Slick Rick's Comments Slick Rick's Comments RSS Syndication from SeekingAlpha.com http://seekingalpha.comuser/333839/comments Ken Lewis Finally Gets It Right: 3 More Banking Myths to Add to His 6 http://seekingalpha.com/article/125243/comments?source=feed#comment-421383 421383
There is no bank without the people who run them. these people have paper work and accounting records that must be validated. I'm so tired of everyone making excuses for the people who were paid to know what was going on.

But instead we have time for steroid investigations. what a country?]]>
Wed, 11 Mar 2009 02:54:02 -0400
There is no bank without the people who run them. these people have paper work and accounting records that must be validated. I'm so tired of everyone making excuses for the people who were paid to know what was going on.

But instead we have time for steroid investigations. what a country?]]>
The Fed's Last Stand: Lower Spreads vs. Default Risk http://seekingalpha.com/article/114019/comments?source=feed#comment-351526 351526 In addition there are some other ideas and lies that will be promoted by the main stream media around the whole process of foreclosure, zoning, and gentrification that one would think we were a third world country. Frankly I'm selling eurodollars (libor) as far as the eye can see to get ready for another lie about rising inflation.

recommendation: Documentary called MONEY MASTERS on google video. A Must See!


On Jan 09 03:01 PM constructe wrote:

> Full faith and credit of the US government is laughable right now.
> There isn't enough of that to fill a bathtub.
>
> I agree that something needs to be done about the CDS market. It's
> crooked filled with a shadowy play of off balance sheet shennaniganism.
>
>
> The US buying them or supporting them by buying the crappy underlying
> bad bonds won't solve the situation. First and formost the CDS market
> needs full transparency. And the big CDS gamblers need to face the
> piper, not the US citizen.
>
> Suss out the muck before you start fixing things...]]>
Sat, 10 Jan 2009 06:14:02 -0500 In addition there are some other ideas and lies that will be promoted by the main stream media around the whole process of foreclosure, zoning, and gentrification that one would think we were a third world country. Frankly I'm selling eurodollars (libor) as far as the eye can see to get ready for another lie about rising inflation.

recommendation: Documentary called MONEY MASTERS on google video. A Must See!


On Jan 09 03:01 PM constructe wrote:

> Full faith and credit of the US government is laughable right now.
> There isn't enough of that to fill a bathtub.
>
> I agree that something needs to be done about the CDS market. It's
> crooked filled with a shadowy play of off balance sheet shennaniganism.
>
>
> The US buying them or supporting them by buying the crappy underlying
> bad bonds won't solve the situation. First and formost the CDS market
> needs full transparency. And the big CDS gamblers need to face the
> piper, not the US citizen.
>
> Suss out the muck before you start fixing things...]]>
Why Aren't Stocks Falling? http://seekingalpha.com/article/113887/comments?source=feed#comment-350141 350141
But as any novice investor knows who has fallen into this fundamentals trap its not that easy. The dot com bust even thought it ended poorly proved that financial institutions are perfectly willing to BUY regardless of current proven information. I hate to say buy the rumour sell the fact here, but this is the single head fake that leaves the average investor scratching their heads. Will the market plummet? perhaps. But if you're a fund manager and don't want to see, outsmarted by your fellow risk takers in the next 12 to 18 months, then some buying has to take place under the support of a new administration that the global community sees as the biggest bullish signal since Google went publc. Besides at some point we're going to need inflation to be triggered by something.

Slick Rick


On Jan 08 12:11 PM Herbert Hoover wrote:

> Reality trumps hope every time. It's gonna get ugly - fast.]]>
Thu, 08 Jan 2009 17:00:02 -0500
But as any novice investor knows who has fallen into this fundamentals trap its not that easy. The dot com bust even thought it ended poorly proved that financial institutions are perfectly willing to BUY regardless of current proven information. I hate to say buy the rumour sell the fact here, but this is the single head fake that leaves the average investor scratching their heads. Will the market plummet? perhaps. But if you're a fund manager and don't want to see, outsmarted by your fellow risk takers in the next 12 to 18 months, then some buying has to take place under the support of a new administration that the global community sees as the biggest bullish signal since Google went publc. Besides at some point we're going to need inflation to be triggered by something.

Slick Rick


On Jan 08 12:11 PM Herbert Hoover wrote:

> Reality trumps hope every time. It's gonna get ugly - fast.]]>