Obviously.3[Edited on September 16, 2008 at 4:45 PM. Reason : 3]
9/16/2008 4:45:44 PM
so i'm a newb at all of this too, but from what i can tell i need to cash out on all of my investments and stuff the money under my mattress. also, if WaMu goes under does that mean that my credit card debt disappears?[Edited on September 16, 2008 at 5:13 PM. Reason : f]
9/16/2008 5:11:32 PM
yes, it's just like in Fight Club. If WaMu goes under, everything is reset back to zero. Go buy as much shit as you can on your WaMu credit card, then don't worry about it ever again
9/16/2008 5:14:24 PM
Pulling your money out would do nothing. It's already insured.
9/16/2008 5:44:46 PM
9/16/2008 6:37:57 PM
i heard if you have a brokerage account that you need insurance because it is not guaranteed like a FDIC in a bank.so unless you are insured you would lose everything.
9/16/2008 8:52:55 PM
9/16/2008 10:41:49 PM
9/17/2008 9:42:29 AM
9/17/2008 8:39:52 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/18/opinion/18kristof.html?_r=2&hp&oref=slogin&oref=slogin
9/18/2008 10:30:11 AM
Again, the shareholders, otherwise known as the owners of the company, can change this if they want. The problem is, as I'm sure you've realized, most of them don't want to change it, because for every Enron, there's a Google.
9/18/2008 1:50:55 PM
It's hard for shareholders who don't have a sizeable stake in the company to get anything done.
9/18/2008 1:57:29 PM
And it's hard for an individual voter to elect Obama, but that doesn't mean it can't happen. But like I said, most of the share holders don't actually want to make the changes, because the rewards are huge and the overall risk is comparatively minimal.
9/18/2008 2:08:04 PM
wait a second, i thought Government's were the only ones that were inefficient and wasted money. In a competitive free market, waste and inefficiencies will be hammered out of businesses, yes?but I suppose it's just government regulations that are causing the inefficiencies in companies, right? You know, all those laws forcing the companies to makes their executives and board members millionaires? http://www.icahnreport.com/report/2008/09/corporate-waste.html
9/19/2008 5:12:51 PM
9/19/2008 8:44:27 PM
9/19/2008 8:50:33 PM
My financial advisor switched some of my stuff last April to a safer area....not a big amount....when it gets back to 12k I will put it back in.....right now you dont know how low it will go and you are throwing money away...need to wait a couple weeks to see if this truely keeps the market from tanking below 10k....before this happened, I was thinking that was for sure going to happen and it probably would...remember...the market was at 10,600 at one point this week.you dont want to flush money down the toilet, wait for it to stablize then put it in....with the ups and downs now...new money will go negative fast....I got a feeling next week will be rough....investors will start to think it isnt enough and then it starts all over again....[Edited on September 19, 2008 at 9:01 PM. Reason : e]
9/19/2008 8:59:46 PM
i don't really care if it goes negative. i have 30-35 years before i need the money. Even if it might go even lower, I'm pouring as much as I can into it while it's down. If it goes even more down, then that's ok, too.
9/19/2008 9:06:00 PM
9/19/2008 9:08:02 PM
9/19/2008 9:32:33 PM
Can we all agree? more government regulation, less government bailouts?What limits should be set for the amount of government involvement in businesses, other than regulation? Or should there be no regulation?
9/19/2008 9:49:21 PM
9/19/2008 10:16:20 PM
9/19/2008 10:24:40 PM
9/20/2008 6:33:53 AM
9/20/2008 7:58:29 AM
9/20/2008 9:23:36 AM
9/20/2008 11:35:11 AM
only a fucking moron could look at a government giving special privileges to a few companies and consider that an example of "deregulation" or the "free market."
9/20/2008 5:09:10 PM
^^I don't see how the financial market is different from any other industry with regards to the 'externalities' you describe, except that the failure can happen much faster in these "black swan" situations. Not because of the extent of interconnectedness per se, but the magnitude of the bets people are making and the fact that they're allowed to make those bets.Call it an 'externality' if you want, I call it bad business sense and a flagrant misuse of statistical methods that proved useless the last time around (see: Long Term Capital Management). Last time it was the Asia crisis, today it's the Housing crisis, tomorrow -- why must there be a crisis tomorrow? Warren Buffett himself looked at these mortgage-backed derivatives and thought they were too complex for any one human to understand. So he didn't buy in. Externalities my ass; if everyone else had two cents of common sense they would've made the same decision. What we're seeing here isn't some Economics problem, it's a business problem. Wall Street has been culturally bankrupt, their management was lazy and ineffective, and now the industry is fundamentally restructuring. I see no reason why the government should bail them out; and I don't agree that intervention had "nothing to do" with this crisis. These companies already had the dubious example of Long Term Capital Management and the S&L crisis to guide them; and that in many ways must have affected their behavior. It's a moral hazard, plain and simple.[Edited on September 21, 2008 at 2:40 PM. Reason : foo]
9/21/2008 2:40:06 PM
back to the whole "CEOs get paid so much, even on collapse, then they don't have as much disincentive to take incredible risks" argument.....http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/09/ceo-clawback-pr.html
9/24/2008 9:41:54 PM
JP Morgan buys Washington Mutual for just $1.9Bhttp://www.voanews.com/english/2008-09-26-voa7.cfmamazing.... they had assets of over $300B and equity of $26B, and they're bought for as much as a medium sized manufacturing firm....[Edited on September 26, 2008 at 7:35 AM. Reason : .]
9/26/2008 7:32:44 AM
^ their CEO got paid like 18 million for being on the job 17 days... damn, thats a good ass paying job.
9/26/2008 10:46:47 PM