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GE had to rollover 5 billion a week
Where do get that it had to roll 193b?
Stockman goes on to say that GE would have had to get more expensive money to roll the debt.
But the main reason this was objectable was Immelt would have lost bonus money. But again no way would GE have gone bankrupt.
He also said that the rollover debt would have been down ABCP conduit before GE would have been caught anyway.
If this is a direct quote from Stockman's book, Stockman is an assclown.
He did serve on Reagan cabinet. I would have to think you are flattering yourself?
Did you get the data on equality referred to on the other thread?
Beep beep beep. Loading up on shorts n gold. Next few weeks should be very interesting. Companies are getting to the limit of margin expansion to meet numbers with no top line growth. Mergers and huge layoff are a coming, which is the last resort to fooling investors. Hope everyone is risk hedged cause this can get real bad quick.
Stockman goes on to say that GE would have had to get more expensive money to roll the debt.
Stockman's an asshole then because he is being deliberately obtuse. There was NO money to be had. At any rate. The credit market was completely frozen.
Stockman goes on to say that GE would have had to get more expensive money to roll the debt.
Stockman's an asshole then because he is being deliberately obtuse. There was NO money to be had. At any rate. The credit market was completely frozen.
Because someone uses logic they are an asshole? Stockman is right, there is always money to be had at the right conditions - completely frozen is utter BS. Now, if you define "completely frozen" as any interest rate above 1%, then yeah, they were fucking frozen. Didn't stop credit card companies to mail out "special offers at great rates" to anybody back then:
http://cafehayek.com/2008/10/on-frozen-credi.html
"I can’t count the number of times I’ve heard in the past few days that credit markets are now frozen in America. Such a ‘freeze’ allegedly is a main reason justifying Uncle Sam’s longed-for bailout of Wall Street.
Well, some tropical sun must be hitting at least a small part of the credit market, for yesterday’s mail brought to my son, Thomas, an offer of a credit card from American Express.
Thomas is eleven. And while his credit is pretty good with his mother and me, I’m very impressed that he’s managed to establish his credit creds so firmly with a company that, if there’s truth in today’s told tale, has scant amounts money to lend.
In looking over this offer of credit to my pre-pubescent son, I see that Thomas Macaulay Boudreaux’s qualifications for this generous offer seem to be the fact that he has a mailing address and a frequent-flyer number with a major airline.
Geez, I can only imagine what sorts of offers of credit will flood in to Thomas if and when Uncle Sam thoroughly thaws the credit markets with a bailout."
Because someone uses logic they are an asshole?
Nope, when someone deliberates lies and misleads people to sell his book--that makes him an asshole.
I don't even know where to begin wrt to your ridiculous story about Thomas getting junk mail. You seriously are using that as an example that credit markets weren't frozen?? I'm nominating that.
Because someone uses logic they are an asshole?
Nope, when someone deliberates lies and misleads people to sell his book--that makes him an asshole.
I don't even know where to begin wrt to your ridiculous story about Thomas getting junk mail. You seriously are using that as an example that credit markets weren't frozen?? I'm nominating that.
Sure, because no company and no person in the world can think for themselves and therefor must be dictated the bailout as commanded by the TBTFs. Before you nominate you should know that even Wells Fargo claimed they refused the bailout because they didn't need it but were forced to take the money anyways:
Sure, because no company and no person in the world can think for themselves and therefor must be dictated the bailout as commanded by the TBTFs. Before you nominate you should know that even Wells Fargo claimed they refused the bailout because they didn't need it but were forced to take the money anyways:
Who cares? wtf does that have to do with the credit markets being frozen?
What exactly do you fear would have happened had the govt not bailed out all the bad actors?
Another Great Depression. 25% official unemployment. You get the picture.
GE is on record saying they were days away from not being able to make payroll.
It would seem that to deny this would mean a repudiation of supply-side economics. I'm happy to argue against SSE, but I can't understand our rightwing friends' position?
If facilitating the top is good for the economy, why would allowing the top to collapse also be a good?
I'm still missing the point. Are you implying that prices are going to fall in the future? How will that happen if inventory isn't rising?
Typical.... Read the original article instead of skimming to the end of the thread...
Or you could just answer my question.
You mean 25% official unemployment (if they were calculating it the old way, right??)
Nope--I mean what I said. 25% official unemployment.
I'd rather you read it yourself so you can figure it out...
So, you don't know then?
The free market is not always self correcting. Especially not in a few years.
Proof you have no idea what you're talking about.
Let me ask you, do you think our country's economy is still a free market economy??
Where do get that it had to roll 193b?
It was their short term borrowings on the balance sheet at the end of the year.
BTW, 5B * 52 weeks= 260B. Not far from it....indigenous says
Stockman goes on to say that GE would have had to get more expensive money to roll the debt.
$193B together with their long term borrowings of $330B at 3.2% higher interest rate wipes out all of their earnings. A company with no earnings becomes less credit worthy...indigenous says
But the main reason this was objectable was Immelt would have lost bonus money. But again no way would GE have gone bankrupt.
I hate saying this, but Immelt managed to negotiate a bailout and was able to borrow money at a rate that saved the shareholders billions, he deserved a bonus.
Did you get the data on equality referred to on the other thread?
You have a lot of questions to answer before we get there. First, if I show the data, would it change your mind? Second, why did you chose the last 6 years and the 1930s? Do you assume constant regulations over each of those periods, or do you want to see the trends for each period? If you want to see the trends, why do you focus on the early 1930s but stop. We have plenty of data after....
But if you won't agree that if proven wrong by me personally again you'll change your tune, then I'm not digging it up. Its a waste of time.
Let me ask you, do you think our country's economy is still a free market economy??
Are you trying to be clever? Our country was never a true free market, but such a thing doesn't exist in the real world. Is that the answer you're looking for?
193B together with their long term borrowings of $330B at 3.2% higher interest rate wipes out all of their earnings. A company with no earnings becomes less credit worthy..
And should cease to exist to make room for better companies instead of pulling a heist and steal from the taxpayer! You guys blather and complain about record profits but fail to realize that taking debt into account quite a few of those "grand" companies cannot and will not survive any recession for more than a couple of months. Debt and leverage driven by cheap credit (plus un-prosecuted clear cut financial fraud and corruption) is the main problem, everything else is bullshit.
In this warped market only 40% of home sales are between individuals using a mortgage, 42% are all cash transactions, 16% are distressed sales, 5% are flipped, and only 27% are first time buyers.
I read the article. Doesn't it state that 42% of transactions were all cash in DECEMBER and then carries that over as the figure for ALL of 2013 towards the end of the article? Is that not distortion?
And should cease to exist to make room for better companies instead of pulling a heist and steal from the taxpayer! You guys blather and complain about record profits but fail to realize that taking debt into account quite a few of those "grand" companies cannot and will not survive any recession for more than a couple of months. Debt and leverage driven by cheap credit (plus un-prosecuted clear cut financial fraud and corruption) is the main problem, everything else is bullshit.
and that doesn't take into account what Jack Welch did
Don't know if that paragraph just referenced December only, but if you look at the chart in post #64, you'll see the large ramp up to cash sales in the second half of 2013 versus 2011 & 2012...
That's NOT a normal market...
It is the tail end of a ponzi, unless they give liar loans to the homeless, like before.
Why? Many of those cash buyers (the ones who will rent out) saw an opportunity to make an investment with potentially better returns than they can get elsewhere. If you check the rental market and you buy a house that offers good returns on your initial investment, then that is simply a reasonable use of your money and clearly not a ponzi scheme.
Don't know if that paragraph just referenced December only, but if you look at the chart in post #64, you'll see the large ramp up to cash sales in the second half of 2013 versus 2011 & 2012...
That's NOT a normal market...
If people/institutions were heavily investing around the country in real estate in 2013, then they did so because they saw an opportunity. What does that say to you about your hoped for crash in house prices, one that you've been saying was just around the corner for the last 2/3 years now, a time during which house prices have risen substantially?
Why? Many of those cash buyers (the ones who will rent out) saw an opportunity to make an investment with potentially better returns than they can get elsewhere.
I guess you didn't read the OP either, just jumped into the end of the thread... Here, I'll help refresh your memory on what the thread was about:
The report from RealtyTrac last week proves beyond the shadow of a doubt the supposed housing market recovery is a complete and utter fraud.
As you well know, I read the post - you replied to a comment I made about it earlier FFS.
The report doesn't say the recovery is a fraud. The blogger says that. And the report says (amongst other things) that there has been heavier cash investment than usual. What do you think that implies?
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 Wednesday, February 5, 2014 __ Level is 98.9
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!
The report doesn't say the recovery is a fraud. The blogger says that.
What's your point... That the blogger can't write what he wants on his blog??
The point quite obviously is that someone saying it doesn't prove it. You are the one quoting him. Oh let me guess, you are just the messenger...
The report (amongst other things) says that there has been heavier cash investment than usual. What do you think that implies?
Read the title of the thread.....
Perhaps you would like to try and explain why it means that.
Are these investment funds paying premium for the properties or are they simply snapping them up cheaply because they can buy great swathes for cash? There's a world of difference between those two things in regard to the implications for individual home buyers.
Real wages (adjusting for inflation) rose steadily. Economic historian Clarence D. Long estimates that (in terms of constant 1914 dollars), the average annual incomes of all American nonfarm employees rose from $375 in 1870 to $395 in 1880, $519 in 1890 and $573 in 1900, a gain of 53% in 30 years
That's about a 1% growth rate, annually. Not anything to write home about.
Why? The 1870-1900 time period saw the adaptation of massive new technologies and efficiencies, with more *fundamental* changes than we've experienced over the past 30 years. We went from wood sail ship to steel powered ships many times larger and faster and independent of wind, a Transcontinental Railroad, Gas Tractor, the spread to the US of the Bessemer Process for Steel, Telephone, etc.
As for wages, let's compare 1913 to today... since we don't have reliable numbers that aren't at substantially ex-rectum prior to that.
Let us take at the period from 1913-2006, where we have complete data. So what do they mean, when they say the dollar lost 95.1% of its value in those 93 years? Essentially, an average good/service that cost $1 in 2006, used to be priced at 4.9 cents in 1913. In other words, the average price level of goods/services increased by 1930% since 1913. True, but guess what, average earned income increased by 6560% during the same time period. Average earned income rose from $740/yr in 1913 to $49,300/yr in 2006. Adjusting for inflation, $740/yr in 1913 is $15,000/yr in 2006 dollars. Average incomes, not only kept pace, but beat price inflation by 230%.
So does it make any sense all to say the dollar lost value? In reality, the REAL purchasing power of the average American, has increased by 230% in the past century. Sure, prices were cheap in 1913, but $740/yr doesn't buy you a whole lot, not anymore than 15,000/yr today. Even this statistic doesn't fully capture the quality of life gains of the last century. A household making $15,000/yr today is well below the poverty line, but yet, they are highly likely to have a refrigerator, indoor plumbing, electricity, tv, cell phone and maybe even heating and cooling. They are highly likely to have government help in making ends meet - food stamps, subsidized housing, Medicaid etc:. And yeah, thanks to advances in medicine, they don't have to worry about half their children dying before the age of 5. Their analogue in 1913, making $740/yr had none of these "luxuries". And that was the average income... Can you imagine what the poverty line looked like then?
Thanks New Deal! Thanks Great Society! The author goes on to say:
During the pre-depression years (1913-1929) average incomes barely kept up with inflation. During the market liberalization era (1979-2006), things were slightly better, but not by much. Average incomes beat inflation by just 22%. Most of the real income gains of the last century came during the high tax, "big" government New Deal era (1933-1973), when average REAL income increased from $9,980/yr to $40,500/yr. In other words, average incomes beat inflation by 300%. Had real average income grown at the same rate during 1979-2006, it would be $97,200/yr in 2006!! The contrast is even more stark, if you look at average real income of just the bottom 90%. For them, average incomes beat inflation by 400% during 1933-1973, as opposed to 1.6% during 1979-2006![1]
How come all these unskilled workers who increased their living standards 53% lived in unlit, dirty, dangerous tenements?
Look at these fine young peop--- er, children. Working hard.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangle_Shirtwaist_Factory_fire
Don't forget famous American novelist Horatio Alger, the pederast...
http://capecodconfidential.com/cccalger020515.shtml
How come all these unskilled workers who increased their living standards 53% lived in unlit, dirty, dangerous tenements?
Look at these fine young peop--- er, children. Working hard
It was like this throughout the entire world, that's just how society was back then. I am not saying it would be like this today nor should it be. We have much more technological innovations today to prevent things like this occuring. However, my point was that back then the world's standard of living compared to today is low obviously because of lack of technology and it was the beginning of innovation but back then the US standard of living was better than most of the worlds.
That's about a 1% growth rate, annually. Not anything to write home about.
Incomes don't have anything to do with growth. I mean by that logic since incomes have stagnated for the last 40 years then you're saying we had no growth for the last 40 years. Good observation lol.
You also missed the point where it talks about growth. Don't be like the media where you wish to pick and choose or fabricate information of your own choice.
As for wages, let's compare 1913 to today... since we don't have reliable numbers that aren't at substantially ex-rectum prior to that.
Lol.. from 1913 until today the dollar has lost almost 99% of it's purchasing power. So you're comparing the dollar today in nominal terms. If you do it that way then yes the income will be greater today than back then. However, if you do it in real terms or in purchasing power, people back in the 1860-1900 were better off income wise than today. That's like saying the movie Avatar was the highest gross selling movie and it is in nominal terms, but in real terms the highest gross selling movie is Gone with the Wind. So in reality the highest gross selling movie is Gone with the Wind and not Avatar.
For more information:
The table to the right shows the equivalent amount of goods that, in a particular year, could be purchased with $1. The table shows that from 1774 through 2012 the U.S. dollar has lost about 97.0% of its buying power
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_dollar#Value
Click the link to see the chart.
The newspaper report says the cannibal was shot by police and later died, but LinkedIn says he still owns his business planning nightlife and events, so he's obviously a zombie. Contact him for "career opportunities, consulting offers, new ventures, job inquiries, expertise requests, business deals, reference requests, and getting back in touch."
Look at these fine young peop--- er, children. Working hard.
Yes nice emotional pictures you have there except there are points of logic to consider.
Back then putting kids to work was typical. Not putting kids to work might well mean that they starve. Remember in agrarian world there were no guarantees, look at Chinese farming families. Not to mention safety on farms.
Want to post an emotional picture? post one of a kid dying of starvation, that will make Stalin weep.
The government did not pass any laws about child labor until 1938.
Not allowing the kid to work may very well have meant no food for the family.
Much of the concern was that government was telling families what they could do with their children.
One of the main instigators of child labor laws were the unions to get rid of competition. Much as fireman do today against volunteer fireman.
Nice charts “Call it Crazyâ€
Prices have tendency to stabilize as well as rent prices. Auction.com and other auction sites have very few properties to offer. It means much less opportunity for flippers and Wall Street investors. If we add some upcoming financial crisis for Asia, DEMAND can dry-up much, much faster than lakes in CA.
Looks like Florida is going to have to pass a "Stand Your Face" law.
Tell you what, if the real estate market crashes to hell, you admit I am right about Sandy Hook hoax, the 9/11 false flag, and the Zionist desire for world rule with a world court placed in Jerusalem as Ben-Gurion wanted. Oh, and he wasn't a prophet, but rather an atheist.
Yeah, because one is obviously determined by the other. Based on what you just posted, I should say to you that as the real estate market has done the exact opposite of what all the perma-bears predicted on here for the last 3 years that you should finally admit that all your conspiracy/zionist nonsense is the utter bullshit it so clearly is. How about that?
That has to be what this is all about. But don't worry, the kingdom of Zionism will be stuffed by the return of Christ. We are near the end.
Oh dear, you really seem to be losing it more and more the closer you get to becoming worm food.
There's a world of difference between those two things in regard to the implications for individual home buyers.
Which is why the thread title says what it says.... what the fuck is wrong with you??
The article is about the AB-NORMAL housing market last year... Is that so tough for you to understand???
All I have been saying is that investment vehicles saw a buying opportunity. Individuals with cash saw an opportunity. What kind of properties were they buying up? In what parts of the country? Were they outbidding other individuals or were they taking massive blocks of property off the hands of banks in one go? Were they squeezing out everyday buyers funded with mortgages by offering more or were they simply buying distressed property that there was no real demand for? Would you sell to a lower all cash offer or a higher offer from someone using a mortgage but whose financing was in place?
What exactly were these cash purchases distorting? Prices fell hard and rose quickly. You didn't see that coming, so now you just want to spend your time screaming it's all warped and manipulated. Well maybe it is, or maybe people with cash did what people with cash do - they looked and found a solid investment. Funds look for returns, so prices need to reflect that. Have funds driven up prices in California? Or have prices rebounded because prices dropped substantially, demand then increased whilst inventory has remained constrained? Why is that manipulation?
Florida? Check! Naked? Check! Box cutter? Check!
Now this is what I call a news story!
So you're comparing the dollar today in nominal terms
So does it make any sense all to say the dollar lost value? In reality, the REAL purchasing power of the average American, has increased by 230% in the past century
In case you don't know--REAL means inflation adjusted. So you are 100% incorrect. Again.
The table to the right shows the equivalent amount of goods that, in a particular year, could be purchased with $1. The table shows that from 1774 through 2012 the U.S. dollar has lost about 97.0% of its buying power
Who cares?? Purchasing power, real income growth are what matters. Why does it matter whether you make $1/year or $1MM/year if the purchasing power is the same??
Yes nice emotional pictures you have there except there are points of logic to consider.
Back then putting kids to work was typical. Not putting kids to work might well mean that they starve. Remember in agrarian world there were no guarantees, look at Chinese farming families. Not to mention safety on farms.
Want to post an emotional picture? post one of a kid dying of starvation, that will make Stalin weep.
That's the point. Wouldn't you say a society where you DON'T have to put kids to work is better than one where you DO? How could the late 1800's have been a better era when kids had to work just to avoid starvation?
That's the point. Wouldn't you say a society where you DON'T have to put kids to work is better than one where you DO? How could the late 1800's have been a better era when kids had to work just to avoid starvation?
The problem is that the pictures are taken out of context.
The technology today is what allows us to work shorter hours.
On a farm there is no such thing as a 40hr work week for anyone back then.
Factory work drew people to it because of it was easier.
Of course the alternative would be a picture of a kid starving to death, wouldn't that be more depressing?
Factory work drew people to it because of it was easier.
lol--you obviously didn't work in a factory back then...
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