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  • How the Banks Once Bailed Out America [View article]
    Nice bit of history. If I'm not mistaken, these were Federally owned banks that sold shares to the public to raise capital for the owner (the Federal government).

    Hard to believe it, but the Founding Fathers were entrepeneurs for the Federal government (state ownership of land and banks, an entrepeneurial Federal government buying and selling shares and land).

    Later, when public complaints emerged about the conduct of the national (Federal banks), it was in the context of mismanagement as control slipped into the hands of early oligarchs.
    Jul 05 12:29 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Tier 1 Capital Ratios of Large U.S. Banks [View article]
    Rather, allowing banks to report numbers which they know are false, and thus allowing the pillaging of the public purse.


    On Jun 21 01:45 PM Fitz919 wrote:

    > Who in their right mind would trust a bank to accurately report a
    > Tier 1 number? It's pure nonsense, it will never happen. Notice
    > how many are clustered around the 10% figure, it's a number they
    > want us all to believe.
    >
    > If a regulator didn't have a clue that 10.5% of IndyMac's loans were
    > producing no income, then a bank can hide anything they want to from
    > anyone they want to. It was months before B of A knew how bad things
    > really were at Merrill Lynch.
    >
    > What we have right now is the Government requiring banks to report
    > numbers which they know are false, in order to maintain confidence
    > in their badly broken system.
    Jun 21 15:34 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Antitrust for Banks? [View article]
    Very hard to believe that any significant anti trust activity will be coming out of DC. Interestingly enough, the Left doesn't have much contemporary interest in ant trust. I think it is just too difficult a subject for the American public.

    Probably the only hope is that a coterie of irritable and intellectual Federal attorneys tackle it. There are truly some benefits to altruism, and being an anti trust attorney sure is altruistic.

    One way to push the thing ahead is to open up the Federal courts to stronger civil law for bases for cases. That could probably be done to some extent administratively. Please give us an update at some point. Huzzah for your postings on this.
    May 12 21:13 pm |Rating: +1 0 |Link to Comment
  • Time to Bury the Rotting Carcasses of Dead U.S. Banks [View article]
    Monkeys have a hard time typing, because they don't have opposing thumbs.


    On Mar 15 10:26 AM starwonder wrote:

    > What is this idiotic Web site?
    > Is any monkey with a computer allowed to post on it?
    > What a joke!!
    Mar 15 17:46 pm |Rating: +5 -3 |Link to Comment
  • Five Impossible Thoughts After Breakfast [View article]
    Thanks for the nice article. The real difficulty is that the banking and central banking issues are hard for the public to understand. The best public service anyone (any politician ) can provide is to gently and clearly explain the nature of the banking crisis.

    As most Americans have at one time or another known or faced bankruptcy themselves, they will easily understand the concept of putting the banks in receivership.

    As for the notion that the counter parties or not identified by the Fed and the Treasury, those are public facts that any Senator or Congressman could make available. It is the pervasive corruption of our legislatures that keeps this from happening.
    Mar 07 15:30 pm |Rating: +3 -2 |Link to Comment
  • Why Nationalizing Banks Is Wrong [View article]
    I date it from 1981 (when the shining knight RR arrived to save us from ouselves) -- that makes it closer to 28 years in the making.


    On Mar 03 02:28 PM fabien hug wrote:

    > This was crisis took about 20 years to build-up and we are maybe
    > about 1/3 to 1/2 in the process of cleaning the mess. Now, if you
    > declare that the situation is going to be cleaned up within 3 months,
    > mayhem is guaranteed, since most of the banks could be facing Chapter
    > 11. I'd like to know, for instance, how would HSBC fare if the assets
    > it has deposited with; BoA, C, JPM would be potentially worth 0 in
    > 3 months. No place to hide. Only time will solve this crisis.
    Mar 03 21:42 pm |Rating: 0 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Why Nationalizing Banks Is Wrong [View article]
    The hazard of being a PhD candidate is that you tend to make things too hard.

    OK. Net the money put into any given institution (including deposit and debt guarantees) from current market capitalization. Anyone in the negative is already bust.

    (Hint: Apple Computer and Google are not bust. Citibank and BAC are).

    Mar 03 21:41 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • TARP Equals Toxic Money [View article]
    Let's see. Free money makes a corporation less healthy ? You are probably right. The companies getting the Fed and Treasury money are bad bets.

    A free lunch is never very healthy for a business in the long run. Companies that get subsidies usually end up on the ropes. They become focused on getting more free lunches, rather than producing products anyone would want.

    Kind of like the auto industry and the New York banks.

    Trying to remember how the poor single mothers were supposed to get off welfare ?

    I can easily imagine a large high school cafeteria full of the creditors of GM and BAC, sitting down, and getting day long seminars on how to get productive work, now that their investment free lunches are no longer panning out. My question is, will they have to bring their own lunches to the seminars ?
    Mar 01 21:19 pm |Rating: +2 0 |Link to Comment
  • Why Bank Nationalization Will Never Happen [View article]
    Please -- Barney Frank may be a corrupt idiot, but that doesn't mean he is the root of the problem.

    You might do better to review the history of financial regulation beginning with Ronald Reagan. This is ultimately the return to roost of an ideology that the financial markets needs no regulation.

    Ronald Reagan and his heirs paved the way for the whole range of financial re - engineering that made the current collapse possible.

    Feb 16 13:54 pm |Rating: +1 -2 |Link to Comment
  • Why Bank Nationalization Will Never Happen [View article]
    Umm. Sorry Mr. Sage. Happy Days are not right around the corner. The money center banks and their various partners and creditors are doing everything possible to give the taxpayer the tab.

    No level of transparency is going to occur prior to that, simply because it doesn't look good politically to transfer money from the ultra poor (the tax paying public) to the ultra rick (the bank owners and debtors).

    In factor, I will be very surprised the day some basic accounting transparency regarding the money center banks occurs.

    By the way, please don't use terms that have no meaning. "Nationalization" is a term of rhetoric, not economics. Do you mean purchase ? Or condemnation ? Or forced receivership ? Or expropriation ? I really like Seeking Alpha, but gosh, a whole lot of articles here appear to be written by 3rd graders.

    (sorry, just my opinion)
    Feb 16 13:44 pm |Rating: +2 -1 |Link to Comment
  • JPMorgan Chase: Poisoned by Bear's 5,000 Counterparties [View article]
    Wow. Very interesting observation on a member of the general public's experience with JPM as a service provider.

    My general take (and I greatly appreciate Mr. Saxena's nice article), is that the problem is not only one of disclosure, but also one of the moral capacity to carry out fiduciary duty -- whether at the Fed, the Treasury, the FDIC, or the SEC.

    Suspect when all is said and done we are looking at more of a systemic moral failure, rather than just a cyclical political economy problem.

    On top of that, malfeasance, either in government or in the government sponsored private banks, seems to not only be endemic, but also as a general rule unpunished.

    My continued reading of the core problem facing the economy today makes the US economy not dissimilar to that of the Russian Republic, or of communist China. The cycles of behavior of the wealthy and powerful appear to be more that of a corrupt plutocracy, rather than that of a republic.
    Jan 04 18:41 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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