+50% higher). the proposed plan says median price of the "metropolitan area" + 25% should be the new cap. however, the numbers need to be made consistent between the house/senate versions, looks like feb 15 is target sign date. \_ it's an experimental erectile dysfunction pill for the CA real estate market, FDA approval and short-/long-term effects TBD Santa Clara = rock hard East Bay = softening San Bernardino = flaccid \_ !swami says this is step one for a complete federal (i.e. taxpayer) bailout of the mortgage mess (i.e. banks). \_ !swami also says this is basically legalized theft. |
2008/1/16-18 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:48958 Activity:high |
1/16 Nikkei 225 back to lows of 2001-2005 and 1986. Dang. I thought stock markets of developed countries were supposed to return more than a savings account over 22 years! \_ If you cherry pick your dates, then no it won't. If you cherry pick the other way you'd be a zillionaire. \_ i guess we're supposed to wait 40 years? \_ No, you're supposed to not cherry pick the dates. Or better yet, just put your money in your piggy bank. \_ If you are really interested in this topic, I suggest that you read _Stocks_For_The_Long_Run_ by Siegel. Plenty of developed countries stock markets have gone all the way to zero, usually after they lost a war. If you held German stocks from 1933 to 1945, you were pretty unhappy. On the other hand, if you bought the Nikkei back in 1950, you are still sitting on a very impressive gain. The Nikkei is *still* not back to where it was in 1989, so yes, you can cherry pick dates and demonstrate practically anything. Diversification and a long term view are essential for success investing, especially passive investing, like the stock market. You should not have money in stocks that you need in the next 20 years. -ausman \_ Guys, conventional wisdom is that you should invest in a market index and hold x years, and you're virtually guaranteed to do okay. What is "x" for returns better than a savings account / CD / bonds? -op \_ Wrong assumption. The stock market gives you likely better returns than a more conservative option like a CD, with a probability curve that starts at x and rises towards 100% over time. -tom \_ Also you have to diversify to prevent being really screwed when one sector/company/country tanks for 20 years. \_ what do you estimate the probability of a market index outperforming CDs is for x = 30 years? do you have a sweet spot for x? let's also assume we are moving from stocks to bonds/safety as we get older, also as CFPs suggest. to bonds/safety as we get older, as CFPs suggest. \_ You could estimate this by looking at historical 30-year returns and seeing how many of those periods resulted in returns less than 5%/year average. I expect that probability is very low, less than 10%. -tom |
2007/12/21-29 [Finance/Banking] UID:48851 Activity:nil |
12/21 Commerce dept consumer spending and PCE for November 2007 +1.1% consumer spending overall +2.0% spending on non-durable goods (food, gas, etc.) +0.3% spending on durable goods (crap + cars/appliances/etc.) -0.3% real disposable personal income (after taxes, before rent/mortge) -0.5% personal savings rate Yay!! \_ "consumer spending" == "consumer debt"? \- does anybody know what the accounting definition of the "personal savings rate" is? tnx. \_ "When interest rate is as low as Bush's approval rating, who needs personal savings?" !Bernanke |
2007/12/19-29 [Finance/Banking] UID:48837 Activity:nil |
12/19 http://tinyurl.com/ys8gcc (wsj.com) http://image.minyanville.com/assets/FCK_Aug2007/File/s2162664.mp3 (At 26:20) Operator: "Again, at this time, if you would like to ask a question, please press *1 on your telephone keypad" * Silence * Sallie Mae CEO: "How good is this. Steve, let's go, there's no questions, let's get the fuck out of here." |
2007/12/12-19 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:48788 Activity:nil |
12/12 http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119746804568523549.html Fed offers term auction facility to address credit freeze - Effective operation almost exactly like the Fed discount window: Banks can borrow money from the Fed at weeks to months duration - But at or near the fed funds target (instead of the discount rate) - The key feature (not discussed in the article of course) is Anonymity. Only the Fed will know who it lends to using this facility. Banks don't borrow from the discount window because it's public knowledge, telling the world that no other bank will lend to you so you had to go to the discount window. - The Fed is on the hook if the borrower goes belly-up, so it will decide who gets how much in loans for how much collateral - Starts next week for $20B and is envisioned as an ongoing program - Fed also lent $24B to ECB and Swiss central bank to help Europe's banks with SIV/CDO implosion. Central banks also relaxing collateral requirements. \_ Expect the taxpayer to get screwed in the end. \_ privatize profits, socialize losses bitch! |
2007/12/10-14 [Finance/Banking] UID:48772 Activity:high |
12/10 Does anyone on motd actually know someone else using 0% down interest only home loans? I don't, and I can't imagine any Berkeley grads stupid enough to do so. \_ I knew someone who got a 105% loan but she got lucky, didn't get fired, and converted a year ago. She was not a Cal grad. \_ Of course I do. It's not really stupid. It's something smart people do all the time. The product is really intended for developers and/or investors who know what they are doing and the risks involved or else disciplined people who have a fluctuating income (e.g. small business owners who pay a massive chunk of principle at the end of each quarter/year when they had good business and have the extra cash). Most people never pay their mortgage off anyway (until they sell) and principle is such a small part of the payment that it can make sense to not commit to it. I would have done it if I could have gotten a better rate that way, but usually you won't. You just pay principle when you want to, but you're not committed to it. In my world, that's smart. \_ principal \_ Ironically, I spelled it "principal" and then checked the web which had it "principle". The web site I looked at was retarded and you are correct. \_ I know someone who got their townhouse in DC that way. She is a Cal undergrad and Yale grad school grad. I talked her into refi'ing into a 30 year fixed rate about 18 months ago. She was planning on doing it anyway, when her rate reset this year, but I think she is glad she listened to me and did it early. \_ Variable rate and interest only are two different things completely. She could've refinanced into a fixed rate interest only if she wanted. \_ It was actually both a variable rate and an interest only loan (with a higher rate variable 2nd, making it a no money down loan as well). Were people actually signing up for fixed rate, interest only loans? What was the term, i.e. how long was the loan for? Life? \_ Works just like variable rate except the interest rate doesn't fluctuate. http://tinyurl.com/2npzy8 \_ Not how I think of it. Those are 5 or 7 year fixed rate loans only, they vary after that, so they are really ARMs. \_ Um, no. Some are fixed for 5 or 7 years and some are fixed for the life of the loan. Look at the Smart30 offering and compare to SmartChoice: http://tinyurl.com/2lcyub Both are interest-only. \_ Those are still only fixed for 10 years. An interest-only loan, by definition, would never get paid off, so it is kind of silly to claim that the loan rate is fixed for the "life of the loan." The Smart30 converts to a standard fixed rate fully amortizing loan after 10 years. \_ Are you an idiot? I hate to call names, but read the damn link! They are fixed for the life of the loan! Read the column that says "fixed-rate period". What does it say? Term of loan! Term of loan is not 10 years. Jeebus! How it's amortized has nothing to do with the rate being fixed or not. The loan may *never* be paid off and it could still be at a fixed rate! That this loan has a 10 year interest-only period has nothing to do with whether the rate is fixed or not. \_ Yes, I read the link. You don't understand what you are talking about. No one offers a loan of infinite duration, which is what a fixed-rate, non-amortizing loan would be. The Smart30 is an interest only loan for 10 years, then a standard 20 year fixed rate fully amortizing loan after that. They both have the same interest rate, yes. \_ No one is talking about amortization here but you! You said "Those are 5 or 7 year fixed rate loans only, they vary after that" which is WRONG. Then you said "Those are still only fixed for 10 years" which is also WRONG! When I showed you proof you started talking about amortization. WTF?! I have completed all the coursework to be a mortgage broker, so I definitely know what I am talking about and you are a buffoon! Further, your reading comprehension is terrible. I never said any of those loans were infinite duration, but certainly such loans are possible - and with a fixed rate, too! I'll make you one if you want it! \_ Interest-only means the same things \_ Interest-only means the same thing as non-amortizing. You are really clueless if you don't realize that. Show me a fixed-rate, interest only loan of inifinite duration, I would loan of infinite duration, I would be amused to know of it. As far as I know there have only been a few cases of this kind of note in history. http://www.csua.org/u/k7p (tutorial) http://www.csua.org/u/k7q (history) Read about the losrenten and the consols. You are talking about setting up a perpetual annuity. \_ You are going off on a tangent now. Please to be acknowledging that your two above assertions about fixed-rate loans were wrong and then we can talk about amortization (or not). \_ My initial question was "what is the term for the fixed-rate, interest only loan?" which you have never really answered except with nonesense like "the entire term of the loan you idiot!" Yes, I glanced at some of the links and thought that the longest interest only loan was 7 years, when it was actually 10, but you still have not even come close to answering my initial question. What you call a "tangent" is actually my initial question. Work on your own comprehension skills. And yes, we use the word "vary" to mean different things. You use it to mean the interest rate varies, while I use it to mean the payment varies. I think that is the root of our confusion. \_ I think it was clear what you were talking about when you used the term ARM and you were incorrect. \_ My original question was: "Were people actually signing up for fixed rate, interest only loans? What was the term...?" So no, this is not a "tangent" as you call it, it is the original question. Your response "the life of the loan" makes no sense, unless you are claiming a perpetual annuity. It is actually kind of amusing that you claim I have reading comprehension problems, considering I got a 750 on the verbal part of the GRE. Perhaps the communication problem is not really on my end. original question. \_ What does "ARM" (a term you used and which has a clear meaning) mean on your planet? You said "Those are 5 or 7 year fixed rate loans only, they vary after that, so they are really ARMs" which is WRONG and "Those are still only fixed for 10 years" which is WRONG. You have yet to demonstrate any real understanding of the subject or acknowledge your misunderstanding, so it's pretty clear you are the idiot here. You are a textbook case for why standardized testing is USELESS. BTW, the answer to your question about the length of the loan is in the URL I provided. \_ You don't know what the word "vary" means in the English language. You think it only means to vary the interest rate, but it can also mean to vary the payment amount. Perhaps your mortgage training taught you this jargon, but that is not how it is used by regular English speakers. \_ No one talks about "variable payments" w.r.t mortgages and you are the one who used the term "ARM" which means Adjustable Rate. You are out of your depth here. Admit that you didn't know what you were talking about, thank me for educating you, and move on. \_ Go to your own website: http://tinyurl.com/2npzy8 "At Quicken Loans, we offer a variety of interest-only loan options, including [...] adjustable-rate mortages..." Then you claim that I was "WRONG" for calling them ARMs. Is an adjustable-rate mortgage an ARM? \_ You're a fucknut. Of course an adjustable rate mortgage is an ARM. The point here is that you are talking about RATE not PAYMENT when *YOU* used the term ARM. You are so fucking inconsistent and a revisionist to boot. \_ I am merely quoting your own comments directly from earlier in the thread I never called the Smart30 an ARM, you just made the wild assumption that I did. All I said is that it wasn't fixed and it clearly is not, since the payment varies after 10 years. You made the assumption that I was referring to the interest rate, but I was not. You are a textbook example of why a little knowledge is a dangerous thing. Furthermore you said: "Those are 5 or 7 year fixed rate loans only, they vary after that, so they are really ARMs" which is WRONG". What do you call the SmartChoice loan, from your\ own URL? It is a 3,5, or 7 year Interest-Only ARM, just like I said. Go ahead and admit you were wrong here. A little confession is good for the soul. \_ I'm done with you. You are all over the map in trying to defend your losing position, you are stubborn, and you are a waste of my time. Thank me for educating you, which I did, and give it up. |
2007/12/2-6 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:48732 Activity:kinda low |
12/2 http://tinyurl.com/2lgwc2 (signonsandiego.com) Old mortgage: 2004-2007 4.97% interest-only on $352K 2007-2009 7.97% to 11.97%, principal payments start 2009-2034 11.97% New mortgage: 2004-2007 4.97% interest-only on $352K 2007-2010 5.25% interest-only 2010-2034 5.25% principal payments start Countrywide is da b0mb! \_ Moral of the story: it doesn't pay to be fiscal responsible. \_ Lame. "Oh we didn't understand the terms of our ARM. We're too dumb to read the papers right in front of us. We thought we were getting a free lunch because we're nice people. Now, only because the rest of the mortgage industry is fucked, we get totally lucky and keep a super low rate forever". \_ Countrywide can tell them to go pound sand. It's the free market at work like it should be. What I have a problem with is the government attempting to legislate these discounts or, worse, making taxpayers pay the bill. \_ All the deficit spending is effectively a tax. We are getting taxed out the ass. \_ This is a non sequitur. \_ Well, it's related to fiscal irresponsibility. Someone always pays the bill in some way. Legislating discounts for idiots passes the bill onto responsible people. |
2007/11/29-12/6 [Recreation/Travel/LasVegas, Finance/Shopping, Finance/Banking] UID:48711 Activity:nil |
11/29 I just found out that I am American Indian. The White Man took away my ancestors' ancestral lands, stuck them in camps, you know, the usual. I am perfectly functional member of society. What are some cool ways I can take advantage of my status? Can I get cheap loans? Grants? ok tnx. \_ What percentage and what tribe? I understand that With some tribes you can get grants, or casino funds. I think for most tribes you don't get jack. But, IANAI. \_ Become an alcoholic. \_ Can you prove it? There are lots of Native Americans who cannot prove that they are because of poor documentation. If you can't prove it then forget it. \_ Live on the Res. \_ Tell us what tribe and I might be able to tell you your chances of getting anything from this, but: you need to be enrolled, the tribe doesn't have to enroll you even if you qualify on paper, most tribes with money require that you live on the res and despite what some motd posters think, the typical tribe member is not sitting in that casino hotel jacuzzi snorting coke with $100 bills. \_ Are you crazy? Try $20 bills. |
2007/11/19-26 [Finance/Banking, Finance/CC] UID:48660 Activity:kinda low |
11/19 Prosper update. I am getting 13.3% on my loans there, but one of them is now 45+ days lates. If that one is a write-off, as seems increasingly likely, my ROI will be about 11% over my first year there. Not too shabby, but we shall see how it goes as this credit crunch thing plays out. Lately I have been getting better rates, but I suspect the risk is higher, too. \_ that is awesome. How much was your initial stake? and what are your parameters for which ones you invest in? \_ I am only taking AA, A and B rated borrowers who have a debt/ income ratio under 30%. My initial stake is just a couple thousand, as I am just sort of checking it out for now. \_ Who verifies this debt/income ratio? \_ Prosper does. \_ How? \_ How are you getting more than a credit card loan? \_ The magic of the market? The invisible hand at work? How do you expect me to answer this question? This is what people with reasonably good credit are willing to pay to borrow money. Not AA credit, but B credit, with a low Debt/Income and home owners to boot. I could get more, but then my default risk would go up, too. \_ Maybe people are willing to pay more on the bet that if they default you are less likely to send them to collections? \_ No, all defaulted debt is automatically sent to collections. \_ No, all defaulted debt is automatically sent to collections. \_ How many loans have you made over that period? \_ Around 50. \_ I looked at prosper when it was first mentioned on the motd. I wouldn't risk a penny on any of those people. I'm glad you've made some bucks but your risk looks way higher than the interest rates these people are paying. There's a very good reason they can't get money from more traditional sources. |
2007/10/12-14 [Finance/Banking] UID:48301 Activity:nil |
10/12 Oh crap Etrade's savings account teaser interest rate went from 5.05% to 4.70% in less than 1.5 month. Who else has a higher savings/mm interest rate? |
2007/9/19-22 [Finance/Banking] UID:48118 Activity:nil |
9/19 High interest CDs. What's the catch? http://www.mlnbank.com/EN/Services/premCDs.htm \_ Premium Certificates of Deposit are NON-REDEEMABLE until maturity. \_ May be a scam, may not: http://preview.tinyurl.com/2rwjpd |
2007/9/19-22 [Finance/Banking] UID:48117 Activity:low |
9/19 http://Prosper.com, earn 9.40% return on your investment: http://www.prosper.com/prm/lender2.htm \_ Lisa needs a loan, Joe has money. Lisa doesn't pay Joe back, Joe is screwed! \_ I have been doing this with some "play" investment money for about a year now and have been earning just over 10%, with no defaults so far. -ausman \_ And if you got just ONE default, what would your earning be? \_ About 3/4 of that. I only lend to B or better credit risks. These have been at under 2% default on Prosper, at least so far. I also make lots of small loans, to spread the risk. -aus These have been at under 2% default rate on Prosper, at least so far. I also make lots of small loans, to spread the risk. I actually wish I had more cash to invest in Prosper right now, since the rates being paid have gone up quite a bit recently, but my wife's kitchen remodel is using up all the spare cash. \_ But your wife's kitchen remodel will probably pay back over 10% !!! |
2007/9/18-22 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:48103 Activity:low |
9/18 So, the lesson of the fed rate cut is: borrow as much as you can, get way over your head, make risky investments as well. make big bucks on the way up. if you get into trouble, the Fed will bail you out. if you're a saver you're a sucker... your life savings just took a hit through dollar devaluation. \_ If you are a saver you ALWAYS take a hit through dollar devaluation \_ I've been busy the last few days... I thought they were going to let everyone bite it. What sort of bailout did the Fed do? \- "If you owe your bank a hundred pounds, you have a problem. But if you owe your bank a million pounds, it has." --jmk BTW, this is an example of why taxes should be progressive. \_ It's amusing that you jump on progressive taxation to remedy this particular problem rather than, you know, eliminating bailouts. -- ilyas \- progressive taxation isnt a solution to this. this is an illustration of the fallacy of some of the "how should we split the dinner bill" type bogus analogies. \_ The best argument for progressive taxation I know is that marginal benefit increases exponentially, but hedonic value increases logarithmically (if that), for money. -- ilyas \_ Investors and risk takers will always do better than nervous nellies. You would rather the whole economy suffered a recession? \_ They're not taking risks if the government bails them out. And considering that the only reason the economy is in danger of suffering a recession is *because* of this kind of risk taking, it shouldn't be encouraged. -tom \_ I think you'd have a hard time substantiating your last sentence. \_ Investors, probably, risk takers? That's ridiculous. The kind of fevered speculation that goes on in these "booms" is not sound business and should not be encouraged. But unless those who do this feel pain, it won't stop. And it does endanger the economy. The "lemming" mentality should not provide safety from stupidity. \_ Yeah, I don't approve of fevered speculation and lemming mentality either. Feel better? |
2007/8/17-20 [Finance/Banking, Reference/RealEstate] UID:47636 Activity:low |
8/17 http://tinyurl.com/383pmp (latimes.com) L.A. Times reports CFC bank web site slow, so customers crowded branch offices to transfer out money that exceeds FDIC coverage \_ Panic on the streets of London. Panic on the streets of Birmingham. I wonder to myself, could life ever be sane again? \_ Panic isn't insanity. |
2007/8/15-20 [Finance/Banking, Finance/Investment] UID:47618 Activity:nil |
8/14 THERE IS NO HOUSING BUBBLE! http://blogs.ft.com/wolfforum/2007/08/fear-makes-a-we.html |
2007/8/10-13 [Finance/Investment, Finance/Banking] UID:47579 Activity:nil |
8/10 http://tinyurl.com/2vz45a (iht.com) Fed accepts MBS bonds, kicking back $35 billion in cash to banks in short-term loans, delaying mark-to-market valuations on the bonds (encouraging mark-to-Fed accounting schemes). \_ http://www.csua.org/u/jbd (Economist's View) That is not really an accurate summary of what really happened. The MBS were all Agency backed and therefore gov't guaranteed in the first place. Secondly, they did not buy them, they accepted them as collatoral for a very short term (72 hour) loan. More discussion about it here: http://www.csua.org/u/jbe (I know you don't like this blog, but unless you can find a better source of economic explaination, too bad emarkp) -ausman |
2007/8/8-13 [Finance/Banking, Computer/HW/Drives] UID:47563 Activity:nil |
8/8 CD rates went down, WTF??? \_ Flight to safety. 10 government bonds went down too. |
2007/8/6-9 [Finance/Banking] UID:47548 Activity:nil |
8/6 The Loan Comes Due http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/05/weekinreview/05norris.html \_ I laugh long and heartily at everyone affected by this. In other news, HRC proposes $1B in federal aid. http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2007/08/07/ap3995204.html Personal responsibility? What's that? |
2007/7/17-19 [Finance/Banking] UID:47314 Activity:nil |
7/17 GMAC Bank has kick ass CD rates. Better than ING Direct and Emigrant Direct. I'm getting rid of ING because it's only 4.50%: http://gmacbank.com/cd-rates.do 6 month 5.30% 9 month 5.35% 12 month 5.40% |
2007/6/22-26 [Finance/Banking] UID:47038 Activity:nil |
6/22 http://gmacbank.com/todays-rates.do GMAC Savings Account at 5.30% APY for $5000.00 dep or up. That's better than many CD's out there, and beats ING Direct and EmigrantDirect hands down! |
2007/4/29-5/3 [Finance/Banking] UID:46478 Activity:kinda low |
4/30 I'm starting business school in September and looking at various financial aid schemes (have not been able to until now for numerous reasons.) I'm in school in France, and need info on non US govt- related loans. Can someone recommend a good resource or book(s) for this? Thanks! -John \_ Unless the loan interest can be deferred or is lower than inflation, it is not worth it. I do not know of a single non-gov loan that allows you to defer or has a low rate, therefore, it is not worth getting the loan esp. given the fact that you're quite well off and don't *need* the loan. Lastly, 99% of the loans are not geared towards people going to professional schools, so... good luck with that. \_ What the heck would the French know about business? Anyway, I would contact a banking institution. They are the ones who are going to bankroll you. Also, your school should have info. \_ It's INSEAD, it's in France and Singapore (one of the top 10 intl. MBA mills, so not really "the French".) I'm checking out Graduate Leverage -- I'm not "well off", and unfortunately the guys who supplied most of the previous somewhat reasonable (i.e. not demanding an arm AND a leg) rate loans to INSEAD students just stopped doing so, leaving a lot of people in the lurch. I'm also grateful for any recommendations on compilations of non-govt. scholarships if you have any. I know that with bank loans I'm going to get reamed. -John \_ Let's step back a bit. You have a vacation home in Chile, your dad paid all of your tuition, you paid for your crooked Swiss doctor to get out of conscription, you travel to places like Bangkok, and lastly you have a super hot high maintenance high funding girlfriend. You're probably not as well off as your Swiss boarding school friends but you're well off by UCB standard. \_ You know, he might have blown most of his income on all of the above and have not much of anything saved. I doubt his dad wants to bankroll him anymore. Though perhaps he could sell his vacation home in Chile, though that may only be worth $50k or something. \_ the place in Chile is a rental paid for by his girlfriend's job. she's working down there. \_ Yup. "Crooked Swiss doctor" was an investment to keep me out of mud push-ups without pay 2 weeks a year, "dad paid all of your tuition" was largely bonds, and I have enough savings to cover about half of b-school (would be better off except for ill-considered dot-com investments.) I love the insinuations, thanks for the constructive advice. And it's "UCB standards." If your parents help you with your tuition, it's considered respectful to at least reward them by showing you did some elementary learning while at school. |
2007/4/28-5/2 [Finance/Banking] UID:46473 Activity:kinda low |
4/28 Reviews on money market/direct accounts as of April: ING Direct: 4.50%. Takes about 3-4 days to transfer to/from your bank accounts. Can link up to 3 accounts. The UI is very simple and the security is very good (random keypad that requires the mouse). Adding a new account requires you to send them a void check. \_ I recently opened an account with ING direct and linked it to my checking account. I did not have to send them a voided check; the process was the same one you describe below for Emigrant Direct. \_ Yes first account is easy, 2nd and 3rd link requires a void check. Stop interrupting my post asshole. \_ Also have "all electronic" interest-bearing checking account. You can transfer money to any other bank account. Will also mail checks. Emigrant Direct: 5.05%. Takes SEVEN days to transfer to/from bank accounts. The UI isn't as intuitive as ING but it is quite decent. Linking accounts requires you putting in bank routing+account, and when they deposit/withdraw 2 amounts, you put that in. High interest rate, but takes too long to transfer in/out of the account. PayPal: 5.04%. Takes 3-4 days. High interest rate and low transfer time. I'd transfer all of my money into it except I've heard a lot of bad things about PayPal's security. \_ Anyone try HSBC Direct? \_ Vanguard Prime Money Market: 5.10%. Takes 2-3 days. Quite reliable, none of this fuzzy, hand-waving "ACH is unpredictable" bullshit. $3000 minimum balance, $100 increments, tho. \_ Amtrustdirect, 5.36% APY, $1000 minimum. Website isn't as good as ING. \_ Note that even for, say, $10k, the yearly income difference between 4.5% and 5% is $50. I suggest basing your choice primarily on features rather than interest rate. -niloc |
11/23 |