Seeking the Fix That Will Finally Work [View article]
Occdude - you are right on mark. The issue is loss recognition, insolvency, and bank failure. You can put all the scaffolding you wish underneath the bad eggs, but they are still bad eggs. You cannot "liquify" yourself out of an insolvency. What we are doing as a nation is no different than a personal balance sheet as follows:
Total Assets = $100 (but recorded at $130 using "GAAP" and "held to maturity" pricing)
Total Liabilities = $115
Net Worth = ($15)
Ben Bernanke, who should be and likely will be fired before long (if Congress and/or next President finally wakes up), along with Daddy Warbucks (ooops...I mean Hank Paulson), told Congress and the world that to correct this negative net worth situation, we merely need to increase the limit on the poor saps credit card.
Ben: Here Mr. Banker. I know you are insolvent, but please take this money and grant more loans.
Banker: But Ben, I need to reduce my liabilities and find some way to recapitalize.
Ben: No...no. Just use the cash. Make loans. The market won't know you are insolvent because you don't have to mark anything to market. We will worry about capital later. This is a liquidity crisis, not a solvency crisis.
Banker: Ben, with all due respect, I don't think you learned much up there at Princeton. The reason my depositors are leaving, wholesale and large uninsured CD, is they have kind of figured out my assets aren't worth $130. They are a bit freaked about that. If I solve the capital issue and recognize the losses - that is "repair" the REAL hole in my balance sheet - they won't leave.
Ben: Don't worry. We will insure ALL depositors.
Banker: Ben...that doesn't solve the hole in my balance sheet.
Ben: Don't worry. Be happy. Trust me...I've studied these things.
Banker: And was it a water bong or a pipe you were smoking during those studies?
With the House vote, I am on my way to being proud of being an American - again. I hope this holds. It will be painful, but a pain that is necessary and proper.
Excellent article/post. Thanks for sharing. Now, let us not socialize the whole system. Wait. Reverse that. It's already happened. Time to go drink some vodka comrads.
Bad idea. Naked shorts...yes. But short-selling? You probably need to read Chairman Cox's own comments on this. Short-selling provide critical information. Naked short-selling via "distort and short" schemes are the problem.
Also - 100% correct by other postings that the corruption must be up-rooted. I would refer interested readers to Washington-Post's "How Washington Failed to Rein In Fannie, Freddie" article posted 9/14/08, by Binyamin Appelbaum, Carol D. Leonnig and David S. Hilzenrath. Until this sort of self-dealing is "dealt" with, and the American people WAKE UP, we might as well face that fact that we live in a socialized (U.K.) model of government. All we need is to anoint a king. Wait...that would be Paulson or Bernanke. My mistake.
Seeking the Fix That Will Finally Work [View article]
Total Assets = $100 (but recorded at $130 using "GAAP" and "held to maturity" pricing)
Total Liabilities = $115
Net Worth = ($15)
Ben Bernanke, who should be and likely will be fired before long (if Congress and/or next President finally wakes up), along with Daddy Warbucks (ooops...I mean Hank Paulson), told Congress and the world that to correct this negative net worth situation, we merely need to increase the limit on the poor saps credit card.
Ben: Here Mr. Banker. I know you are insolvent, but please take this money and grant more loans.
Banker: But Ben, I need to reduce my liabilities and find some way to recapitalize.
Ben: No...no. Just use the cash. Make loans. The market won't know you are insolvent because you don't have to mark anything to market. We will worry about capital later. This is a liquidity crisis, not a solvency crisis.
Banker: Ben, with all due respect, I don't think you learned much up there at Princeton. The reason my depositors are leaving, wholesale and large uninsured CD, is they have kind of figured out my assets aren't worth $130. They are a bit freaked about that. If I solve the capital issue and recognize the losses - that is "repair" the REAL hole in my balance sheet - they won't leave.
Ben: Don't worry. We will insure ALL depositors.
Banker: Ben...that doesn't solve the hole in my balance sheet.
Ben: Don't worry. Be happy. Trust me...I've studied these things.
Banker: And was it a water bong or a pipe you were smoking during those studies?
Fear Goes Hand in Hand with Drama [View article]
Buffett Warned Us in 2003 [View article]
Depressionary Tales [View article]
>>Prohibit short selling.
Bad idea. Naked shorts...yes. But short-selling? You probably need to read Chairman Cox's own comments on this. Short-selling provide critical information. Naked short-selling via "distort and short" schemes are the problem.
Also - 100% correct by other postings that the corruption must be up-rooted. I would refer interested readers to Washington-Post's "How Washington Failed to Rein In Fannie, Freddie" article posted 9/14/08, by Binyamin Appelbaum, Carol D. Leonnig and David S. Hilzenrath. Until this sort of self-dealing is "dealt" with, and the American people WAKE UP, we might as well face that fact that we live in a socialized (U.K.) model of government. All we need is to anoint a king. Wait...that would be Paulson or Bernanke. My mistake.