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OO,
Most full service firms provide additional insurance for their clients up to 25 mil. I can't speak for the discount houses but my guess is that if they go under the accounts will be bought up by either another discounter or broker and you'll be assigned a new account number and get a "welcome letter".
I have heard of rare instances where no one wanted some "gut bucket shop's" accounts so they go through a "paying agent" and certificates are issued. PITA. It can take months.
But brokerage accounts only pay around 2% in comparison of the 5+% of banks/CUs. Any money not being invested in my brokerage account gets skimmed off pronto and goes into the CU.
You can also use your brokerage account to participant in Treasury auctions.
Real banks are for the very rich (private banking) and the very poor ($23.67 checking accounts).
Dow at 12,861.47. I predict that it will fall down to 12,000 at least, if not 11,000. The bubble bursting is finally having its impact. Home prices will follow suit, no doubt. Perhaps we'll see some deflation as people can't afford the basics when they lose their jobs and their homes.
Let’s say I am holding 1M shares of C at a no-name online brokerage, if that brokerage goes under, I am still holding the stocks, or maybe I am being too naive?
Why would you go for a no-name online brokerage when Fidelity charges around $10 per transaction? :)
Perhaps we’ll see some deflation as people can’t afford the basics when they lose their jobs and their homes.
You have too much faith in our central bank. They will simply print more Peso.
"Real banks are for the very rich"
The rest are at Wamu? I know that sometimes CU's can offer higher yields (generally) but mmkt yields don't have as big a difference a Dennis implied. I remember when I first started in the business they would let you "pitch" the mmkt b/c it didn't require a license. I used to know the prospectus inside out!
Obviously I have a lot to re-learn about how they function today?
The Dow is below 13000, Countrywide may face bankruptcy, Homebuilder confidence yet lower on the latest survey, S+P 500 erases all of its gains for the year.
Another typical day in the "great credit/real estate unwind"???
Another very profitable day.
Peter, I use Scottrade, I don't know why anyone would use anyone else. Check them out, I can vouch for their service.
Peter, I believe as long as you have the certificates of your holdings you can move them pretty effortlessly. When I was with Ameritrade they used to describe the proces on their page, but I'm not certain what the documentation is. As I recall I think you had to actually have the stock certificate themselves.
I am watching Kudlow and Company in complete disbelief! Kudlow claims to be a capitalist, yet he a socialist all the way through. If I were his boss, I would force him to hold up a copy of the “The Communist Manifesto†and goosestep around in front of the camera. He will support capitalism if it works in his favor but turn socialist when he and his rich buddies can’t afford their lavish life styles.
Where the world is the personal accountability the “conservatives†keep preaching about? I rate right wing people as socialist morons when they talk about the “fed†saving the day. I say let the chips fall where they will and if this means “deflation†then so be it. If people have their homes taken away and they have to *gasp* rent like me, I will support it even more. I hope there is no bail out and the banks that survive will learn from the past and have a 20% down payment requirement that is nonnegotiable in the future. Hell an economic reset might be good for us in the long run! Our trade imbalances with the rest of the world can’t continue and will hurt more later than taking our lumps now.
Kudlow, Capitalism does not mean Private Profit and Public Risk you socialist fool!
RE: the Chronic-le article about the jumbo mortgage squeeze on high-end buyers, what I found interesting was that the prospective buyers had a 10% down payment on a $2.45m home. That's asinine. They are supposedly living in a $5m home. Even if they are full of equity to the hilt in the primary residence, borrowing over $2m for what I can only assume is an investment property is retarded. At the very least, you'd think they could spring for a 20% down payment to at least avoid PMI.
Yes there are those with lots of money who prefer to park the cash in other investment vehicles rather than tying it up in a home, but how does servicing a $2m mortgage make any sense? Am I missing something?
Peter, I use Scottrade, I don’t know why anyone would use anyone else. Check them out, I can vouch for their service.
I have heard good things about them too. I personally use Fidelity. But any brokerage with a large number of physical branches should be fine.
I believe CD's placed in trust under the name of a family member (parent, sibling ) is also insured to 100k.
skibum,
I think I told a story here before of someone I know who took on a almost $2M mortgage on a $3M home on his primary residence. And that someone is working at a hedge fund, expecting his annual bonus to keep marching high from 05 onwards. Contrary to what you would have guessed, he doesn't have enough savings to cover his loan. He also took on an ARM.
It is quite amazing how one's risk perception can be so out of whack.
I use Schwab and Scottrade, and I am afraid neither of them may qualify to be "too large to fail". I have very little cash at any bank, only enough to cover monthly expenditure.
Ah, it's wonderful to come back just as I am seeing the predictions that most people here have been making for the past couple of years.
Despite what my neighbors and a couple of Realtor friends are saying I predict that people who can't afford houses without 20% down payments won't be able to buy them, which will substantially release the nutty upward pressure that we have seen on prices, even in, gasp- prime areas of San Francisco.
I also noticed the oddity of people putting 10% down on a $2.45 million house. There's no tax advantage to be gained from the large mortgage. Perhaps they have cash tied up in investments that are doing better than the lower rate, but not as well as the 8% on the new mortgage?
I'm guessing that's not what was going on, but that the people merely appeared to be rich and are simply leveraged. Had they really liked the house and had the cash they would have just upped the downpayment to keep the lower rate. Once the leveraged-living people are out of the game they high middle/lower upper houses will have far fewer people lined up to buy the houses and the prices will decline.
SFWoman!
Good to hear from you! And yes, I think you've summed that little scenario up quite nicely.
@Malcom,
I'm pretty sure you mean "statements" *not "certificates"? I don't know a lot of people that use certificates any more? If you had the physical stock certificate, likely as not you're the type that keeps them in a safe deposit box. Keep an eye on those bearer bonds! (just kidding)
Remember, NAAVLP stands for National Association for the Advancement of Very Leveraged People. Perhaps we can get a grant for the government to "reach out" to those poor souls. :lol:
SFWoman
Back from your long holiday I see. I'll assume you were in France. Anyway, good to have you back. It's Schadenfreude time!
I primarily use (gasp) E-Trade. I know all the problems with it, but it gives me access to everything I want with reasonable fees for occasional activity. I move earnings out of E-Trade into Vanguard a few times a year. As a rule I never move money into E-Trade, only out of. Also E-Trade is where my wife's company puts her options and espp, and is where my past options all went. So it's kind of path of least resistance.
Anyway, E-Trade accounts are in the category of "someone will buy them" if they fail. Probably Scottrade. I just don't want to see him fly over in that damned helicopter when that happens.
Actually DinOR, I think it is the actual certificates that are needed to move your holdings. Not just a statement probably because that is just a snapshot in time. Like I said, I'm not positive how it works, but I got the impression that you literally have to get the certificates from your broker. I know in current times it is all tracked electronically but I suspect that you have a right to actually obtain a physical certificate from the corporation on demand.
In small non traded corporations, I've seen principals receive physical stock certificates. Randy probably can help confirm this, I suspect his startup is this type of firm.
LOL about the safe deposit box, I'd take it a step further and hide them in my walls, that type of person is probably suspicious of banks as well. :)
Actually for Scottrade you fill out an application and send the most current statement. I suspect that it is verified, with the original brokerage, and some official movement occurs. Gotta love technology.
Funny about bearer bonds-
We had a client at work send in 40 year, zero coupon, CA water authority bonds from the late 60's signed by governor Ronald Regan.
http://atlanta.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2003/03/17/focus3.html?page=1
This is from 2003, but it describes how some people insisted on having certificates in case their brokerage goes bankrupt.
I have a drawer full of quite impressive looking stock certificates from companies I've started or had founders shares in. The one from the dot-com I worked for back in the bubble has many many zeros in the number of shares. The most important zero, however, is the one you multiply those shares by.
I know that sometimes CU’s can offer higher yields (generally) but mmkt yields don’t have as big a difference a Dennis implied.
DinOr,
Beats me, but my TD Ameritrade account pays only 1.66% on the MM account whereas my newly-opened Banner Bank 13 month CD is paying 5.4% (5.55% apy) and my Zion's Bank MM account is paying 5.1%. When I want to buy something on DT A, I have to first move some money into the MM account and then place the order. NOT very user-friendly.
Maybe that's another reason to dump TD Ameritrade for Scottrade.
My primary reason is that TD Waterhouse / Ameritrade closed all their B&M offices within 500 miles of Boise. Heck the reason I went with them when I lived in SJ was that they had an office in the building across from Intel headquarters when I was working there. When I first got to Boise they did have an office but closed it soon thereafter. Scottrade, Schwab, et al. do retain offices in Boise.
Although I also have a UBS and Fidelity account. UBS is where Intel puts shares purchased through the ESPP and Fidelity is where Intel and BSTZ put their 401(k) accounts.
My Fidelity _municipal_ MM fund is yielding 3.23%. You should be able to get more with a fully-taxable fund.
The most important zero, however, is the one you multiply those shares by.
More importantly, the number of persons that will buy the shares from you. :)
If anyone sees what I don’t, I would appreciate feedback.
Paul,
There is a general "flight to quality" going on right now. So even though there is no specific sub-prime exposure, people are demanding more risk premium for holding junk bonds. And HIX is 78% junk, according to ETFConnect.com.
I have to say, I am impressed with collective acumen of this crowd. I poo-poo'd all of your concerns about me holding my dry powder in OPCAX, a hi-yield CA Muni bond fund. Sure enough, it has gone down 5% in the last week or so. I personally think it is a buying opportunity.
I am still 100% in the market, though my stops got hit on a bunch of big banks. I am stilling holding Citibank. I immediately took the cash and bought some IBM, which I have been wanting to hold for a long time. I think there are tons of buying opportunities in todays market and wish I had more money to take advantage of them. I am not about to dip into my 10% down payment fund (for the next house) though. In fact, it looks like I am going to have to fill it back up.
The one thing that has surprised me is that foreign stocks got hit harder than US stocks in the last couple of weeks. This is the opposite of what I expected and just proves that the international financial markets still think of America as a safe haven. What do you know.
The one thing that has surprised me is that foreign stocks got hit harder than US stocks in the last couple of weeks. This is the opposite of what I expected and just proves that the international financial markets still think of America as a safe haven. What do you know.
The black helicopters of other countries do not fly as fast, so their plunge protection team does not work as well. :)
US-Style Democratic Market Capitalism is a terrible system. Messy, dismal, unfair, and inefficient. It just happens to be a whole lot better than all the other systems in use today.
I am not at all surprised vis-a-vis foreign stocks. In fact, the Europeans are effectively trading euros for dollars right now at a discount to the exchange rate. Fancy that. If the EU can't kick the dollar habit how in the hell do the doomsayers think China is going to?
I am still 100% in the market
Sorry, I guess that is not really true. I still have a six month emergency reserve in CDs at WFC, as well as a tiny gold holding (about 1% of net worth) and my "next house down payment fund" which is about 10% of net worth, sitting in Muni bonds and bond funds of various sorts, mostly OPCAX. The Muni bonds I hold have not moved much at all, either up or down.
Other than that I am fully invested in the market and wishing I could buy more.
I still think that someday we will have to pay the piper for all of our deficit spending and all of our enormous and unsustainable trade deficit.
It doesn't look like that is going to happen this year though.
I still think that someday we will have to pay the piper for all of our deficit spending and all of our enormous and unsustainable trade deficit.
We will just pay the piper with newly printed American Peso.
US-Style Democratic Market Capitalism is a terrible system.
The market cannot be overly democratic. Do you really want capitalism to turn into NIMBYism? :)
All is good in the world again - SFWoman is back posting on Patrick.net. And I thought she had fallen to the darkside.
Great to see daily coverage in the Chronicle about the credit crunch / mortgage crisis / and now even "the rich" feeling the pinch.
Now, if we can get the tech industry to take a bit of a downturn not even the fortress with be able to hold off significant price declines. Hopefully, AMAT's disappointing earnings are a sign of things to come.
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What do you think comes next. Let this stand as a record of your incredible intuition and insight. Or let it just be a scratch pad for your musings. All takers welcome.
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--Randy H