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Peter P,
I just found out that opentable is running a promo on 1000 points for a bunch of restaurants, seemingly the economy is really HURTING in the Bay Area.
1000 points = $10 open table dining coupon, but you need at least 2000 points for redemption. Still, eating out twice and get $20 back, that is not a bad deal at all.
I just found out that opentable is running a promo on 1000 points for a bunch of restaurants, seemingly the economy is really HURTING in the Bay Area.
Sometimes, I get 1000 points just for dining at odd hours. :)
I use opentable whenever possible. It is a great invention.
@OO,
Creola in San Carlos is a pretty good New Orleans style place - not quite California, but may be an interesting new experience for visitors from AU. It runs quite a bit less than $100 p.p., though. :-)
I'd imagine the Fed chief job is a complex seat in which to plop ones ass. I've a fraction of the information, and much BS to filter, compared to what Ben B has at his disposal. I have no idea whether his loosening and timing of same was smart, I understand it caused people to loose. But I don't know that those were bad decisions. I know this swim against much of the blogosphere contempt.
I've read a good bit of Bernanke’s academic work out of curiosity relative to depression economics. I found him to be intellectually deep and my impression is of a moral man. I'm glad I don't have his job right now.
Did his loosening prevent a crash? Maybe. Many on the wrong side of the bet lost money, but maybe it stopped a true panic. I don't know for sure. I'll give Ben B the benefit of the doubt, not blind faith but some trust.
Where would we be right now if we held interest rates high? Interesting exercise, I don't know.
A stock market panic and sell off creates economic damage in the real world, it is part of the fed chairs job to stem massive fear until cooler heads prevail. Fear feeds on itself. Its a judgment call I suppose, I don't have serious problems with Ben's calls so far. I'm not sure I would have made the same ones, but no serious issue. He must maintain confidence in our markets, no easy job after all the slime peddling.
I do however take serious issue with calls coming out of the Bush cabinet, DOJ, FDA, EPA, State, HHS, Treasury. No real leadership shown out of that group.
Ben B's toughest calls are in front of him. Its way too early in the game to draw judgement on the man.
Creola in San Carlos is a pretty good New Orleans style place - not quite California, but may be an interesting new experience for visitors from AU.
Ooh, I have to try that out. :)
OT: Need restaurant recommendations
OO, don't you owe us a review of Nick's Cove (which still seems to be getting ubiquitous press coverage -- that is some PR machine)?
Few others from my notes...
- Yuzu Sushi in San Mateo
- Sakae Sushi in Burlingame
- Hola Mexican in Burlingame (yeah, I know - upscale Mexican is kind of an oxymoron around here)
- Cascal tapas in Mountain View (I am kind of bored of it now, but people who go there for the first time still seem to like it)
Cascal tapas in Mountain View (I am kind of bored of it now, but people who go there for the first time still seem to like it)
Try the black ink paella!
Hola Mexican in Burlingame (yeah, I know - upscale Mexican is kind of an oxymoron around here)
But is it upscale Mexican? I have almost given up on the cuisine.
# Peter P Says:
Creola in San Carlos
Ooh, I have to try that out. :)
Here you go - I had their card right here on my desk. Better call ahead for a table.
344 el camino real, san carlos, ca
650.654.0882
http://www.creolabistro.com/
Of course, for the ultimate fish experience (both quality and quantity) you have to try Sawa Sushi in Sunnyvale.
Too much fish even for me.
Stay away from *anything* cooked.
Here you go - I had their card right here on my desk. Better call ahead for a table.
Thanks, SP!
I want a Gumbo and a Étouffée. :)
Peter P Says:
Hola Mexican in Burlingame
But is it upscale Mexican?
It is a shade higher than typical mexican places, but not really the sommelier-and-cheese-tray type of upscale. They have a few dishes that you don't find elsewhere.
The place is a bit... um... festive, but if you can stand the noise, it's worth a try if you're in the 'hood.
SP,
thanks for the suggestions, Creola looks good. I have no problem if it is quite a bit below $100 pp :-)
EBGuy,
unfortunately something urgent came up for the week that I was gonna head up to Nick's Cove so I canceled the reservation. I still plan to go up though, it's just a bit far away so I need to plan ahead. I will definitely write a food review after I eventually make it up there.
There are lots of good old-standby places in the south bay but they go up and down in quality. I moved out two years ago so take this with a grain of salt: La Foret in New Almaden is a wonderful place with a deep wine list.
La Foret in New Almaden is a wonderful place with a deep wine list.
I agree. They make good sauces too!
I just discovered that the all-time high for gold price was $19390/oz on May 31, 1781.
Looks like we are still way off that high.
Not investment advice.
Hi, I was hoping somebody here could point me to a good free foreclosure listings site? (if it even exists) All the ones I see, you have to pay to access full listings.
Much appreciated in advance.
Cheers
yodaking,
Trulia lets you search for foreclosures, but for more details on individual properties, you need to be a paid subscriber to RealyTrac.
PropertyShark may be better for you. They list a lot of details - even with free registration.
Patrick,
Weirdness in Atherton indeed! It's often been said to follow the money but what do you do when it leads you to a gas station?
This type of mortgage fraud is what's going to make "the recovery" so difficult. I highly doubt the person that pulled this off is even still in the U.S, let alone down at the Chevron station?
It would be interesting to see if that funny Atherton fraud lead to Norman Hsu and fundraising for his "mama".
OK so Bill Gross is also asking for a bailout. Given James Carville's famous quote: "When I die I want to come back as the bond market. Because then you can intimidate everybody", what hope is left?
And can someone explain why Gross wants a bailout (he says PIMCO is doing fine!) - isn't the bond market doing fantastic now? What's he trying to do, pop his own bubble?
DennisN,
You mean "Run-around-Hsu"?
Well, if you're going to steal, steal BIG! I could barely follow Patrick's detective work on that one? The guy set up an LLC incorporated in Delaware? Of course that's not an issue for a toilet paper magnate!
Small wonder little if any of this will be investigated. Some institution loaned out millions on this and didn't bother to check the address was a gas station? When they said "why rob a bank when it's so easy to rob your house?" this guy took it to heart.
DinOR Says:
This type of mortgage fraud is what’s going to make “the recovery†so difficult.
In a different context, someone had used the analogy of a frantic attempt to scoop sh*t up from the diaper and get it back into the baby... i.e. can't really be done and the end result is worse than the problem you tried to fix.
"get my tax money back" LOL!
BAI, I dunno' I've said Gross was a "real" idiot for years. He's fought 'marking to market' and prefers mark to myth! No, the bond market is not well. With the implosion of the insurers there's been a 15-20% hit in the muni's. Muni's for crissakes.
Don't you remember his famous comment to Bush? Taunting him to immediate "action" and calling him "The Decider"?
DinOR
Not being an expert I don't follow Gross so closely so i don't remember the taunt. I just had this impression of him and PIMCO as 'serious' characters - whatever that means these days. Now he seems to be acting like Cramer, screaming "they know nothing, they know nothing!"...wtf?
By the way BB is not suggesting the gov. make up the difference in the loan reductions between lender borrower (may I am as naive as I am idiotic). He's endorsing Summers' scheme to come up with some new instrument which will allow the bank to share in any upside, should prices go up in the future. So they write down now and then sell those instruments - maybe even securitize them? That must somehow mitigate losses right? Assuming they can pull this off, the gov. is in the meantime helping out by throwing money into the economy, in amounts suspiciously close to what the economy used to get from MEW.
BAI,
BG's monthly newsletter was littered with Arthurian and Greek Mythology references that I guess guys in the bond pit really didn't have the luxury of appreciating? He should have retired when PIMCO was still respectable.
Agreed, he's become just another Cramer and reminds of one of my father's favorite sayings: "It's easy to act classy (when you're always winning)" :)
BayAreaIdiot Says:
By the way BB is not suggesting the gov. make up the difference in the loan reductions between lender borrower (may I am as naive as I am idiotic).
Of course he is not going to come out and spell it out directly - it will be a complicated transfer of risk, through an alphabet soup of treasury-backed schemes - each of which will purport to serve a very honorable and politically popular purpose - but taken together they will form a conduit for neatly transferring risk to the taxpayer.
As a teenager, I once had the pleasure of having my pocket expertly picked in Naples (Italy, not FL) - didn't feel a thing. I think this will turn out the same way.
Wll if Greenspan now works for an outfit whose founder is calling for a bailout from the mess Greenspan was instrumental in creating......words fail me! Is there no shame?
As a teenager, I once had the pleasure of having my pocket expertly picked in Naples (Italy, not FL) - didn’t feel a thing. I think this will turn out the same way.
Well if it was a pleasure, then what are we worried about now? BB et al may not be Neapolitan, but as long as they are smooth about it... :-)
Besides they may neatly transfer risk to the Chinese/Arab SWFs as opposed to the US taxpayer...keep hope alive!
Besides they may neatly transfer risk to the Chinese/Arab SWFs as opposed to the US taxpayer…keep hope alive!
SWFs are intelligent strong-hands, although much investments will be politically motivated. Let's see how it plays out.
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The biggest default in history has already happened: the US has devalued its promises of repayment to everyone who bought US Treasuries or US bonds of any kind, by devaluing the dollar 50% in just a few years.
What does this mean for the US? Higher interest rates. I don't understand why any person or any government would trust the dollar after this. The logical course of action would be to demand much higher interest rates to compensate for the risk of holding what is rapidly turning out to be only so much green toilet paper.
The thing I don't get is the huge gap between the interest rate the Fed sets for interbank lending (which seems to limit what Americans can get on their CD's and savings) and the very high rates we now see for municipal bond lending (sometimes as high as 20%). Something just doesn't make sense.