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#26 | |
Searching for Jimmy Hoffa
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Long Island, NY
Posts: 771
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#27 |
Certified Nice Person
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The only thing I've heard so far is that it would be really difficult to get a mortgage. Well, my mortgage is held by one of the strong banks that is actually buying the failing banks and I have no immediate plans to sell my home, so, well, yeah. It's all about the banks' ability/willingness to extend credit.
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Click here to purchase a bridge I'm selling. |
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#28 |
Banned
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Mohawk, New York
Posts: 19,477
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And the world is taking a shit. No more credit.
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#29 | |
Searching for Jimmy Hoffa
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Long Island, NY
Posts: 771
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#30 |
"Faith is believing what you know ain't so." ~ Mark Twain
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"We didnt get it passed cause Nancy was a meanie weinie"
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#31 |
"Faith is believing what you know ain't so." ~ Mark Twain
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Maybe SuperMcBush will swoop in and save us all!
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#32 |
Subversive filth of the hedonistic decadent West
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Southeast Florida
Posts: 27,936
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So does this mean that if these securities that the government was bailing out do default then trillions of dollars in Credit Default Swap contracts will become due?
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#33 | |
You can now put whatever you want in this space :)
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I'm looking forward to Mad Money today, Cramer should be entertaining Bush and McSame sure are influential, NOT ![]()
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How To Keep An Asshole In Suspense
I'll Tell You Later |
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#34 | |
If there is nobody out there, that's a lot of real estate going to waste!
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 2,177
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#35 |
And Lord, we are especially thankful for nuclear power, the cleanest, safest
energy source there is. Except for solar, which is just a pipe dream Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Kansas City
Posts: 225
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While on this subject, what's everyone doing with their existing stocks?
I have a monthly allotment into a diversified trading account and I'm thinking about converting all my existing stocks into treasury bonds, and then continuing to invest from here forward as before. My thinking is that I should protect what I already have, but still get in on the fire sale that's coming. Any thoughts? |
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#36 |
Jim? I heard he's a dirty pornographer.
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Washington, DC
Posts: 2,706
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That hurts my feelings. I'm going to go cry in the corner.
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#37 | |
Jim? I heard he's a dirty pornographer.
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Washington, DC
Posts: 2,706
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I'm even more embarrassed to say that about 1/2 of it I recently moved to Wachovia. I've been telling people since 2000 this crisis was coming but I just wasn't enough to know how to make a billion on it. |
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#38 | |
Progress rarely comes in buckets, it normally comes in teaspoons
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Dark Side Of Naboo
Posts: 1,289
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#39 | |
wtfwjd?
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 2,103
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A lot depends on your age, but that sounds like a good safe thing to do. Of course if value comes back in a few days, you'll miss out. |
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#40 |
"Faith is believing what you know ain't so." ~ Mark Twain
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#41 |
It's the end of the world as we know it, and I feel fine
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Canada
Posts: 2,527
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I sold my house a year ago. I liked the place, and I miss it, but I'm pretty sure I did the right thing. Next summer I'm moving to a cheaper part of the country and if the madness continues I should be able to buy a nicer place there for a bargain.
I'm hoping the madness doesn't continue though, because I get paid in Ameribucks, and it's real good for me when they're worth more than Canuckbucks.
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If the Environment was a bank, they would have saved it by now. |
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#42 |
With $10,000, we'd be millionaires! We could buy all kinds of useful things like ... love!
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I too have been following this very closely and I believe that we really need to be worried about this credit freeze that is just going to get worse.
I predict that several sponsors will go under in 2009. The sponsors that are operating in the red will not be able to pay you on time, and some will close up shop without paying you the remaining earnings on your account. Some sponsors will get bought out by the big guys if they are lucky and you will keep getting paid. I think this is the immediate problem for all of us, rather than the consumers not having credit cards to buy memberships. But make no mistake, porn sales will go down because people will be too busy looking for a job. Honestly, I don't know enough about finance and economics to either support or oppose this bailout plan. But I've learned more about this crisis from reading this thread than I learned from all 9 of Bush's mini-addresses. |
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#43 | |
Certified Nice Person
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I predict everything will be fine for the average American. Sure, if you purchased a home within a the last few years, you probably aren't going to want to sell it for several more years since its market value is about to drop, and your 401K's value means you won't be able to retire tomorrow, otherwise, I've seen no reason to believe that we need to start looking for soup kitchens.
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Click here to purchase a bridge I'm selling. |
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#44 | |
wtfwjd?
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 2,103
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#45 | ||
With $10,000, we'd be millionaires! We could buy all kinds of useful things like ... love!
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When it works, it's a big circle jerk and everyone gets off. When it doesn't work, it's a downward death spiral. |
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#46 | |
You can now put whatever you want in this space :)
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![]() Consider this:
- (Big money center) banks often deposit money with each other. - Good banks won't place their money with poorly performing banks for fear of risk. - As a result, all inter-bank deposit activity suffers (liquidity). - The amount of money then available to loan out to businesses and consumers (or available as lines of credit) decreases because only with a liability (deposit) or capital on their books can a bank finance an asset (loan). - less loans means less economic activity means less jobs. - if your loans can't be funded then watch for your credit card limits and lines of credit to be reduced. In extreme cases, watch for your loans to be called (paid down or repayment) -- even if you are current in your payments! Also consider: - Lehman Brothers was the largest commercial paper market issuer in the country. - If companies can't easily issue commercial paper then they can't finance short-term inventories which means they have to lay people off. - Yes, someone will take Lehman's place but that doesn't happen over night. (Remember they were put into bankruptcy and not bought out.) The problem with the bailout: - It rewards bad companies for doing bad things, however, there are few options available. - Banks not funding each other can have a big domino effect. - During the depression 2/3 of the banks in the U.S. went bankrupt. Imagine the carnage if that were to happen today? What would happen in your town if 2/3 of the banks were gone along with everyone's savings? - Short of the Fed being allowed to fund the good banks and, thereby increase liquidity, I am not sure what else they can do. And that last option would involve setting up some sort of state bank which I am sure would not be popular with the House Republicans. Also, who decides "good"? - Long and the short of it is that ARMS were a small problem but left too long and they became a big one. - A component of fraud is also likely as some are saying that ARMS were packaged and sold as AAA mortgages. - There will be considerable inflation of prices AND devaluation of the U.S. dollar whatever route is picked to solve this mess. I don't know if that adds anything to the conversation but I thought I would add my 2 cents. Quote:
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#47 |
Certified Nice Person
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I'm rolling with the Cato Institute. Let the market work itself out.
One of the commentators on CNBC keeps saying that this will hurt the man on Main St. in the short term if there is no bailout. How? Fewer toys on the shelves during Christmas? More difficult to get a new car loan? Idiots who shouldn't be getting home loans won't? 401K values decrease until the market comes back up (and it will)? Fucking fear mongers. Screw that. I want Sodom and Gomorrah, and I want it now!
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Click here to purchase a bridge I'm selling. Last edited by Useless; 2008-10-01 at 12:48 PM.. |
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#48 | |
You can now put whatever you want in this space :)
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That will work but is likely to be much more harsh in the short-term.
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#49 | |
Certified Nice Person
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![]() Being that there is nothing even similar to a guarantee if the bailout goes through, I don't see it as a risk worth taking. Every single expert, when told something similar to, "this bailout is just as likely not do anything," completely agrees with the statement. That's scary. I vote: chaos.
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Click here to purchase a bridge I'm selling. |
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#50 |
wtfwjd?
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 2,103
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Everything eventualy works itself out, even the fall of The Roman Empire. It's just the misery we go through during the transition....sorta like waiting for the Barbarians to settle down and become Europe. Not something I would anticipate with glee.
But fuck it, bring it on... |
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