12/12/2010 6:50:49 PM
Again, you are missing my point. If our own citizens aren't willing to own them then who the fuck will?! Once they realize it's never going to be paid back in full and that they should be compensated for the risk they are taking the yields will skyrocket. The only reason the Japs rates have stayed low is because the govt has convinced its citizens to hold its debt. That will not happen here I'm telling you.
12/12/2010 6:57:20 PM
June 2008 Kris? Really? It's closer to 30% now.
12/12/2010 8:39:31 PM
12/12/2010 9:08:37 PM
You're still wrong little buddy, keep trying.[Edited on December 12, 2010 at 10:28 PM. Reason : Is it just me, or does column 3 not exist? ]
12/12/2010 10:24:49 PM
dude i cant have discussions with you. You are clearly a smart guy, but someone has brainwashed you with your socialist indoctrine to the point where you are incapable of using logic on these matters.If only 30ish percent is held abroad then where do you think the majority of the rest is? Not to mention if even 3-4% of the people who owned US debt decided to dump it all at once it would start such a wave of panic that everyone else would be rushing for the exit also.Have you not observed what has happened in Greece, Ireland, and Spain the past few months? If citizens don't feel it is their patriotic duty to hold our debt, then who will feel it is their duty to own it??? The only people willing to own it are those who think it's yield is in line with its risk. Since they clearly are out of line, we can expect rational investors to dump treasuries. This really isn't complex...[Edited on December 12, 2010 at 10:49 PM. Reason : a]
12/12/2010 10:42:59 PM
12/13/2010 12:04:49 AM
12/13/2010 12:34:14 AM
12/13/2010 6:41:45 AM
If the US becomes insolvent, it's citizens will need to pick up the debt, or the system will failUS citizens will not pick up the debtTherefore the system will fail
12/13/2010 12:33:20 PM
If I were trolling you, I'd say show me where a US citizen would have to file any of that paperwork knowing it's a fools errand.Instead, since you didn't answer the proper question so I'll state it more plainly.What is the difference between 'international' and 'foreign'? If we're talking about how much US citizens own it's certainly important to understand what is meant by international. You're claiming that 'international' is debt not held by US citizens. If that is the case, why not classify that debt as just 'foreign'? Why the distinction?[Edited on December 13, 2010 at 12:50 PM. Reason : Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States...US citizen lolerskates]
12/13/2010 12:49:21 PM
12/13/2010 1:04:35 PM
(8,211.1-4,200.0)/13,561.6 = 0.295768936[Edited on December 13, 2010 at 6:25 PM. Reason : This site agrees with me http://www.bullandbearwise.com/TreasuryOwnershipChart.asp]
12/13/2010 6:23:38 PM
I had guessed you might try something like that, but private != u.s. citizens.
12/13/2010 6:49:44 PM
And I figured that would be your next move as well. The Treasury is fine characterizing the debt that is held in this way as Private. So I'll defer to their expertise over yours. If US citizens didn't want their various investments held in US treasuries I'm pretty certain they have options for expressing this opinion in the form of US corporates, agencies, equities, or any foreign equivalent.30% dawg.[Edited on December 13, 2010 at 7:01 PM. Reason : .]Btw, I will concede incorrectness on the earlier assertion about "international". I was trying to browse on my phone and epic failed.[Edited on December 13, 2010 at 7:01 PM. Reason : .]
12/13/2010 7:00:54 PM
12/13/2010 7:12:12 PM
Kris, for fucks sake, you were completely fine with stating that private pension funds and mutual funds were US citizens holding US debt but you're going to ignore every other category that the Treasury itself is classifying as private? You're wrong. Admit it, and lets move on.
12/13/2010 7:44:17 PM
Holdings from corporations are completely different.You're moving goalposts.
12/13/2010 7:46:54 PM
The implications was that even the US doesn't want to hold US debt outside of the Fed. This isn't true. No goalposts were moved. No kittens were harmed in the correct analysis of the data.Stop being so fucking butthurt about this.
12/13/2010 7:55:47 PM
12/13/2010 8:31:54 PM
Kris, if you want to stick to very very strict language to make your points, then fucking do it. I'm not the guy that brought mutual funds into the equation in one instance as if every citizen that owns a mutual fund that owns USTs picked that specific fund because it owns USTs. You're more guilty than anyone in this section recently of being flimsy with language and getting more bent out of shape about it when your half-assed (yes, they are half-assed) posts get destroyed by those of us who are stupid enough to actually take the time to do so.It's become utterly clear that you're way more interested in being steadfast on whatever initial point you made that you either didn't think through, stated incoherently, or used bad or misinterpreted data in it's stating than you are at actually having a debate about the spirit of the point you were making.The bottom line is, the production, investments, and savings of private US citizens in one way or the other has bought USTs at to the tune of 30%. That is the topic Rally brought up, that is the answer. I'm done playing your stupid language game I called you out on last week and you're still doing it.[Edited on December 13, 2010 at 9:20 PM. Reason : .]
12/13/2010 8:54:56 PM
12/13/2010 9:39:41 PM
12/13/2010 10:02:50 PM
12/13/2010 10:33:57 PM
12/13/2010 10:52:47 PM
12/13/2010 11:06:02 PM