9/3/2010 1:24:35 AM
Any business whose product is required by law and by law only the government gets to say who can satisfy this law, is a government sponsored enterprise.
9/3/2010 2:06:23 AM
9/3/2010 7:27:25 AM
9/3/2010 9:18:16 AM
9/3/2010 9:57:04 AM
9/3/2010 10:41:53 AM
9/3/2010 5:56:58 PM
9/3/2010 7:39:44 PM
9/4/2010 2:51:24 AM
9/4/2010 10:17:54 AM
9/4/2010 10:32:27 AM
9/4/2010 10:47:29 AM
If you didn't want to have a discussion about the recovery, why answer this
9/4/2010 10:50:48 AM
If there had been no bailouts, we'd probably be well on the way to recovery by now. But politicians, who subscribe to the same theories as Kris, won't let a crash happen. Now, we're just building up a bigger crash. The crash in 2007 was a result of too low interest rates during the early 2000s. Now we're had (and are going to continue to have) 0% interest rates, which means the crash is going to be much, much worse the next time around.
9/4/2010 11:08:05 AM
9/4/2010 11:18:23 AM
I was not derailing anything. As you appear to have missed it, let me re-state: Bailouts are at fault for the economic meltdown.And some market failure cannot or should-not be fixed. [Edited on September 4, 2010 at 11:28 AM. Reason : .,.]
9/4/2010 11:27:04 AM
So this is the best we can do? Constant booms and busts? Forever inefficiency? It's those kinds of ideas that would have us still riding horseback to get around everywhere.
9/4/2010 8:14:42 PM
Liberty is rife with inefficiency. We tolerate the rampant inefficiency of liberty and freedom because the alternative is vastly more inefficient. In comparison, two years of bust induced recession is cheap compared to 10 years of "New Deal" experimentation induced Depression. 70 years of liberty induced boom and bust is cheap compared to 70 years of Soviet Socialism.
9/4/2010 10:31:58 PM
9/5/2010 4:19:03 AM
PottyMouth:
9/11/2010 8:33:28 AM
9/11/2010 9:32:50 AM
Yes, academic research should never be allowed to get in the way of your preferred unfounded beliefs and your one anecdote from a newspaper. Which begs the question, how do you have "a pretty good day" if you withdrew from the market? Doesn't that mean you lost money on the day by failing to cover your operating costs?[Edited on September 11, 2010 at 4:26 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/11/2010 4:25:35 PM
Look, I'll take a shop operating in New York, boots on the ground and shit, over your stupid fucking Federal Reserve economist wanna-be PHd candidate.Not to mention other shops are on the record saying they turned the machines off when the plunge started getting ugly on May 6. So much for liquidity.One of these days, you'll wake up and realize humans don't follow predictable equations and the most recently accepted theory of their behavior.Are you at all surprised that a quant would find no flaws with HFT
9/11/2010 4:36:07 PM
9/11/2010 4:38:34 PM
^^And some day you'll realize that legislation should be a product of more than "just don't like their kind."All traders leave the market sometime. I guess to be consistent you should want to ban all traders for the crime of being human?[Edited on September 11, 2010 at 4:47 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/11/2010 4:46:21 PM
Do you have any idea what you are talking about? You always do the "liberty, freedom, government bad" reply when your position is thoroughly undermined and you have nothing else to add (until you go research it for a few days and come back to the thread)?
9/11/2010 4:51:41 PM
I did no research. the article came us as reference material for a Duke University economics discussion a few days ago, and I thought you might be interested. It didn't occur to me that you had all the information you would ever need on the subject from the newspaper, and this being a university and all, academia had nothing else to offer you. My bad. Everything I personally had to offer, I already offered earlier in the thread. I thought my argument was damning: the organizations operating these markets are free to regulate or ban any type of trading, they choose not to, therefore such trades must not be that harmful for their customers. The benefits must exceed the costs, because customers clearly prefer exchanges where such trading is allowed, otherwise one exchange would ban them and gain all the trading business.
9/11/2010 8:46:42 PM
9/12/2010 7:45:42 PM
9/13/2010 1:51:43 AM
9/13/2010 8:58:23 AM
There is somewhere else. There is NYSE, Nasdaq, Chicago, London, Hong Kong, lots of competing exchanges. And if customers are leaving in droves, then competition is working, leave it be. The exchanges will do whatever it takes to stop losing customers. Now, if you want to discuss eliminating some legal restrictions on competition, which I'm sure there is, have at it.
9/13/2010 9:34:15 AM
Well, this is timelyhttp://www.finra.org/Newsroom/NewsReleases/2010/P121951
9/13/2010 7:45:25 PM
How is it not the free market at work? FINRA is not the government. I said if it was a problem then private exchanges would ban the practice. No need to get Congress involved. It seems I was completely right: an obscure trading strategy that harms others has been banned. Well, FINRA has no rules against high-frequency trading by itself, just non-bona fide trades with strategic cancellation. As such, this seems like evidence that HFT is safe, what TBS did was not, so one is banned, the other is not. If it ever becomes harmful, then they will happily voluntarily ban it for you. Economic Liberty is sustained. So, please, mind your own business, and keep your legislators to yourself.
9/14/2010 12:18:48 AM
The point of my last post had nothing to do with private markets and governments. It was about how god damned arrogant you are. I posted several things damning HFT and you claim that its fine because markets allow it.I guess it was fine until it wasn't allowed, now it isn't? In which case, why even bother commenting here? We always and forever know how you stand, markets good, governments bad, market is final arbiter.
9/14/2010 6:49:52 AM
I am arrogant? For having an opinion on this subject? Absolutely. That was my point! Neither you nor I can claim this subject as our personal business. It has almost nothing to do with us, so we should keep our opinions out of Congress. That was my opinion. Your opinion was that you knew better than everyone, including the friggin' stake-holders, that this was a bad practice and that Congress should ban it. Your opinion required two assumptions. #1, that the harm of the practice outweighed the benefit; and #2 that stake-holders were incapable of handling such a problem themselves. Well, I eventually had academic evidence that #1 was not the case, but I personally didn't know. Meanwhile, you offered no evidence to back up #2. That was, until you posted evidence that #2 is not the case. In the rules of online forums, I've won, hence why you have turned the topic of conversation to how arrogant we both are, for expressing our opinions on an online forum? Amazing.
9/14/2010 9:48:41 AM
having bested you according to the rules of online combat, i bid you goodday sir!
9/14/2010 9:53:51 AM
9/14/2010 10:34:00 AM
9/14/2010 2:10:04 PM
More damning evidence that Fannie and Freddie (and thusby extension Frank, Dodd, the CRA, and all socialists everywhere including Republicans who pushed home ownership) were the cause of the blowuphttp://modeledbehavior.com/2010/08/27/fannie-freddie-acquitted/
9/22/2010 9:52:18 AM
I blame Chance
9/22/2010 9:58:04 AM
9/22/2010 1:21:51 PM
How does their bailout in terms of % of assets compare to other bailed out institutions?
9/22/2010 7:19:36 PM
^^ is that a joke question?
9/22/2010 8:17:15 PM