9/15/2008 8:37:33 PM
9/15/2008 8:56:43 PM
Because to suppose that the market will be perpetually high is unwise in and of itself.
9/15/2008 9:02:11 PM
The capital gains tax shouldn't be lower than the AMT.I think the main reason is because if it's lower, it effectively allows wealthier people who can afford to keep more money in investments to have a tax shelter that makes them effectively pay a lower tax rate. And if someone were so wealthy that ALL their income came form capital gains, then they definitely would have a lower tax rate. The AMT is around 28% which is where the capital gains tax should be, at the least.
9/15/2008 9:03:58 PM
scary stuff. Paul Krugman sums it up.
9/15/2008 9:57:14 PM
9/15/2008 10:47:36 PM
so, you consider the "free market working" if we just go on boom and bust cycles, where 150 year old companies with solid histories just go belly-up over night? And that's ok? Forget about the thousands of innocent people who worked there or who had their life-savings tied up in those companies? They're just a victim of the correction?I think you guys are mixing up the "free market working" and the "free market at work". The free market at work gets us to where we are now. Poor regulation and weak oversight leads to greedy SOBs at the top looking out for their own self good and not worrying about who gets dragged into the dirt after they land softly from their golden parachutes. The free market working is a market that has free and open competition, but a reasonable level of oversight to help keep unethical behavior to a minimum and to try to prevent people being taken advantage of. There is still plenty of room to get rich if you want, since that's what you guys seem to be worried about all the time. Sure, boom/bust cycles will still happen and people will still find ways to make a buck on the backs of others, but the fluctuations should be smaller and the risk should be more focused on the actual decision makers.
9/15/2008 11:02:06 PM
9/15/2008 11:17:35 PM
9/15/2008 11:24:32 PM
the government is a business too
9/16/2008 8:41:03 AM
http://blogmaverick.wordpress.com/2008/09/15/stock-market-meltdowns-why-they-will-happen-again-and-again-and-again/Interesting take on it from Mark Cuban.
9/16/2008 9:26:05 AM
9/16/2008 9:41:51 AM
9/16/2008 9:46:57 AM
How are average people able to hold CEOs accountable when the government lets them off every single time?
9/16/2008 10:18:43 AM
9/16/2008 10:29:16 AM
government punishing individuals for bad economic decisions would be the height of irony.
9/16/2008 10:31:44 AM
that's why i said "punishing"as in: when a CEO throw's a complete hail-mary and it completely and utterly fails, he doesn't get his $40M severance package. that kind of punishment, not legal action (unless laws were broken or he clearly acted not in the interest of the shareholders, of course)
9/16/2008 10:34:37 AM
9/16/2008 10:38:26 AM
9/16/2008 10:41:13 AM
it's not up to the shareholders, at least not after-the-fact. It's written into most of these guys contracts, which is written by the Board of Directors, which I just said are almost always just boys' clubs of college buddies and other rich CEOs who do nothing but pat each other on the back all day. you're totally right that the huge severance packages and golden parachutes are pure outcomes of the free-market, because a company cannot hire a CEO right now without giving him a golden parachute, because the guy will simply go on to a different company. But the entire practice is just an upward spiral that cannot be maintained indefinitely, unless, you know, everybody all of a sudden decides to become altruistic and begin to act ethically
9/16/2008 10:50:41 AM
9/16/2008 10:57:20 AM
Bad CEOs will fail themselves out of the system. The board of directors who hired them are also going to take a hit as their company disapears. And if you even own 1 share of lehman and didn't like who was appointed as CEO, you can take your money elsewhere. But most people probably didn't think about it, so in the end they own part of the fault. Bad management practices cant be legislated against. You have to let them fail. The companies with better management will divide up the leftovers. In the end the bad practice has been excised, and the good practices have been strengthened.That is, of course, as long as the fed doesn't step in to buyout those bad practices.
9/16/2008 10:58:41 AM
Focusing on that point ignores the problem of having a $680 billion asset company go bankrupt. The problem lies in the fact that their liabilities are around $640 billion. There's a very good chance that at least some of your 401k is tied to the bad loans and even if it's not the company is still responsible for all of their liabilities. Where do you think that money will come from to pay for them? Your 401k. It might not be all of it, but in order to pay down their liabilities they're going to have to pull money from their assets. That's why they're going bankrupt. They don't have enough liquidity and there's also a very high chance that their assets aren't really as high as $680 billion because we have no idea how big of an effect the mortgage scandal has truly caused. It seems as though it's catastrophic at this point though.A lot of you people laughed at me when I said that this crisis was going to cause the loss of hundreds of billions and possibly trillions of dollars because that money was just going to disappear. But that's exactly what has happened. The financial companies don't have enough assets to cover their liabilities now because the money that they thought they had has simply disappeared. Even if all of their assets were completely liquidable (word?) there's a good chance it wouldn't be enough to cover all of their liabilities and since they're not receiving and income on a lot of these loans, they don't have enough money to cover all the money they potentially have to pay out (investments from customers). So no, your 401k is not safe at this point if you have over 100k in it (which a lot of average Americans probably actually do).^ Please read that Mark Cuban article and realize how foolish you are. There's no incentive to not fail for these CEOs when failure means making off with tens of millions of dollars.[Edited on September 16, 2008 at 11:09 AM. Reason : ]
9/16/2008 11:08:15 AM
^^^ i know, i was mostly being facetious. That's not to say, though, that there aren't lots of people who have lots tons of money through no real fault of their own, except that maybe they're not psychic.
9/16/2008 11:11:54 AM
Can someone explain to a complete noob what happened here?I'm really interested about all of this, but I really am just overwhelmed.
9/16/2008 11:19:45 AM
CEOS from a bunch of large, financial companies tried to make a lot of high risk investments.High risk investments fail.CEOs still make off with millions of dollars from their severance packages.Economy as a whole is fucked.
9/16/2008 11:22:37 AM
they aren't going to find anyone to replace a failed CEO if their company is fucking gone. Thats what you're not getting through your head. Lehman is gone. CEO? Gone. Board of Directors? Gone. They will all lose a bunch of money and the fade into obscurity. No one will hire them.As for CEOs not having a reason to succeed, thats the dumbest thing ever. Unless your management is retarded there are a number of performance requirements for those CEOs to meet in order to recieve the big pensions. If there aren't, its a sign of bad management and their probably doomed to failure for many other reasons than their choice of CEO.
9/16/2008 11:22:58 AM
w/ Lehman brothers?or with this disaster of a thread?http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lehman_Brothers#Subprime_mortgage_crisishttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lehman_Brothers#Bankruptcy.[Edited on September 16, 2008 at 11:24 AM. Reason : df]
9/16/2008 11:22:59 AM
9/16/2008 11:24:16 AM
9/16/2008 11:27:39 AM
Dude, what you're not realizing is that these CEOs don't care if they never get another job again. If you can't like off 20 million dollars for the rest of your life, you're a complete idiot. Even if you put all that money into a generic savings account in a bank, you could easily live off the interest for the rest of your life. You could sit around all day doing nothing and let your money make money. It's the American Dream, really. These guys are living it on the dollar of ordinary people.
9/16/2008 11:29:34 AM
ACCOUNTABLE!COMMUNISM!CEOS!PROFITS!BAILOUT!TAXPAYERS!RECESSION!OIL!GAS!
9/16/2008 11:36:09 AM
OK I think I have a better idea whats going on with Lehman, what does AIG have to do with all of this?
9/16/2008 11:40:32 AM
AIG also got itself heavily invested in dubious investments and now it is so leveraged its income can't afford to pay for its expenditures.
9/16/2008 11:45:46 AM
So its just a coincidence that they're both falling apart at the same time then?
9/16/2008 11:48:35 AM
Both were heavily invested in items such as subprime loans.
9/16/2008 11:52:33 AM
coincidence?no, not exactly.... but it's not like one directly caused the otherBut all of this stuff is related - Bear Sterns, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Washington Mutual, Lehman Brothers, Countrywide, AIG - they all have their fingers in each other's holes, so to speak..... you could kind of view them all as a
9/16/2008 11:52:37 AM
They took the money from their risky insurance and put it in risky investments. So they're double fucked.Short term we're all pretty well fucked, but as long as the fed doesn't get super involved we'll be ok long term.
9/16/2008 11:53:18 AM
I'm curious why taxpayer-funded corporate socialism suddenly fell out of favor.Don't get me wrong, I'm glad. But I wonder what bug got up Paulson's ass about Lehman...
9/16/2008 12:45:36 PM
Had to make an example out of someone. They let Lehman die, but injected 70 billion in capital into the finance markets to help free up some credit. In the short term, it'll let the air out of the bubble more slowly. In the long term it'll hopefully generate come positive income if it's used wisely. Either way, everyone's still gonna get fucked by all this. There's just a difference in how hard and how quickly.
9/16/2008 1:19:47 PM
he probably didn't enjoy being called a socialistseems to me like he was just making a point to attempt to prove that yes, in fact, the administration is Conservative, even though all indications in the past 8 years point otherwise
9/16/2008 1:20:05 PM
Just to help get the point across to some of you people...FAILEDREPUBLICAN POLICIES
9/16/2008 1:21:07 PM
this should help make the election interesting
9/16/2008 1:22:52 PM
^^ which specific ones can you pinpoint that were not also widely supported by democrats?
9/16/2008 2:08:01 PM
9/16/2008 2:13:54 PM
Of course it's not what they had in mind. Being cautious with your company is not about best intentions, it's about watching your backside. And these guys clearly don't give a shit because they are still get huge severance packages on their way out the door.
9/16/2008 2:16:34 PM
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=adb_1221494431
9/16/2008 3:01:03 PM
The impression I get:Bear Stearns - Bailed out because they didn't realize just how bad it was...Fannie & Freddie - Bailed out because of their bizarre public/private hybrid nature and sheer scaleLehman Brothers - We need to put a bit of fear back into Wall Street so they'll actually be proactive in cleaning up their own mess. Lehman is disposable.
9/16/2008 4:15:05 PM
Am I the only one enjoying watching it all burn down?
9/16/2008 4:19:58 PM
I met some really smug individuals that worked at Lehman Brothers at an event in DC back in May. They didnt impress me much with their data analysis, either.
9/16/2008 4:41:19 PM