7/15/2008 1:36:11 PM
7/15/2008 3:37:21 PM
So what are all the people who didn't get shitty mortgages supposed to do? Put up with it?
7/15/2008 4:34:13 PM
^ They entered into contract.You saying the other side shouldn't be able to enforce?
7/15/2008 4:41:41 PM
No, I'm saying that all of America is paying for this shit because some people can't handle their finances/banks fucked everyone over. Inflation is not limited only to people who lost their houses. THis is something the entire country is now having to deal with.
7/15/2008 4:49:31 PM
Indeed. When interest rates are cut and inflation soars it is the fiscally responsible parties that get screwed.
7/15/2008 4:52:49 PM
7/15/2008 6:13:53 PM
^ Uh...what do you think their current policy represents exactly?
7/15/2008 7:51:19 PM
^ They aren't printing money. The Fed is opening up the discount window and taking on garbage in their swaps, but there hasn't been any marked increase in the money supply. In fact, private credit is being wiped out, a deflationary pressure.The two forces at balance right now seem to me to be massive deflationary pressure caused by asset collapse and private credit reduction, balanced against a weak dollar (caused by low interest rates), and expanding (or threat of expanding) public debt, and also materials shortage (e.g. oil)
7/15/2008 8:55:22 PM
Fair enough. A worldwide dollar sell-off has the same effect, though.
7/15/2008 9:41:02 PM
What's the difference between printing money and creating e-money? Both are supposed to represent the "value" of a dollar. Suppose everyone wanted to get their e-dollars out of the bank. It'd be the same effect as if everyone wanted to get their money handed to them in person. It's still an artificial creation of money either way you do it. Value is lost every time a new one is created.
7/15/2008 9:57:25 PM
No, the creation of new money does not destroy value, it just moves it around (from existing bills to new bills). This is a fact of life and abolishing the Fed would not abolish money creation through credit expansion. All it would do is guarantee that eventually all such credit booms end in horrible busts where prices must painfully fall back to match the physical money supply. slamjamason is right, it is not clear right know that the Fed is being expansionary or if it is simply filling the hole left by a lack of e-dollars, as IMStoned420 put it.
7/15/2008 11:11:55 PM
7/15/2008 11:17:14 PM
7/15/2008 11:34:38 PM
IMStoned420, which part of that sentence do you have a question about? As I print new slips of paper the paper in your bank account loses a tiny bit of its value. But society as a whole is no poorer for it, because all the value you lost was gained by me. Similarly, if I make it a habbit of cashing my entire salary and then burning it in a big bonfire, society as a whole is no worse off for it (everything I lost was gained by others because their salaries now buy more).
7/16/2008 12:34:17 AM
Who the fuck cares if society in total isn't any worse off if each and every individual has less money?
7/16/2008 12:37:08 AM
But that is not the case. Some individuals have money that was just created, so they have more money than otherwise. As such, inflating the money supply by itself, as long as it is by a small amount, is neither good nor bad because society as a whole is just as wealthy as it otherwise would be. However, it allows the creation of a lender of last resort which solves a lot of collective action problems for society, which is a major benefit. To continue arguing you either need to show this benefit is too small to care (absurd) or the moral hazard created outweighs the benefits, which I find extremely unlikely.
7/16/2008 8:44:22 AM
This is retarded. I don't have to argue anything because everyone already knows that printing too much money is a hazard to the economy. It's well documented. It doesn't solve anything. All they're doing is taking monetary value away from ordinary Americans in order to save these banks that fucked themselves in the ass but then they send out the economic stimulus checks that are likely just a way to slightly pay money back to Americans that they already had. It's just that the value of our money is worth less, so they have to hand it out to everyone to keep up with inflation.The Fed has said that their main goal is to combat inflation and yet there is an article that recently that inflation is at a 26 year high and that is the result from before the bailout of Fannie and Indy. They're doing a pretty piss poor job if they were trying to fight inflation. This has the potential to be the worst economic action ever taken. They were already creating money at a pace that is high enough to have extremely high inflation and now they're creating even more money. If you can't see how this has the potential to have a runaway effect on inflation, then you should not be debating economics period. The government is robbing the American people for the sake of American businesses. I'm not saying that this isn't the right thing to do (because we might be in an even worse situation if didn't), but if you can't see the effect this is having on the economy, you are fucking blind.
7/16/2008 10:20:50 AM
^
7/16/2008 11:28:06 AM
7/16/2008 12:21:58 PM
Here's a thing I read
7/16/2008 12:23:56 PM
7/16/2008 12:31:29 PM
^^ Link or source please.[Edited on July 16, 2008 at 12:33 PM. Reason : .]
7/16/2008 12:32:45 PM
Here you go, here is a link you can chew onhttp://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htmAnd this for some more analysishttp://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/07/cpi-june-2008.html
7/16/2008 12:57:04 PM
Now is when everyone tells me to go smoke some more weed because of how wrong I am.Wait...
7/16/2008 3:04:09 PM
TroleTacks, the price index you are referring to is being driven up by food and fuel prices which do NOT represent inflation, but a shift of purchasing power from consumers to producers. During periods of inflation prices rise to cover rising costs, that is not the present, as 80+% of the price jump is being pocketted as unmittigated profit. IMStoned420, you should go smoke some more week because of how wrong you are. What the Fed did for BS is not going to drive inflation, all it is going to do is prevent contagion and therefore stem deflationary pressures. In other words, we will experience no more inflation than if BS was not in trouble.
7/16/2008 3:11:02 PM
Oh... so the price of energy and food really isn't skyrocketing. I'm so relieved.
7/16/2008 3:16:22 PM
7/16/2008 3:29:15 PM
7/16/2008 5:10:49 PM
Core inflation based on the Consumer Price Index, which ignores the fuel and food prices that are largely out of the Fed's control, is the standard.Core inflation rose .3% for the month of June.
7/16/2008 5:16:45 PM
You mean it's a standard for a government that doesn't want the consumer (and thus, the voter) to get restless?
7/16/2008 5:19:31 PM
Yeah, it's a little hard to take the core inflation seriously at a time when the two things it doesn't measure are rising at outrageous rates. Normally, it works fine. But right now you absolutely have to take into account food and energy prices. Leaving those out basically amounts to ignorance in this situation.
7/16/2008 5:22:52 PM
^^You make it sound like we are in a communist state. The Fed is a quasi-public, nonpartisan, independent institution. I fail to see how placating voters comes into play.[Edited on July 16, 2008 at 5:25 PM. Reason : 2]
7/16/2008 5:24:32 PM
7/16/2008 5:32:38 PM
7/16/2008 6:04:52 PM
7/16/2008 7:35:17 PM
lol kinda odd that while the dems it was really low...then we go in there and start to make them ack right, and they move the price upseems to me they want to rise the price when they are up to no good and we call them out on it...]
7/16/2008 7:38:31 PM
7/16/2008 8:49:49 PM
Then we have no word that means 'debasement of a fiat currency' as all our current words would suddenly mean the same thing: 'a general rise in prices'. By the way, the time scales are long but not that long. Oil has shot up many times, but it has always come back down within a decade (seven years on average). Food I know less about, but as prices were rock bottom for half a century I suspect the response to high prices will be quicker than it is for oil.
7/16/2008 9:23:22 PM
7/16/2008 9:25:59 PM
7/16/2008 10:03:10 PM
I've been following his blog for several years now, as well as his appearances on CNBC and Bloomberg. Trust me when I tell you, his analysis is almost always one-sided. Read the WSJ's econ blog alongside BR's for a few days and you'll see the dichotomy. It may seem that he has been "right" quite often lately, but it's only because he is almost always bearish on the economy.I continue to follow his blog almost daily (although with a grain of salt) and believe he is a bright guy, but if you have been following his commentary before the current slowdown, you would know he is a perma-bear who relentlessly cherry picks for the negative side of all news/data. [Edited on July 16, 2008 at 11:01 PM. Reason : .]
7/16/2008 10:45:01 PM
Wall St. soars on banks' best day in 16 years
7/17/2008 8:48:37 AM
^It's good news, widespread bank failures will be painful and hopefully we don't see it. It looks like the rally may continue through today as well.However, keep some context. 10 days ago Wachovia was at $16 a share, after yesterday's rally it closed at $10.50. Its day low on the 15th of $7.80 a share was pushing the lowest in company history. Its 52 week high is $53 a share.Wells Fargo and JP Morgan (who has announced positive result today) are two of the strongest banks in the industry, there are plenty of other banks out there in very difficult waters.
7/17/2008 9:21:49 AM
^ Context? I simply offered the story--without commentary.I'll leave it to the panic-stricken here and elsewhere to find the negatives in every good bit of news. As for me, I intend to remain positive--I've never seen that any other approach did much good.
7/17/2008 9:31:46 AM
^ Didn't say you offered commentary - you offered the story without context, and I offered some context that the "best day in 16 years" may be reason to offer a small sigh of relief, but it is probably not a reason to celebrate that banks are out of the woods.
7/17/2008 9:35:57 AM
^ No shit--I never said the banks were "out of the woods" or anything else, for that matter. But thanks for pointing it out--you have a firm grasp of the obvious.
7/17/2008 9:38:42 AM
Hooksaw, why are you so defensive when you refuse to post commentary and someone else adds commentary afterward? Does it really hurt your feelings that much?
7/17/2008 9:40:56 AM
^ I was clear in my meaning. Why are you involving yourself in this A-and-B conversation?
7/17/2008 10:12:01 AM
A and B conversations don't exist on these forums unless it's in PM's. Suck it up.If you can't provide commentary to your original posts, don't complain when someone adds their own to the article you posted.
7/17/2008 10:13:34 AM