Text 12830, 286 rader
Skriven 2010-04-24 20:36:00 av WAYNE CHIRNSIDE (1:123/140)
Kommentar till en text av ED HULETT
Ärende: Re: GM
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-=> ED HULETT wrote to WAYNE CHIRNSIDE <=-
EH> On 04/24/2010 02:50 AM, WAYNE CHIRNSIDE -> ED HULETT wrote:
-=>> ED HULETT wrote to WAYNE CHIRNSIDE <=-
EH>> On 04/23/2010 06:27 PM, WAYNE CHIRNSIDE -> ALL wrote:
WC>> Well well, it seems General Motors has paid back ALL
WC>> it's TARP funds with interest and 5 years early at that
WC>> so the U.S. taxpayer no longer owns GM as was
WC>> recently maintained here.
WC>> Another bit of good news.
WC>> Only a year ago the TARP bailouts were project to cost
WC>> 500 Billion, now the projected figure is 87 billion
WC>> with most of that accounted for by Freddie and Fannie.
EH>> Ahem, GM used the TARP money that was put in an escrow account to "pay
EH>> back" the smaller amount that was called a loan. So, basically, all
EH>> they did was take taxpayer money to pay back taxpayer money. Plus, the
EH>> US government is still 60% owner of GM with the Canadian government
EH>> being a 12% owner. GM says they plan to fix that by issuing an IPO and
EH>> go public... again... as if 72% government ownership isn't already
EH>> public.
EH>> Fannie and Freddie are the quasi government agencies that were at the
EH>> center of the housing bubble collapse.
WC> Nope, that's the propaganda now being sold.
EH> Sold by whom?
WC> Freddie and Fannie were the result of bad derivative packages sold to
WC> investors.
EH> Look up derivatives. You will find that you are arguing semantics.
WC> Fannie and Freddie were thus a result of Wall Streets misbehavior and
WC> irresponsibility
WC> as in the Abacus Investments derivative packages now in the news sold by
WC> various investment
WC> firms such as Goldman Sachs.
EH> Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!
What a convincing rebuttal.
EH> Just keep on believing that.
WC> Then Goldman Sachs and other investment firms shorted the very Abacus
WC> Investment
WC> accounts they'd promoted to their clients betting against the very
WC> investments
WC> they had promoted.
EH> They did? Where did you get that information? BTW, you might want to
EH> contact the SEC with that to help their case against GS.
Uh they've enough problems to contend with dealing with their people
downloading porn rather than keeping an eye on the economic sector on
Wall Street.
They couldn't even be bothered to look into charges about Bernard Madoff
despite YEARS of being told it was a ponsie scheme, during the last
administration BTW.
WC> Since those deriviative investment packages largely consisted of sub-prime
WC> loans of course when their lack of any value it impacted Fannie and
EH> Freddie
EH> Uh, it was federal law which mandated that investment banks take on
EH> sub-prime loans with Fannie and Freddie being formed by the federal
EH> government to buy those loans as part of that law to help investment
EH> banks stay solvent.
Nope it was the LACK of federal law and the LACK of banking oversight
produced by the Republican Congressman from Texas introducing the repeal
of Glass Steagall.
Had Glass Steagall NOT been repealed in 1999 investment banking would have
remained forbidden to the banking industry and banking and investment firms
would have remained separate entities with derivatives limited
to investors willing to take on risks equivalent to the commodities
market where where you can go broke rahter quickly even after POURING
money into it.
That's for speculators, not people relying on their 401k's or
hedge funds and mutual fund accounts.
Or it WAS until the repeal of Glass Steagal, now it's
akin to paramutual bettings only with much greater risk.
With Glass Steagall in place.
The banks being unable to gamble with banking clients
accounts, 401k's and hedge funds these derivatives would
never have been able to initiate the banking meltdown as they'd have
to have made FINANCIALLY RESPONSIBLE mortage loans rather then to be so eager
to bundle sub-prime mortgages into derivatives on 32 - 1 margins
in anticipation of huge profit at equally huge risk.
All this on account of the repeal of Glass Steagall.
WC> Large banking institutions engaged in speculation with investors monies
WC> in derivatives is the cause.
EH> It was federal law that forced them into that practice. The "Community
EH> Reinvestment Act" to be precise.
WC> Bill Clinton is partially to blame while the Republican Congressman from
WC> Texas who first proposed the repeal of the Glass Steagall act is dead
WC> center
WC> to blame.
EH> Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!
EH> You parrot left-wing talking points well.
Actually these are FACTS it appears you cannot be bothered to verify.
WC> Bill Clinton could have vetoed the repeal of Glass Steagall but his
WC> financial
WC> advisors
WC> advised him they would be good for the economy, he's recently come out and
WC> admitted
WC> his mistake.
EH> Poor Slick, he was a victim of the bad old Republicans and poor advice.
I didn't say that, his finanacial advisors were members of his own cabinet.
The Republican Congressman from Texas didn't advise Bill Clinton,
rather he was persuaded NOT to veto the bill after Republicans pushed the
legislation through Congress.
It was his own cabinet advisors that led Clinton astray
and he's admitted to the error.
Don't go building strawmen then claim points for refuting that
which I never said, that's dishonest and deceitful.
EH> Hahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!
Another of your profound rebuttals?
WC> BTW The Glass Steagall Act was first enacted after the Great Depression to
WC> prevent
WC> PRECISELY this sort of irresponsible lending by banking institutions.
EH> Do you even know what Glass Steagall is about?
YES, do you?
I can explain it to you if you like.
WC> It took a mere eight years after the repeal of the Glass Steagall Act
WC> for the house of cards to come crashing down.
EH> Glass Steagall has nothing to do with sub-prime loans.
No it does not, it separates speculative investment firms from the banking
industry.
That is NOT to say it's REPEAL had nothing to do with sub-prime mortgages as
sub-prime mortgages gave investment banking the funds on 30 - 1 margin
to engage in the practice of selling worthless derivatives, than shorting them.
Thus the financial collapse.
Sub-prime loans were the SOURCE of the funds along with mutual funds and 401k
the banks would not have been able to otherwise engage in investing in
woorthless derivatives had not Glass Steagal been repealed.
Rather more complicated than can be rebutted by your extended ha ha's
and numerous exclamation points.
WC> Actually only two years as the first down was Enron then WorldCom
WC> which should have alerted to these bad practices as these were precisely
WC> the sort of speculative packages sold as derivatives.
EH> Hahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!
So you'd no idea that Enron spun off worthless assets to
subsidiaries in order to cook the books resulting in its collapse?
You appear to find all of this rather amusing from your
lack of rebuttal with any more depth than "hahahahahaha..." with bunches
of exclaimation points
WC> IOW's both the Great Depression AND the current massive recession had
WC> almost identical causes.
EH> Yes, too much government meddling.
To Little, Glass Steagall "meddling" as you call it by enforcing the separation
of investment firms from banking firms held up for near seventy years
until repealed.
After that not eight years passed before the house of cards fell apart.
It's kind of like my taking monies from your savings account and 401K
and going off to the dog track and playing a few 6 dollar box
trifectas in hopes of hitting a big one.
WC> The Great Depression was caused by buying on margin and the current
WC> recession
WC> by speculation on derivative packages engaged in by large banking at up
WC> to 32 to 1 margin.
EH> Total bunk.
You don't watch a lot of PBS do you?
Nor hit multiple and varied sources of information on the internet?
I hit BOTH Republican AND Democratic web sites and employ dialectic reasoning
to arrive at my conclusions.
WC> Just as the current recession hit investment banking was gambling with
WC> derivative packages of dubious value at the margin of 30 - 1 actual
WC> dollars, banking dollars, like those kept in checking anbd savings
WC> accounts.
EH> Who was supposed to lose WRT government mandated sub-prime loans? Were
EH> the banks just supposed to eat their losses when the borrowers were
EH> unable to pay their loan payments? It was federal law, CRA again, that
EH> mandated banks give loans to people who had no real means to pay those
EH> loans so the federal government could "right a wrong" where there was
EH> none. Fannie, and then Freddie was set up to take on those toxic loans
EH> in an attempt to keep the banks from going bankrupt.
WC> It's rather easy to gamble with other peoples monies for short term huge
WC> personal
WC> financial gain.
EH> Do you even have a clue what a sub-prime loan is and why banks were
EH> selling them to Fannie and Freddie? It wasn't for "short term huge
EH> personal financial gain."
WC> The current "fix" proposed by Democrats is to reduce the magin from 32 - 1
WC> to 10 to 1 and to limit the size to which large banks can grow.
EH> Oh yeah, limit freedom. That's always how Democrats think.
Limit irresponsible collusion between questionable investment firm derivatives
and the nations banking customers assets in savings. checking and 401k's.
That's how critcal thinking people think regardless of party affiliation.
You've something against the retirees wiped out in the derivatives
fueled economic crash?
The crash FUELED by sub-prime mortgages bundled into derivatives
then shorted by the banking - investment firms that passed them off
to customers as sound investments?
WC> This amounts to a reinstatement of a rather watered down version of the
WC> Glass
WC> Steagall Act that had been rather effective in preventing such enormous
WC> financial meltdowns since the 1930's.
EH> Hahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!
Another _convincing_ rebuttal.
WC> The banks after the repeal of Glass Steagall rolled themselves into
WC> investment
WC> firms buying on margin just like individual investors in 1929 and just
WC> as in
WC> 1929 this came back and bit the American economy in the a**.
EH> You parrot the propaganda well.
Why don't you do a little research rather than just parroting Republican
taking points, Rush and Glenn Beck?
I'm citing verifiable facts and history, your lack of comprehension of these
facts
and history in no way indicates I've been the least bit influenced by
propaganda, that's your your shtick.
And yes I do indeed read The Wall Street Journal among a great many other
sources.
http://online.wsj.com/home-page
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