i'm talking coast to coast average.
I haven't tried at all to verify, but I heard they are almost 20% in Oregon.
i'm talking coast to coast average.
bets are net zero sum.
But you don't know if the banker next to you won or lost his bets, so you don't know whether he'll be able to repay that overnight loan tomorrow.
correct, so it's a transparency problem more than a money problem. (oversimplified on my part I'm sure)
That's part of it, and if you're the banker who lost his bets, opacity is your friend.
that's what human nature will tell them, but I could argue that opacity isn't there friend. btw, I'm guessing most of the losers are insurers and hedge funds and not banks.
WaMu, Wachovia, Citi were among the big losers.
Citi is a quasi-bank and an abomination of the abolition of glass-steagel.
WaMu originated and serviced most of their sub-prime notes is my understanding.
I'm not clear on Wachovia.
He must be including all of the unfunded en lements along with the public debt. If you do that then %360 sounds close; that number is about $60 trillion now, and currently about $500,000 per household.
Nobody should count on the government to pay you what they really owe you, in real terms. Great thread.
ES, explain to a layman like me how a 3.3% rate on a 30 year treasury bond is an indicator, if you don't mind.
Low bond yields mean high bond prices, which mean that investors are so risk-averse that they are willing to accept a very low interest rate.
This is amidst an environment when the federal fund interest rate is just 1%.
A liquidity trap is when interest rates are close to zero but still fail to stimulate the economy because nobody is willing to lend or make investments with any risk. Once that happens, the central bank no longer can use monetary policy to stimulate the economy. It is likened to "pushing on a string."
Looking at the 30-year-bond, it's been going with a six-month coupon of 4.5%, so if the current yield is 3.3%, investors are paying $135 for every $100 in par value. That's a tremendous premium.
Thanks ES, appreciate the patience to take the time to explain a complicated subject. George will had an article this morning about the problem. His contention is that Obama is trying FDR II, New Deal and that it didn't work then and wont work now. He (Will) contends that the Market did not regain before depression status until the 50's. Which surprised me. I wished Washington would step back and let the business people straighten things out without their interferrence. One thing that you said rang a bell big time with me, if I was in my 70's, I had seen my best days. Well I am well into my 70's and hopefully you are wrong.
Yeah ES, I have heard that the schemes "built" could very well equal the worlds total economy or maybe even exceed it. One of the experts said, like you. No one knows how much is really out there.
See my comment above.
Wachovia bought out World Savings, which specialized in the
sub-prime market, if I am not mistaken.
All of you talking unemployment. I was born at the tail-end of the Depression. And I can still remember the very end of it. Everyone was poor in Texas. But my Dad and most of my family all had jobs. Not big paying jobs, but jobs. And my Uncle Lawrence who was a hardest working guy I ever knew, said there was always work here in Texas for those that wanted it. Like I said it may not have paid a lot but it was available. Now I am talking about a guy who would go to the cedar breaks with a double bit axe and cut fence post when he couldn't find other work or got pissed at his boss.
Anyhow, ES thanks again. I hope you keep this thread going. It is
informative. Better than the damn papers who want to slant everything.
You deserve a Spur under your avatar or something for that. That was absolutely brilliant and very easy to understand. You might have just typed a summary of what happened, but I feel much more informed about the situation now. It might be the best post I've read on this website, and that's saying something. Major props to you for that. I read the whole post. Feel free to share more, because I've yet to see this laid out so well and clearly anywhere else.
Pfft. All he had to say was "It's Carter's fault."
I just hope that president Obama isn't the second coming of president Carter.
I'm sure Republicans will try to blame Obama for the recession in 2042.
Ah yes, leave it to Chump to screw up a decent thread. He is like that
little kid, me, me, me, I have something to say.....whaaaaaaaaa.
And like that little kid, he actually has nothing to say. And does it well.
You mad?
ES actually brought up the Republicans' Carter canard in another thread. It was a little joke echoing that.
I never expected you to be smart enough to understand.
Ahhhh, I am so sorry. I must have missed it. I take it all back.
I said that back when I was a Republican; you can't hold it against me.
All is forgiven.
im with you on the problems of deregulation
. However, you described two bubbles that had little to do with deregulation. Also, you went on to agree that cds are more a transparency issue than a money issue. Yes, the system is clogged, but the national wealth was inflated and deflated because of fannie freddies 2 percent capital reserve requirements.
Am i wrong, and if so, why?
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