10/10/2010 10:16:50 PM
Repudiating the nation's debt is not the same thing as repudiating the dollar. Nations often do one without the other.
10/11/2010 5:04:18 AM
I never said they were the same. I just posted an image relevant to the conversation that seems to be going on here about a fabled doomsday that will never come. It used to be a popular idea that the god of david would one day strike us with a judgement day for all our wickedness. It now seems like its been replaced with the same scenario only this time it's the god of adam smith.
10/11/2010 9:20:37 AM
The only thing saving the dollar from a collapse is every other country doing the same thing. World inflation, banks and debt run governments win, everyone else loses.
10/11/2010 9:24:00 AM
Wow, the only thing saving the dollar is faith? What a revelation! Or it would be if it weren't in the very definition of the dollar that the only thing that makes it worth more than it's weight in paper is faith in it.
10/11/2010 9:40:49 AM
Faith? How about supply and demand? Other countries are buying our newly created dollars as soon as we print them so that their currencies don't appreciate.
10/11/2010 9:58:32 AM
That's a homunculus argument. You have faith in the demand.
10/11/2010 10:12:46 AM
I disagree. What you meant to say (I assume) is that I have faith that the demand continues at a level that doesn't destroy the system. No one has that faith, they only respond rationally to whatever level the demand is.The faith is that the system works. Whether I get 1 loaf of bread for my dollar or 1 slice of bread, so long as there isn't another method of exchange I can use to preserve the value of my production, I can only use the one that everyone else is using. [Edited on October 11, 2010 at 10:24 AM. Reason : .]
10/11/2010 10:22:12 AM
10/11/2010 10:56:24 AM
10/11/2010 11:41:40 AM
I don't buy that argument. While everyone else printing money would stabilize exchange rates, it alone would not stop domestic prices from rising. If foreigners were squirreling dollars away into the mattresses, that would prevent prices from rising, but I don't believe foreigners are hoarding dollars, at best they are hoarding U.S. treasuries, and I know no mechanism for this behavior to lessen inflation.
10/11/2010 11:47:43 AM
10/11/2010 4:19:33 PM
Like most things, people don't use gold as a competing currency because it is illegal to do so, as the Liberty Dollar people found out way too late to save themselves.
10/11/2010 5:04:24 PM
10/11/2010 5:40:49 PM
10/11/2010 6:45:49 PM
Just when you think the market couldn't make any less sense, this happens:U.S. sells debt with a negative yield for 1st time
10/25/2010 3:50:09 PM
It makes sense, in the same way you have irrational fear of the stability of the US economy, it seems many more people with much more money have a seemingly irrational hope.
10/25/2010 7:01:48 PM
The fact that we could be in a condition where people think a negative yield on TIPS is a good buy says enough, but I think there could be many motives. The most obvious one is that people expect greater than normal inflation. That's warranted. Indirectly, I think this points to the mounting expectations that the Fed will undergo more quantitative easing, undoubtedly justified by "too low inflation." It's like we're living in some kind of fucking bizarro world where the Fed does the opposite of what it's supposed to do (prevent inflation), the "winner" of the currency war is whoever can debase their currency the fastest, with Geithner cruising around the world telling everyone else how to run an economy.
10/26/2010 12:16:33 AM
^^ Dude you are in over your head here.If people are willing to accept TIPS at zero yields that means they have the expectation of monster inflation.If they had hope they would be investing in something that would actually benefit from the economy performing well.LOL, you just tried to say that investing at 0% shows you have belief in the economy. Think about that for a minute.For what it's worth TIPS are a huge suckers bet. The gov't controls inflation reports and they have been misreporting inflation for years. That's how they keep social security benefits from exploding. They do a lot of crazy bullshit to spit out that fake CPI number which includes changing the percentages that comprise the basket, adjusting the "value" of a product, etcA good example would be a new TV. It may cost $500 the same it cost 5 years ago but they will say it is 2x better quality so the true cost is only $250.This is also how we get fake adjusted GDP numbers. The gov't misreports inflation which gives us larger adjusted GDP growth. That makes the politicians look good.You guys need to read more.How can anyone explain the price of everything exploding over the past decade yet there has been low inflation haha.
10/26/2010 12:40:09 AM
Well, it's better than investing in nominal treasuries. I mean, holy shit...there's like a 1% yield on a 5 year. You would have to be a complete idiot to buy that. At least with TIPS, you get the benefit from whatever bullshit CPI number they conjure up.
10/26/2010 12:49:33 AM
10/26/2010 8:44:03 AM
10/26/2010 9:28:09 AM
10/26/2010 4:53:16 PM
If someone could post the link to the latest jeremy grantham quarterly letter here he really crushes it again this time.It feels like everytime its his best one yet. I'm on my phone so its annoying to try to do, but ill add when I get home if no one has done it yet
10/27/2010 12:02:54 PM
http://www.gmo.com/websitecontent/JGLetter_NightofLivingFed_3Q10.pdf
10/27/2010 1:38:33 PM
As always you have to excuse his whacky northeastern liberal politics but he raises valid points about the govt and fed robbing the nation blind over the course of this whole thing and stunting its growth.He never blames obama specifically enough for his crazy anti-growth agendas though which is an immediate red flag.
10/27/2010 2:03:40 PM
Obama is arrogant and ignorant. His administration is incompetent. He's just another cog in a machine that is much bigger than him, though. When have you heard Obama talk about money or the Fed? it just doesn't come up. I can't imagine it's an accident; it doesn't fit into his narrative. Obama was the perfect candidate for a docile public that gets the vast majority of their information from TV pundit talking points. Fraud has been rampant throughout the housing crisis and banking industry, but any attempt to actually prosecute that fraud will lead to collapse of the system.The mainstream politicians are phony. They will kick the can along, no matter the cost. We have to do better or this country is going to be a wasteland.
10/27/2010 4:02:27 PM
^ I don't necessarily disagree with what you're saying about politicians, but I think that bank roll is a little misleading. Obviously we can only speculate, but if Ron Paul had won the nomination I imagine he would have received similar contributions. Those big donors tend to hedge their bets and give money to whomever they think will win and to both sides.
10/27/2010 4:54:24 PM
Well, you're speaking about a guy who wants to abolish the Fed, which has served as a proverbial piƱata for the TBTF banks. Somehow, I think the breakdown would have looked a lot different regardless.
10/27/2010 5:03:45 PM
10/27/2010 5:44:58 PM
When good and bad mortgages were packaged together and sold, they formed what we now call mortgage backed securities. Unfortunately, no one knows that what exactly is in those securities. People are now learning that the banks often don't actually hold the original note for the home loans they own. They can't even prove that the mortgage originated from them, or that they're authorized to collect payment. It's fraud, plain and simple. The banks are already insolvent. Yeah, we can continue down this road where the Fed buys MBS and the banks buy treasuries. It's a tidy smoke and mirrors game, but if the administration were to investigate the issue, or if more and more people wake up to the fact that they've been had by the banksters, the collapse that was allegedly prevented by the bailout in 2008 will begin again. It'll just be much, much worse.
10/28/2010 10:47:18 AM
You're falling into the overthrower's trap. The more your argument relies on people you can't specify doing things you can't explain, the less likely people are to take it seriously.
10/28/2010 1:16:46 PM
I can see how that paragraph would strike someone that doesn't read current events as "tin foil hat"-esque. Turns out that the government-backed banking industry is more riddled with corruption than the most loony conspiracy theorists would have previously guessed. Start here and come back when you get educated.http://consumerist.com/2010/10/graph-how-the-current-foreclosure-fraud-crisis-works.html
10/28/2010 3:50:02 PM
I've already heard about the robo-signers, but you're a fool if you think that small level of impact could cause such a crisis.
10/28/2010 4:23:28 PM
How small is the level?
10/29/2010 5:59:41 PM
Robo-signers really only sped up foreclosures, they didn't really cause them, so they aren't nearly the root of the problem, just companies cheating to cut corners to deal with the large number of foreclosures and shrinking of staff.[Edited on October 29, 2010 at 6:56 PM. Reason : ]
10/29/2010 6:48:31 PM
Clearly, you've not read much about Fraudclosuregate.It's the potential double counting of mortgages, the allegations that shitty MBSs were created specifically to profit off their blowup via CDS, and a potential forced mark to market event because of all of this.Estimates to the hit on bank balance sheets are currently ranging from about 100-400 billion. This will cause a Lehman like event and TARP 2.0 to be vogue if it isn't managed. It might even if it is managed.
10/29/2010 7:51:03 PM
Here's my link:http://www.businessinsider.com/calculated-risk-why-the-banks-used-robo-signers-2010-10Give me your link
10/29/2010 7:58:13 PM
http://tinyurl.com/25nbkkk
10/29/2010 8:39:05 PM
10/31/2010 5:12:23 PM
You really are just trolling this section aren't you?
10/31/2010 7:18:52 PM
TROLOLOLOLOLHave my responses ever been less than sincere? What would make you think they are? Are you that closed off to the world that you have trouble believing that people have different opinions than you?
10/31/2010 8:46:22 PM
10/31/2010 9:06:29 PM
If you don't bother reading my posts completely, I'm not going to keep writing them. This is the third or forth time you've obviously just skimmed over my post and not bothered actually reading it, it's insulting.
10/31/2010 9:35:17 PM
Rofl. You didn't even post anything you lame troll. Go run along and play failed society games.
10/31/2010 9:41:52 PM
I did post things, you quoted them but failed to actually read them.
10/31/2010 9:50:56 PM
You realize you're in a different thread now right? The one where you read one link about robo signers and apparently don't know enough about the fraudclosure crisis to link them.
10/31/2010 10:06:13 PM
I know what thread we're in, and I know that you don't bother to read what I say and just take the first and last words I say and fill in the middle with whatever you like.
10/31/2010 10:56:01 PM
Economy Logs Brisk 3.9 Percent Growth
10/31/2010 11:25:38 PM
11/1/2010 8:56:24 PM