« First « Previous Comments 202 - 241 of 300 Next » Last » Search these comments
Guys, I'm reading some of your posts regarding foreign food shortages and our weakening dollar. I came to a pretty scary realization. Oil prices are high because foreign countries are willing to pay the price, they have stronger currencies and we fuel their economies. This could easily transfer to food. The last thing we want is to be competing with foreign currencies for our own food supply. American food companies will choose to sell to whoever can pay more, just like oil companies do.
OO, that's interesting about buying ahead. I was just thinking futures might be something to educate myself on.
Malcom :
I expressed similar thoughts regarding the food in the previous threads and DennisN put it best "We are Saudi Arabia of food". The competition for oil, water and food will keep getting intense. Nothing we can do about it.
I really want to invest in companies that own agricultural land in US. There are hardly any. So I am stuck with the choices like MON which right now seem way overpriced.
Thx Skibum and Stuck!
I've been slaving away deep in rennovations. It's a money pit at present...but I'm happy. I'm gonna hunker down and wait out the recession.
There are times I feel this world has gone crazy. My landlady was such a horrible person--glad to be rid of her. But thanks to this blog ---you guys helped me survive my almost 3 years as a renter!
MON is evil. They are behind the suicide seed genetics that will lead to many thousands of human deaths around the world. Holding Mon is therefore also evil.
RE: Monsanto
Interesting court case in Canada a few years ago...went to Canadian Supreme Court...upshot is that if Monsanto's proprietary pollen happens to blow onto your crops, you can expect to pay Monsanto several hundred thousand dollars per year in licensing fees. Never liked them since hearing that.
The level of control they would like to have over the world's food supply scares me.
I kind of wonder whether Australia mightn't have significant mineral wealth in those deserts. Particularly given the way technological needs change.
Yeah, I knew an Indian guy in college who had the most amazing American girlfriend--Olympic level swimmer, smart, very impressive woman, and he loved her--but his parents kept pressuring him to go back to India, just for a few weeks, just to see the family. He finally went and came back married 3 weeks later. He never looked very happy after that. So far as I know, though, he did stay in the US, start a business, contribute to the community, continue to put down roots. And that's fine by me, except of course that his personal life was probably not at all what he wanted. Poor guy.
However, I do see it as a problem when people come into this country, or any country, as economic tourists. It sucks to be colonized.
May we gird our loins and face the future knowing we lead the men of OFEC.
This day is called the Feast of Crispian:
He that outlives this day, and comes safe home,
Will stand a-tiptoe when the day is named,
And rouse him at the name of Crispian.
He that shall see this day and live t'old age,
Will yearly on the vigil feast his neighbours,
And say "To-morrow is Saint Crispian":
Then will he strip his sleeve and show his scars
And say "These wounds I had on Crispin's day."
Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot,
But he'll remember with advantages
What feats he did that day. Then shall our names,
Familiar in his mouth as household words
Harry the King, Bedford and Exeter,
Warwick and Talbot, Salisbury and Gloucester,
Be in their flowing cups freshly remembered.
This story shall the good man teach his son;
And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by,
From this day to the ending of the world,
But we in it shall be remembered;
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;
For he today that sheds his blood with me
Shall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,
This day shall gentle his condition:
And gentlemen in England now abed
Shall think themselves accursed they were not here,
And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaks
That fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day.
Every time I go to the World Ag Expo, I make it a point to go by the Monsanto booth and just be mean and rude, ask loud nasty questions to draw attention to the scam. I have the ass to back it up and I've never been arrested. The genetics, the rBST---nasty stuff.
StuckInBA Says:
March 17th, 2008 at 6:22 pm
"Malcom :
I really want to invest in companies that own agricultural land in US. There are hardly any. So I am stuck with the choices like MON which right now seem way overpriced."
Sometimes something overpriced does make sense if you have some certainty about the future. I don't have a guess on this, but a lot of things being said here are supporting a future where higher food prices should be viewed as the most likely outcome, borderline definite outcome. How does that company look to you if you double their revenues?
I wonder if the money I invested in those two books of Forever stamps is going to turn out to be a smart investment?
I am calling Citibank to be the next one to go bust. I really thought they would be the first but I was wrong. I figure the arabs will grow tired of bailing C out everytime they have a liquidity squeeze.
EBGuy Says:
I’ve been using using OPNs (other peoples numbers) and saying that the Fed will have 300 to 400 billion dollars left when all announced measures have taken place.
If the F'ed is really chasing interest rates down (as opposed to setting the rate, as most people believe), then they could actually go down _TO_ 1% tomorrow - that's where the treasury rate is hovering...
Why do we expect immigrants to be invested in the US as a country when basically we are only importing them to exploit them in our pyramid schemes? It does not surprise me one bit that they just want to make a quick buck and get away.
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/03/17/BUFOVLGLT.DTL
Fear and doubt spread in Silicon Valley
Interesting... Here's another somewhat rambling discussion about the state of the economy... Patrick.net get's linked.
@lunarpark,
I and others were predicting this last year - I recall several, including Randy, who claimed VC money had some degree of immunity from overall economic hard times, as that is mostly private equity wealth. So much for that claim.
Do the backers of Vulture Capital firms just have lots of cash laying around, or do they have to leverage personal assets?
Isn't it just possible that "liquidity is a coward"? If the timing isn't right, why roll it out?
Love to stay and chat but I have to "pre-flight" the helicopter. :(
Time to kick the tires and light the fires!
> I wonder if the money I invested in those two books of Forever stamps is
> going to turn out to be a smart investment?
If they get honored in the future, they're a great inflation hedge. Buy all the stamps you will need for the rest of your life. OTOH, the post office could "default" and say "Forever? We meant a couple of years..."
Re: vodka, I think that literally means "little water" and voda means water. I took one term of Russian, taught in German. A nightmare. Only class I ever failed.
Do any of the Chinese speakers have an interest in translating the main crash.html, crash2.html, and crash3.html into Chinese? I have them all in Spanish and 2/3 in Russian now.
VC typically loads new companies up on debt as it maximizes tax releif. VCs typically use a lot of leverage, and yes, leverage is hard to come by these days. You can 100% bet that VC money in BA is going way down as at lot more actual capital, not just borrowed money, has to go into the pot. This intensifies the risk and a lot more business ideas just will not make it past the hurdle. The article that stated biomedica looks oka for now is right on. Health will be one of the last ideas to fail the start-hurt hurdle. In the end, the pension funds, and VC pools of capital have no problem taking their money off the shelf and into somethng safe, say the Euro, until the can reset their risk models and be certain of adequate capitalization. A lot of good ideas will be shelved until such time as we are down with the monetary contraction.
Hey, welcome to the business cycle.
do they have to leverage personal assets?
Maybe the present casual attitude toward debt will go out of fashion. Then we will see a return of the less flattering terms for pledging ones assets toward a loan.
"leveraged personal assets" will become "further into hock"
"liberated equity" will be "pawning the house"
Any form of morgage should be refered to "the house is still in hock"
OO was asking why anyone was buying BSC at 4 dollars. You can see why now.
Today's link to the article, how bad is this mortgage crisis goign to get should be mandatory reading.
Kruegman is very good.
He is estimating 25-50% declines in home prices, 20 million homes (nearly1/4 of all homes) will go into negative equity, he i betting we are in recession and will not feel a recover until June 2010, or later.
However, he points to the advantages to a weaker dollar. Which are signifacnt. My only insight that was left out of this artcle is this: the fixed income crowd is getting hurt by this finaincial crisis. We may see large 'un-retirement' parties, and delayed retirement from the workplace.
Duke,
If your scenario plays out, someone who packed savings into a bank (not stocks) for a house purchase should do OK.
Justme
importing them to exploit them in our pyramid schemes?
Well said and I agree completely. I certainly would not want to be a han chinese or east indian living in this country today. And in any event, their next generation gets assimiliated through our system of public education and media brainwashing. Those raised here become more here than there, to the consternation of their parents.
One benefit of the coming elimination of wage arbitration and a new wave of onshoring will be an reduction in the simmering resentment against those imports. Or at least one might hope.
Duke,
I think we're already seeing 'un-retirement parties'. Remember, a lot of these boomers fully planned on retiring after the last (tech) bubble in huge waves. Most weren't ready anyway. The only reason they stuck around was for all the toys that came out of the house ATM. Now...?
I hope Duke's scenario plays out as well. I want very tough new regulations in place on the way money is loaned out. Now that the Fed has basically bailed out the guilty, I think the whole notion of a free market system has been proven wrong. I say require 20% down on all future purchases for cars or houses. If you don't have the 20% down, keep renting till you can get it.
I also want a scarlet letter to be placed on the credit reports of the people walking away. They gambled with our collective money and lost. I think a 50% down requirement on their next home purchase would be fair.
*3/4 point cut on the Fed rate*
What about people who would willingly lend their own money to those people with less down? Are you going to also suggest a 'source of downpayment' police?
Malcolm,
That's fine as long as it is calculated into the DTI as money owed.
We were waited on last night by a very humble boomer at Outback last night. He was a nice guy, but I could tell he had once been at a much higher status level. I felt sorry for him until I realized I had worked an hour and a half to basically pay his tip.
And as a matter of fact, I did have to prove where my down payment came from, way back when.
This is so funny, cut 3 quarter pts and the market is down because the Fed didn't cut a full percent.
I suggest that Bernanke just cut to 1% and get it over with. We will get to 1% by end 2008 anyway, if we are lucky, we might already get there before summer.
Time to load up ultrashorts.
Then what's the point? If their debt to income at 100% LTV is acceptable, what difference does it make if they play the same 80/20 borrowing game?
I think a better solution is just to remove some of the government safety nets, and maybe regulate the insurers closer. Actually prosecuting people who break the law (I know this is America and we are selective about who and when in determining the nature of a crime) is a radical notion, but I think it would have had an impact.
Did you guys notice how quickly the Fed moved on the Bear Sterns fiasco? Wow, there was never any room for anyone to debate the merits of the bailout. That is very telling on how serious this is all getting.
It's like they are begging for 12,000, like it's some magic number or something.
Krugman piece is overly optimistic in my opinion. He does a fine job of documenting what has occurred to date, and stating the obvious projections forward.
Many factors and inputs he ignores or does not speak to, in typical academic economist fashion. He mentions other shoes dropping, but misses the point that it is entire shoe store falling. All the credit verticals will go pop, all of the consumer flavors - auto credit card home equity education etal; all the leveraged commercial real estate in all flavors; all the unfunded pension issues; and the governmental debt state local and fed.
Job losses necessarily will cause a cascade of credit default. It is unavoidable now. Next Q’s earnings should start the employment contraction in earnest.
Oh, and then there is this thing called confidence and trust. The US has lost its shine relative to inward offshore investment flow.
What happens in that scenario, Mr Krugman?
And did I forget about the high likelihood of geopolitical instability that is a short term foregone conclusion in more than one part of the world? Fossil aquifers are drying, food scarcity crisis is real. (Including the Ogallala in the US, btw. It irrigates our breadbasket, and is a non-replenishing source) Chances are 100% the US military will be engaged in another significant conflict within the next 10 years. North South conflicts are coming. Pakistan is a mess. Many around the world are not real happy with the USA, for a variety of reasons.
Krugman states that it is different this time due to the fact “we know more nowâ€. While this is valid in a few respects, such as preventing a market crash where I think without the new tools (PPT) we would have seen a full panic by now, and possibly preventing cascading counterparty default such as Bare maneuvers, it’s ignores basic economic reality.
Krugman has his head in his ass.
Hope in one hand and shit in the other. See which one fills up first fellas.
It’s like they are begging for 12,000, like it’s some magic number or something.
All numbers are magical as they carry different energies.
Richmond Says:
March 18th, 2008 at 10:37 am
"And as a matter of fact, I did have to prove where my down payment came from, way back when."
It used to be that 25% or more were pretty much no questions asked loans. They weren't even liar loans, they were no qualifying loans, no questions asked. Anything else, even 20% down was a hassle. You would have had to show the money sitting in your bank account for a couple of months. Even that was just a small obstacle, just move the money from a credit card and let it sit there for a couple of months. That's kind of why I think chasing and knitpicking otherwise qualified borrowers who lenders want to lend to is somewhat futile.
« First « Previous Comments 202 - 241 of 300 Next » Last » Search these comments
From a reader:
Wow, is this true? The Fed is now printing money to pay Wall Street bonuses?
An alternate explanation I heard is that Bear is somehow essential to the mechanism for the Fed's money creation, but I don't understand how that works.
Patrick