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40334   CL   2013 Dec 16, 4:22am  

tatupu70 says

In any event--all time periods aren't equal. A company going bankrupt when unemployment is low is not nearly the same as if the country is on the verge of a depression.

It also depends why the company has to declare bankruptcy. Every case is different.

Exactly. It would have been different if market forces had necessitated their bankruptcy, but it was the spiral of the financial system at the heart of it.

In any case, the Obama administration did gently guide them into bankruptcy, as opposed to allowing the entire system to go into a death spiral.

If the economy had been healthier, I wouldn't doubt they would have been allowed to fail. We could have absorbed that, and more importantly, there would have been willing buyers. I don't recall anyone being eager to buy an automotive megacorp in '09, as many investors wouldn't even buy shares at $1...even the famed Ford stock was worthless.

40335   mell   2013 Dec 16, 4:34am  

CL says

Exactly. It would have been different if market forces had necessitated their bankruptcy, but it was the spiral of the financial system at the heart of it.

Those were market forces necessitating the leveraged into bankruptcy. In fact tightening credit is a poster boy of a market force example.

CL says

In any case, the Obama administration did gently guide them into bankruptcy, as opposed to allowing the entire system to go into a death spiral.

Lots of other companies went belly up, GM was not in special in any case. Usually bailouts and crony subsidies like this happen in backdoor negotiations out of fear of stirring up a political scandal, and they are illegal. What this did is setting a precedent for the president to come in openly like a fascist/corporatist dictator and pick winners and losers, blatantly disregarding the rule of law and fucking over people who thought they had a contract while turning the whole affair into a PR stunt. This alone was grounds for impeachment (and yes, Bush gave plenty of reasons for impeachment as well).

40336   Analyzer   2013 Dec 16, 5:01am  

edvard2 says

Medians mean everything, sorry. After actually buying a house and working
with an experienced realtor I can tell you that medians are used not only
locally, but even on a neighborhood by neighborhood basis: recent home sales are
combined to come up with current market values for a particular home for sale in
that era. When combining recent home sales, that means their median prices are
used as a benchmark. With that system this is how values rise in lockstep.

I don't think the medians were that relevant for the past few years when investors, speculation, and the proliferation of being priced out of the market were running rampant.

40337   edvard2   2013 Dec 16, 5:11am  

Analyzer says

I don't think the medians were that relevant for the past few years when investors, speculation, and the proliferation of being priced out of the market were running rampant.

They were because knowing the medians ( average house price) is what contributed mightily to the psychological elements of the bubble. Basically knowing what these averages were what caused people to either get greedy, or panic by the fear of being priced out forever. They heard reports on the radio- that "prices had risen xxx% last month" and so on.

40338   dublin hillz   2013 Dec 16, 5:26am  

edvard2 says

And yes- we are very much in a bubble.

I think the cost of living regarding shelter is high in bay area whether it's renting or owning. Back during "official" bubble days of mid 2000s however, the annual rents ratio was higher. Nowadays, the ratios are more reasonable but it's only because the rents are so much higher compared to back then.

40339   ttsmyf   2013 Dec 16, 6:01am  

WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!

Say hey! This was in the Wall Street Journal on March 30, 1999. Note "... how much it will buy."

Holy cow/interesting/compelling ...!

And where is it up to date??? Right here ... see the first chart shown in this thread.
Recent Dow day is Monday, December 16, 2013 __ Level is 101.6

WOW! It is hideous that this is hidden! Is there any such "Homes, Inflation Adjusted"? Yes! This was in the New York Times on August 27, 2006:

And up to date (by me) is here:
http://patrick.net/?p=1219038&c=999083#comment-999083

WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!

And http://patrick.net/?p=1230886

40340   Nobody   2013 Dec 16, 6:19am  

Looking at how strong the real estate market came back, it seems we didn't have a bubble.

40341   edvard2   2013 Dec 16, 6:23am  

Memories are apparently short. People seem to be forgetting that from 2003-2007, the bubble was ALL anyone talked about at dinner parties. I'm starting to hear some of that same talk now. We might be towards the earlier side of a new bubble, but its here for sure and it like all the others will run its course.

40342   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 16, 6:58am  

edvard2 says

Memories are apparently short.

LOL! and that is the most remarkable part about bubbles... any bubble !

The amount of denial is so blatant..

40343   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 16, 7:01am  

tatupu70 says

You've got to be kidding me. You've obviously never done a valuation of a stock, bond, or option. It is basic finance--I can't believe you are so ill informed.

In order to do a proper valuation you must ESTIMATE future cash flows. And discount rate. Five people that do a valuation will almost certainly come up with five different answers.

Is it coming back now Thomas?

I just have to laugh when I read this.. to even flunk a simple bond valuation is unthinkable... there are no 5 different answers!

40344   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 16, 7:03am  

Its remarkable to really see the people here, neck deep in RE, they banked

everything on it..

It goes down... it goes down really bad for these folks... why they are deep in denial !

40345   🎂 tatupu70   2013 Dec 16, 7:10am  

thomaswong.1986 says

I just have to laugh when I read this.. to even flunk a simple bond valuation is unthinkable... there are no 5 different answers!

Again-there is absolutely no way you are a controller. None. You lack the most basic accounting and finance skills.

40346   edvard2   2013 Dec 16, 7:19am  

Rew says

I'll play!

You add all the total home sale prices up and divide by the total number of sales. This gives you a median home price.

Why they are meaningless: because if you sell a few very expensive houses, or many many more affordable houses, the median will be about the same. So, the median itself doesn't tell us what the market is doing or made up of at all.

You're simplifying this to make a point. Yes- there are indeed overall medians for overall housing markets on a national, state, regional, metro, city,and neighborhood. Likewise there are also median statistics for upper, lower and medium levels of housing: for example, what the average 3 bedroom, 2 bath home sells for in a given neighborhood.

It is the statistical collection of these medians that determine current value of any given area. If that wasn't true then someone could say: " Well, my neighbor's house sold for $250,000... so I'm going to put mine on sale for a Million!" Of course you wouldn't do that: You would price based on studying your local market-aka- what is the MEDIAN that the homes in your area are selling at.

Again- this is super, super basic fundamental economics.

Its important to understand how mathematics and economics go hand in hand.

40347   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 16, 7:28am  

tatupu70 says

I just have to laugh when I read this.. to even flunk a simple bond valuation is unthinkable... there are no 5 different answers!

Again-there is absolutely no way you are a controller. None. You lack the most basic accounting and finance skills.

Thats OK...I will have a good laugh and continue with my prosperous career...

But I will know YOU couldnt pass the CPA or CFA exam because you cant do a simple Bond valuation problem and you come up with 5 different answers.

40348   🎂 tatupu70   2013 Dec 16, 7:33am  

thomaswong.1986 says

But I will know YOU couldnt pass the CPA or CFA exam because you cant do a simple Bond valuation problem and you come up with 5 different answers.

I explained how the bond valuation is done and also why different people will get different answers (in the real world). On an exam, there is one answer because all the variables are provided for you. In the real world, when you have to estimate, different people will get different answers.

If you think I'm wrong, please explain why. Otherwise, I'll assume you don't know...

40349   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 16, 7:37am  

tatupu70 says

I explained how the bond valuation is done and also why different people will get different answers (in the real world). On an exam, there is one answer because all the variables are provided for you. In the real world, when you have to estimate, different people will get different answers.

If you think I'm wrong, please explain why. Otherwise, I'll assume you don't know...

Im not going to explain jack fucking shit cause you dont know how to do a simple valuation of Future cash flow...... your neck deep in RE and like many in denial...

You made your own noose, now hang from it.

40350   Homeboy   2013 Dec 16, 7:46am  

tatupu70 says

OK--let me get this straight. Stating the obvious fact that:

People losing their jobs decreases demand

is the same as saying:

GM had to be bailed out because of the risk that employees would lose their jobs??

Where in the hell do you get that???

Um, because that's the subject of this thread. If CL argues that the bailout was necessary to preserve demand, and you chime in and ALSO say that saving jobs preserves demand, then yeah, it sounds a bit like you're arguing in favor of the bailout.

But I guess you aren't; you're just being a disingenuous troll arguing only for the sake of argument.

40351   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 16, 8:42am  

CL says

In any case, the Obama administration did gently guide them into bankruptcy, as opposed to allowing the entire system to go into a death spiral.

Tell that to the Bondholders about "Gently"... whats that supposed to mean anyway
vs a "Reorganization Bankruptcy"..... how is that a death spiral ?

What death spiral did PG&E go through.. why are they still around ?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Motors_Chapter_11_reorganization

40352   CL   2013 Dec 16, 8:58am  

Homeboy says

Um, because that's the subject of this thread. If CL argues that the bailout was necessary to preserve demand, and you chime in and ALSO say that saving jobs preserves demand, then yeah, it sounds a bit like you're arguing in favor of the bailout.

Seems like it might be a terrible idea if the Government is trying to stave off collapse and to contain the damage, that they would just allow an even more costly disaster to simply "take its course."

Further, wasn't allowing Lehman to collapse the previous administration's biggest economic regret? Didn't that cause a whole lot of panic? The free-marketeers suddenly weren't into that creative destruction mantra they spout to get the votes of the rightwing electorate. They're all Keynesians at heart.

thomaswong.1986 says

"Gently"... whats that supposed to mean anyway

Even in the link you provided, Lehman and Wamu were two of the top 4 largest bks in history. If GM were to suddenly collapse, I think it's reasonable to believe that we would have had much longer and painful turmoil. But who cares, as long as we have ideological purity, embraced by a minority!

40353   Rew   2013 Dec 16, 9:02am  

thomaswong.1986 says

If home prices didnt fall,, how do you explain the large % of homes that sold for a loss?

I never said they didn't fall. They most assuredly did.

40354   Rew   2013 Dec 16, 9:12am  

edvard2 says

It is the statistical collection of these medians that determine current value of any given area. If that wasn't true then someone could say: " Well, my neighbor's house sold for $250,000... so I'm going to put mine on sale for a Million!" Of course you wouldn't do that: You would price based on studying your local market-aka- what is the MEDIAN that the homes in your area are selling at.

This is a comparative price, NOT a median. Comps ARE important for price determination ... Medians are not.

Both do not tell you anything predictive about market health, bubbles, future etc.

40355   🎂 tatupu70   2013 Dec 16, 9:25am  

thomaswong.1986 says

Im not going to explain jack fucking shit cause you dont know how to do a simple valuation of Future cash flow...... your neck deep in RE and like many in denial...

You made your own noose, now hang from it.

That's what I expected. You don't know.

40356   🎂 tatupu70   2013 Dec 16, 9:28am  

Homeboy says

Um, because that's the subject of this thread. If CL argues that the bailout was necessary to preserve demand, and you chime in and ALSO say that saving jobs preserves demand, then yeah, it sounds a bit like you're arguing in favor of the bailout.

Try reading my comment next time and you won't make that mistake.

The subject of the thread is how much the bailout cost the taxpayers. And lost tax revenue is most definitely an appropriate subject for discussion. So you're pretty much 0-2.

If you'd calm down, you might not make that mistake next time...

40357   mell   2013 Dec 16, 9:48am  

CL says

Further, wasn't allowing Lehman to collapse the previous administration's biggest economic regret? Didn't that cause a whole lot of panic? The free-marketeers suddenly weren't into that creative destruction mantra they spout to get the votes of the rightwing electorate. They're all Keynesians at heart.

The wealthy are Keynesians at heart, yes, to their own benefit and at the detriment of the middle class.

CL says

Even in the link you provided, Lehman and Wamu were two of the top 4 largest bks in history. If GM were to suddenly collapse, I think it's reasonable to believe that we would have had much longer and painful turmoil. But who cares, as long as we have ideological purity, embraced by a minority!

The rule of law and the free market are not ideological impurities. They protect countries from sliding into poverty and fascism.

40358   HydroCabron   2013 Dec 16, 10:29am  

I wonder if Ellison has what it takes to be a Thought Leader in an anarcho-cannibalistic economic system.

40359   Strategist   2013 Dec 16, 10:31am  

Rew says
The exact middle between the highest and lowest sold house (Median) isn't very relevant in market prediction or health either. With a median it only takes 1 very low or high priced house to skew the middle. (That actually seems worse!)

Yeah, it has limited use especially when your data is limited.

40360   Strategist   2013 Dec 16, 10:39am  

The graph shows we recently hit an all time high in median prices of new homes sold. I would have thought we have ways to go before we hit that number.

40361   New Renter   2013 Dec 16, 10:55am  

I'll add a few ideas to the mix:

Pirates! There would be no end of desperately poor people lining up to take their shot at the assholes who not only destroyed any shot they had at a better life but convinced them it was their fault. A few knives and AKs is all it takes.

Mines! Nuff said.

Sharks! - Gives me goose pimples just thinking about it - someone call the Discovery Channel!

Now THAT'S reality TV worth watching!

40362   Waitingtobuy   2013 Dec 16, 11:05am  

This is insane. While I think some of the intelligence is cooked, to accuse it of being a Zionist plot without any proof is ridonkulous. If anyone staged it, it was likely a Saudi plot since they are supplying the rebels with arms (and I don't even think it is them either).

The Israelis have nothing to gain and everything to lose if Assad is removed from power at the expense of Sunni extremists. Alawite refugees would cause a massive exodus, destabilizing the region even further. Their best scenario is what is happening now, or Assad regaining power, for stability. The devil you know is better than the one you don't.

You give the Israelis too little credit for doing what is in their best interest. (and I think you are really infatuated with this whole Yinon Zionist cabal theory)

40363   HydroCabron   2013 Dec 16, 11:12am  

New Renter says

There would be no end of desperately poor people lining up to take their shot at the assholes who not only destroyed any shot they had at a better life but convinced them it was their fault.

I dunno: killing the job craters with 50-cal. sniper rifles would increase their security costs, which they would just pass on to us in the form of higher prices for goods and services.

Plus: if there are no job craters, nobody will ever have jobs again!

40364   Y   2013 Dec 16, 11:17am  

Not insane. Russia flys a tattered false flag dipped in the insecticide of post communistic populatory excess.
Time for us to wake up and smell the Borscht.

Waitingtobuy says

This is insane. While I think some of the intelligence is cooked, to accuse it of being a Zionist plot without any proof is ridonkulous. If anyone staged it, it was likely a Saudi plot since they are supplying the rebels with arms (and I don't even think it is them either).

40365   dtbristol   2013 Dec 16, 12:32pm  

Claims that are made without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.

-Christopher Hitchens

40366   dtbristol   2013 Dec 16, 2:04pm  

How about you expanding on YOUR statement and providing a scrap of evidence for your outlandish claims. I think if the toaster burnt your waffle you would say it was a Zionist plot.

40367   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 16, 2:40pm  

CL says

homaswong.1986 says

"Gently"... whats that supposed to mean anyway

Even in the link you provided, Lehman and Wamu were two of the top 4 largest bks in history. If GM were to suddenly collapse, I think it's reasonable to believe that we would have had much longer and painful turmoil. But who cares, as long as we have ideological purity, embraced by a minority!

Do you see any Painful turmoil when PG&E went into similar Ch 11 reorganization..

How did ALL OF THE Airlines do... did our Airlines also go into Painful turmoil ?

Have you traveled lately ?

40368   Homeboy   2013 Dec 16, 4:32pm  

CL says

Seems like it might be a terrible idea if the Government is trying to stave off collapse and to contain the damage, that they would just allow an even more costly disaster to simply "take its course.

I can think of much more efficient ways to inject liquidity into the market than forcing market share AWAY from well-run companies and toward a poorly-run behemoth. I don't believe Keynes ever advocated welfare for bloated mega-corporations. His idea was to enact public-works projects and the like.

Companies go out of business, go bankrupt, or restructure all the time, and yet lo and behold, the U.S. economy still exists. Where's Pan Am? Where's AMC? How does the U.S. continue to exist without those jobs?

40369   Homeboy   2013 Dec 16, 4:39pm  

CL says

Further, wasn't allowing Lehman to collapse the previous administration's biggest economic regret? Didn't that cause a whole lot of panic? The free-marketeers suddenly weren't into that creative destruction mantra they spout to get the votes of the rightwing electorate. They're all Keynesians at heart.

I have no idea what you're talking about. What is a "creative destruction mantra"?

CL says

If GM were to suddenly collapse, I think it's reasonable to believe that we would have had much longer and painful turmoil.

It seems awfully convenient to me that supposedly the only way to stave off "sudden collapse" is to enrich the investor class at the expense of the working class, and the people who gave this advice were members of the investor class. Sorry, not buying it.

40370   thomaswong.1986   2013 Dec 16, 4:39pm  

Homeboy says

Companies go out of business, go bankrupt, or restructure all the time, and yet lo and behold, the U.S. economy still exists. Where's Pan Am? Where's AMC? How does the U.S. continue to exist without those jobs?

Or even a Delorean.... some bought all the parts and are making them in Texas

life for even a Delorean goes on...so some jobs are actually created..

http://delorean.com/for-sale/

40371   Rew   2013 Dec 16, 5:24pm  

Clearly Russia has no political motives in the region, so we should take what they say at face value.

Also, those first hand videos of 8 year olds panicked in the streets ... darn awesome acting schools in Syria.

The multiple soil sample scientists, they are in on it too. This one is a bigger conspiracy than 911. (snicker)

bgamall4 says

Israel controls much of the US press.

What? The scarier truth is, humans actually have very little control over one another. Thin veil of society and all.

40372   Rew   2013 Dec 16, 5:33pm  

SoftShell says

Not insane. Russia flys a tattered false flag dipped in the insecticide of post communistic populatory excess.

What kind of word salad are you making today SoftShell? Can we get it with croutons?

40373   🎂 tatupu70   2013 Dec 16, 11:37pm  

One thing that gets overlooked is that a large percentage of underwater homeowners seems to lead to prices rising, not falling, because inventory dries up. People can't sell so they stay put.

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