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  1. #1
    on instagram, str8 flexin DUNCANownsKOBE's Avatar
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  2. #2
    Cogito Ergo Sum LnGrrrR's Avatar
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    If anything, that just goes to show we need LESS regulation! The free hand of the market will solve all this collusion!

  3. #3
    on instagram, str8 flexin DUNCANownsKOBE's Avatar
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    If anything, that just goes to show we need LESS regulation! The free hand of the market will solve all this collusion!
    But we need trade tariffs! The free market works if we have trade tariffs (even though I'm admitting that the free market doesn't work by saying we need trade tariffs, I'm just singling out free trade agreements since it was a Democratic president who sponsored those).

  4. #4
    Believe. BobaFett1's Avatar
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    NAFTA

  5. #5
    Veteran InRareForm's Avatar
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    But , but, but everyone wants to blame the government for all the problems..

  6. #6
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    in other criminal financial sector news

    The Shame of Pension-Advance Loans


    The financial services industry is second to none in dreaming up ways to rip off Americans. Show me a a financial product—credit cards, mortgages, checking accounts, 401(k)s, annuities—and I'll show you a stack of consumer complaints do enting how banks and other firms have sought to bleed dry the American public.

    The latest alarming example are "pension-advance loans." Never heard of these nifty loans? Well, I hadn't either until the New York Times ran a shocking expose Saturday about firms that offer workers and retirees a chance to "convert tomorrow’s pension checks into today’s hard cash"—but with annual interest rates that have "ranged from 27 percent to 106 percent—information not disclosed in the ads or in the contracts themselves."

    The story focused on loans against defined benefit pensions, the kinds you get if you serve in the military or civil service. Unlike 401(k)s, which are a failed retirement vehicle in part because so many people borrow against their nest eggs, DB pensions have been one of the bright spots in an era of collapsing financial security. Those with such pensions tend to face a more secure retirement. And, until recently, there was no easy way to get at that money prematurely.

    But the financial services sector is unrelenting in its search for fresh veins of wealth, however modest, that it can tap into and drain away. And so it's no great surprise that eventually a bunch of firms would come to specialize in pension advances—companies with names like LumpSum Pension Advance, Pension Funding, and DFR Pension Funding—and begin showering come-on offers on those with such pensions.

    In lean economic times, people with public pensions—military veterans, teachers, firefighters, police officers and others—are being courted particularly aggressively by pension-advance companies, which operate largely outside of state and federal banking regulations, but are now drawing scrutiny from Congress and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. . . .
    But these offers, known as pension advances, are having devastating financial consequences for a growing number of older Americans, threatening their retirement savings and plunging them further into debt. The advances, federal and state authorities say, are not advances at all, but carefully disguised loans that require borrowers to sign over all or part of their monthly pension checks. They carry interest rates that are often many times higher than those on credit cards.

    Pension-advance firms are focusing particular attention on military service people and veterans, who have been targeted in the past by other predatory financial services. In fact, there has been so much financial abuse of current and former military personnel that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has an entire office focused on this problem.

    It's worth pausing for a moment to consider how utterly unpatriotic it is to target those who protect us for financial exploitation. But, again, no big surprise there: Modern capitalism isn't guided by any sort of moral compass or respect for values universally embraced by all Americans. It's guided by the bottom line, and it doesn't matter whether the targets of exploitation wear a uniform or not.

    Like other high interest predatory loans, pension advances can lead to a cycle of indebtedness that is impossible to escape. Especially since many of the true costs of these advances are hidden from borrowers, a characteristic of any well-laid trap. These advances contribute to rising levels of debt among seniors, a phenomenon that Demos has do ented in a recent research report which the Times cites in the article. That report, along with other data, paints a bleak picture of senior indebtedness. As the Times writes:

    The combined debt of Americans from the ages of 65 to 74 is rising faster than that of any other age group, according to data from the Federal Reserve. For households led by people 65 and older, median debt levels have surged more than 50 percent, rising from $12,000 in 2000 to $26,000 in 2011, according to the latest data available from the Census Bureau. . .
    Meanwhile, households headed by people age 75 and older devoted 7.1 percent of their total income to debt payments in 2010, up from 4.5 percent in 2007, according to the Employee Benefit Research Ins ute.

    This story is yet another example of why the CFPB is so important. Republicans trying to kill that agency should have to explain why they want to leave veterans and police officers at the mercy of financial bottom feeders.

    http://www.demos.org/blog/shame-pension-advance-loans

  7. #7
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    and there's ALWAYS MORE:

    This Subprime Bubble Is Getting Ready to Burst

    There's another subprime loan problem brewing, but this time, home mortgages aren't the main ingredient in the securities being created, sliced, rated, and sold to hungry investors.
    Subprime auto loans are making a comeback, as are the asset-backed securities that include these and other risky loans. Investors are snapping up these products, and a recent article on the subject strongly suggests that the Federal Reserve is to blame for the whole thing.


    This bubble has been expanding at a rapid pace

    ABSes have seen a resurgence in popularity over the past year, after falling out of favor shortly after the financial crisis hit. These investment products -- which are made up of debt such as student loans, credit card balances, and auto loans -- have become more attractive as stingy yields have become the norm.


    A rejuvenated market for new cars and trucks has revved subprime auto loan production, and Equifax noted in its January report that auto loan balances have risen to a two-year high. By September of 2012, ABSes backed by subprime auto loans totaled more than $14 billion, more than the $12.7 billion issued during the whole of the previous year. For 2013, almost $4 billion has already been sold to yield-starved investors.

    Shotguns as downpayments

    The Reuters article referenced above is truly spooky, as it tells a tale of one individual with a shaky credit history purchasing a used truck with a shotgun as the primary down payment. One of the most active lenders in this space is Exeter Finance, a subprime lender with big backers such as Goldman Sachs , Wells Fargo , Citigroup, and Deutsche Bank.

    How is the Fed to blame for this scenario, you ask? According to the author of the Reuters article, Federal Reserve policies designed to jump-start the economy have caused investment yields to plummet, turning everyday investors into ravenous risk-takers willing to go to any lengths to make a buck. While QE3 and other programs have certainly made some investments less attractive, I think it is a great exaggeration to lay the gearing up of risky investment behavior entirely at the Fed's doorstep.

    Banks may have helped the subprime auto loan market speed up. Early last year, Bank of America and Wells Fargo were among the big banks that began loosening credit restrictions for these borrowers, although these two banks primarily financed prime and near-prime auto loans.

    A crisis in the making?

    The author of the Reuters article notes that a bursting of the subprime auto bubble would not affect the economy in the same way as the mortgage meltdown did, but concerns remain. Even a Goldman Sachs representative expressed worry over this market at the annual American Securitization Forum this past January.

    For investors, at least, this type of investment can be dicey. While ABSes backed by prime auto loans have been stable, those containing subprime loans showed annualized losses of 6.72% at the end of 2012.
    Even with an industry expectation of a 25% default rate, investments backed by subprime auto loans look to be headed for a crash -- so, investor, beware.

    Bank of America's stock doubled in 2012. Is there more yet to come? With significant challenges still ahead, it's critical to have a solid understanding of this megabank before adding it to your portfolio. In The Motley Fool's premium research report on B of A, analysts Anand Chokkavelu, CFA, and Matt Koppenheffer, Financials bureau chief, lift the veil on the bank's operations, including detailing three reasons to buy and three reasons to sell.

    http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/...eady-to-burst/

  8. #8
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    While Wronged Homeowners Got $300 Apiece in Foreclosure Settlement, Consultants Who Helped Protect Banks Got $2 Billion

    http://www.rollingstone.com/politics...#ixzz2RsTLBDwi

    "We stole you home, we ed you good, here's $300, now GFY"




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