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Yup, and over the weekend I think we heard the amount of missing money is double whats been reported. Its pretty damn sad, wake up one day and through no fault of your own your account is frozen and mabye the bankruptcy trustee will give you some money back. All the while the TBTF banks jockey for position in the front of the line ahead of customers which should be universally criticized from the politicians yet they remain silent.
True. More disturbing is apparently what MF Global did was legal, that is, using customer's accounts to invest in pretty much any equity class they wanted.
No doubt the mainstream media - outside a handful of business publications - will avoid making this aspect part of regular stories.
If Joe Sixpack was aware that the ultimate account holder - who is usually NOT the financial firm he choose and whose logo graces the office he visits - can speculate freely with his money, there would be a helluva crisis of confidence.
Or not, since everybody seems determined to avoid talking about bad news, bad laws, and bad policy and prefers to blame it on a few bad apples or laziness. Which itself is lazy.
Now if you can sink 450K into south african bonds then you can get above 3%..otherwise it is Brazil and that is pretty risky
https://www.everbank.com/personal/rates.aspx?tab=currencies
Rates are low world wide. Brazil gives a high rate...but there's some stipulations about how that works.
Well, that's just Everbank though. Those rates are a joke and won't come anywhere near beating inflation in many of those countries. If you get rates at a local bank, it'd likely be far higher than Everbank's.
For example, Everbank quotes 2% for short-term money for India, but you can apparently get 7% on a short-term CD from the SBI:
http://www.rupeetimes.com/compare/fixed_deposits/state_bank_of_india.html
I think Brazil's central bank rate is 11.5% now. I really wouldn't use Everbank as a comparison.
Well that would be a interesting argument...we tend to have some states subsidize others. Alaska has this to attract people..the states along the gulf coast also are subsidized. It would be interesting to see what would happen if say Alaska went bankrupt and what it would do simply because the energy markets.
The dollar is not on a gold standard but oil is priced in dollars.
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http://www.cnbc.com/id/45336180/European_Debt_Crisis_Unlikely_to_Impact_US_Fed_s_Bullard
I've heard a lot about the Greece debt crisis adversely affecting the stabilization of the Euro, but how does that affect me here in the United States. Sure I understand some people probably have 100's of billions invested Europe and they could take some big losses, but how does that impact John Q. Public here in the United States? The Stock market will certainly take another tumble downward, exports to Europe will suffer, but I hardly think it's time to run around and scream the sky is falling.
Can someone explain to me why I should care?