The top 100 stock
market authors
selected for publication
market authors
selected for publication
morph366
»
Comments
» C
You are currently following morph366
Stop FollowingYou are no longer following morph366
-
730
)
Warning: The Coming Credit Dislocation [View article]
Now (as per Borat) not so much!
Meredith Whitney Ratings [View article]
Lots of the "head and shoulder" shorts were falling over each other yesterday to cover in the financials, but it remains to see how much real institutional buying moves into the banking sector
Banking Industry: How to Buy Friends and Alienate People [View article]
The banking sector is the tail wagging the global economy dog.
Goldman Sachs: Profit Dissonance [View article]
One senses that there is a strong antipathy building towards GS not only amongst the "little people" that haven't given up in desperation (myself included) but even amongst the financial elite that envy their GS counterparts - who, for the time being, sit under a Washington halo.
Banking Crisis Not Yet Over [View article]
"Over all the British have saved their banking system from collapse."
You may be just a bit premature as they say it's not over until the fat lady sings
Bank Stress Tests: Is Everybody Confused Yet? [View article]
Whether they then go on to discount it appropriately is a different matter and can take a lot longer to manifest itself.
The big concern of course is whether those doing the spinning are as clever as they appear and whether they really know what's going on.
A Stress Test Shocker: BofA Needs $35 Billion [View article]
We Need to Make Banking Boring Again [View article]
But the devil is in the details.
T
Why the U.S. Prefers Quasi-Nationalization of Big Banks [View article]
Re: IronPants question - I have no short positions at present in any major US bank.
Re: Airelon Trading - that was exactly the point being made
Re: minieconomics - I think you are tracing the more sinster aspects much further than I would want to go
Re gendakonomist - no by quasi-nationalization I meant a situation like that for Citigroup where the governments has a signifcant stake, can influence policy, but where it has avoided the full responsibility of cleaning up the balance sheet, replacing the current management and board and avoiding Citi from becoming a zombie bank for years to come -- this has absolutely nothing to do with fascism
Why the U.S. Prefers Quasi-Nationalization of Big Banks [View article]
D-Day for Citi's Pandit Too? [View article]
Pandit knows banking and investing he is also a very Ethical man.
I wouldn't have expected anything less from the man who runs one of the world's largest banks.
The U.K.'s Sovereign Rating and Major Banks [View article]
The great irony is that, according to another source, the UK would not qualify for an IMF Flexible Credit Line (FCL) for failing to satisfy the basic conditions.
So no IMF facility - normally paid out to lesser sovereign credits - but as far as the Head of Sovereign Risk at Moody's (at least as quoted in the FT piece) - no problem with a AAA rating.
Baffled and want to read more-
morph366.blogspot.com/...
'Ownership But Not Control' Is More Like Control Without Accountability [View article]
Another is that it avoids having to deal with the debt-holders and the third is that it prevents triggering lots of CDS contracts.
Seen in this light it is not surprising that the government is doing all it can to avoid putting those troubled banks into receivership. Only in the fullness of time will the error of this approach be confirmed.
Nobody Knows What Bank Stocks Are Really Worth [View article]
krugman.blogs.nytimes..../
Banks And Consumers Say No to More Debt [View article]
"The nation does not need more debt but rather more income."