No shit the gold standard exacerbated the situation, hence the Greenback Party and the major reason we no longer operate on the gold standard
10/14/2008 2:30:52 PM
Then you realize that your earlier statement, "the Panic of 1873 and the Long Depression are what this event might turn into over the long haul" is unfounded, since to day we are neither on the gold standard nor without a frederal rapeserve.
10/14/2008 2:45:14 PM
wow, this is getting rich..... a bunch of 20-somethings arguing over the Panic of 1873, like any of you know what the fuck you're talking about.
10/14/2008 2:47:36 PM
We need to get people who lived during the Depression of 1873.
10/14/2008 2:54:02 PM
^^ Yes, it's clearly impossible for young people to know anything about the past.
10/14/2008 3:45:45 PM
I didn't say that. And i think it's great of some people here are intimately schooled on that event. I just find it curious that after 23 pages in this thread and countless pages in other thread of conversation about the economy, the housing crisis, the stock market, etc, the Panic of 1873 wasn't brought up once, but as soon as it's mentioned, a swarm of guys on here start talking about it like they're experts. Here's what I think happened: one of you read about it in a newspaper or blog posting, then the rest of you looked it up on Wikipedia to see what the hell they are talking about. Maybe a couple of you have vague remembrances of hearing about it in 11th grade American History.
10/14/2008 4:07:23 PM
well, you gotta realize that nutsmackr thinks he's an expert on everything.
10/14/2008 4:27:03 PM
All I know about the 1870s I learned from this book:[Edited on October 14, 2008 at 4:59 PM. Reason : img]
10/14/2008 4:59:20 PM
http://money.cnn.com/2008/10/14/news/economy/budget_deficit.ap/index.htm?postversion=2008101416
10/14/2008 6:04:23 PM
10/14/2008 6:40:30 PM
so, pray tell.... in what illustrious volume that you keep on your bedstand did you first run across the Panic of 1873?
10/14/2008 8:07:12 PM
10/14/2008 8:16:38 PM
10/14/2008 8:28:20 PM
I first read about the Long Depression when reading about the Hapsburgs, which lead me to reading about the Panic of 1873
10/14/2008 8:35:51 PM
http://norris.blogs.nytimes.com/2008/10/20/first-birthday-for-the-recession/Oops, this thread was the perfect contrary indicator! Made me a ton of money off this one here!
10/22/2008 3:57:28 PM
That blog post was halarious!
10/22/2008 5:59:36 PM
OH YES, THE US ECONOMY IS CERTAINLY IMPRESSIVEif by "impressive", you mean the sense that our bundled (bungled), mortgaged-backed securities was able to derail the entire global economy and is the catalyst for the deepest worldwide recession in a lifetime.IN OTHER NEWS: Alan Greenspan's faith in the self-correcting free market is "shaken"
10/24/2008 2:21:58 AM
^ sounds like he's trying to cover his ass.Regardless, this whole housing mess was caused by government involvement. Changes to the community reinvestment act in '97 forced banks to loosen standards and lend to unqualified borrowers. Unqualified borrowers took on the risk when they should have stayed renters.Next thing you know, government directed Fannie Mae starts bundling subprime mortgages into securities and selling them like they're gold.If people banks were allowed to lend to whomever they felt fit, and government stayed out of it, we would have been fine, and renters would have stayed renters and kept their homes.
10/24/2008 2:34:49 AM
10/24/2008 5:19:26 AM
We're in for a bad day...Dow index futures drop 550 points, maximum allowed price change
10/24/2008 8:23:34 AM
Here's a game/simulation I have on my computer that deals with stocks and what it takes to run a company. It's pretty realistic, I think, and gives a unique insight on how the stock market works as well as investing and whatnot. It's only a shareware version so it has limited gameplay, but it's still enough to get it's point across.http://www.roninsoft.com/The download link is on the right side under Wall Street Raider Financial Simulation header.
10/24/2008 8:43:31 AM
10/24/2008 10:24:47 AM
Hmmmhttp://market-ticker.denninger.net/archives/626-To-Our-Government-CUT-IT-OUT-NOW.html
10/24/2008 11:17:45 AM
10/24/2008 3:00:35 PM
10/24/2008 3:46:21 PM
Talk about conspiracy theoryhttp://www.princeton.edu/hubbert/current-events.htmlYou have to have a lot of free time on your hands to cook this stuff up. Interesting regardless.
10/25/2008 11:16:21 AM
Is there a better thread (here or Lounge maybe?) to put some of this stuff?http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/3260052/Europe-on-the-brink-of-currency-crisis-meltdown.htmlThe silver lining in all this mess is we take down all the other world economies which might have a positive effect on us? We are already seeing the dollar strengthen compared to the Euro. These are wild times indeed.
10/26/2008 2:55:55 PM
^ im fine with that. misery loves company
10/26/2008 4:54:00 PM
10/26/2008 5:14:28 PM
yeah, that's right... what he ^ said. [Edited on October 26, 2008 at 5:35 PM. Reason : ]
10/26/2008 5:33:01 PM
http://us1.institutionalriskanalytics.com/pub/IRAstory.asp?tag=319I'm not even going to pretend like I understand CDS and how they are used to manage risk, but as I continued to read about the ongoing crisis, certain things jump out at me, like such:
10/27/2008 10:57:16 AM
10/27/2008 2:33:45 PM
^You forgot the biggest problem of all with CDSs: It's not like other insurance. When someone gets in a car crash, it doesn't increase the likelihood of anyone else crashing, so the insurance company never gets hit too hard at one time. In the case of the financial crisis, it's the equivalent of millions of drivers crashing at the same time, and the issuer of the CDS's (AIG) could not possibly cover all the losses. AIG's whole CDS business model was built on the market staying rational, but the market can be irrational longer than you can stay out of bankruptcy.
10/27/2008 2:46:51 PM
we like to think of the market as being rational, but the past year has shown that to not be the case. the rules of the market are rational, but the people operating the rules are far from rational.
10/27/2008 2:50:33 PM
I'm trying to deposit my funds in some Viking banks, anyone know how to do ithttp://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&sid=ay61s1zV3NCA&Iceland Central Bank Raises Key Interest Rate to 18%[Edited on October 28, 2008 at 8:47 AM. Reason : just a joke folks]
10/28/2008 8:46:14 AM
No Thanks, We're Waiting on Our Bailout
10/28/2008 10:49:48 AM
More scary shithttp://market-ticker.denninger.net/archives/631-Oh-No....-Foreign-Debt-Bought-by-The-Fed.html
10/28/2008 12:31:51 PM
dows up close to 600 todayi blame bush
10/28/2008 3:35:31 PM
10/28/2008 3:40:14 PM
^^ so the DOW is back to where it closed 6 days ago??!!awesome!! Does that mean the financial crisis is over!?
10/28/2008 3:49:06 PM
yep over
10/28/2008 3:53:06 PM
10/28/2008 5:34:34 PM
10/28/2008 5:44:11 PM
No, I predict that the DOW has stabilized and the current up and down is just fluxuations. I suspect it will go way down again, then way up, on and on for weeks.
10/28/2008 6:04:30 PM
[Edited on October 28, 2008 at 6:13 PM. Reason : double post]
10/28/2008 6:11:49 PM
Just a reminder for people who take comfort in the adage that stock prices always go up in the long run.Note that the Nikkei closed at 7621 yesterday after hitting a 26 year low on Monday.
10/28/2008 6:12:50 PM
its going up and can only go upnext pres. will love it when that happensjust how should we tax these people?
10/28/2008 6:22:32 PM
lol, if Obama knows anything its how to tax people. I don't think he'll have any problems with this at all.
10/28/2008 6:30:04 PM
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aLgRyi4zbS3s&refer=homeGood stuff, we're bailing out other countries now too!
10/29/2008 6:28:27 PM
This pic gave me a headache:
10/30/2008 10:51:09 AM