economic crisis is now effecting the globe. markets just opened and Europe, NIKKEI, UAB, Japan markets are all failing. no indication that the DOW Jones has bottomed yet. will the DOW reach 4000? It seems likely at this point.the future is uncertain ... who's @ fault? the blame is way bigger than a citizen level. its the whole "Consumer" culture . . . this is very bad.
10/8/2008 3:51:09 AM
people have lost touch with the concepts of saving, budgeting , and sacrificing
10/8/2008 4:01:23 AM
I'd say it's like 65% Wall Street25% People living outside their means10% Government de-regulationFixing any one of those would have prevented this shit.
10/8/2008 5:06:14 AM
10/8/2008 7:09:18 AM
10/8/2008 7:20:01 AM
Some may not agree but . . . people should realize this isnt the end of the world (if it continues), in fact after its over we may, as a planet, end up happier with a more sustainable and fair system.
10/8/2008 7:38:20 AM
10/8/2008 8:50:21 AM
I was under the impression that that could be grouped in with Wall Street.
10/8/2008 9:14:04 AM
^^I thought we were talking about pre-crisis.
10/8/2008 9:23:40 AM
10/8/2008 10:08:30 AM
here is my expert opinion:we're fucked.
10/8/2008 10:17:09 AM
Here is my expert opinion: recessions happen from time to time. It is not the end of the world when they do.
10/8/2008 10:22:12 AM
10/8/2008 10:37:47 AM
10/8/2008 10:53:00 AM
Id have to agree, consumerism does play a huge role in getting us where we are nowso the solution is simple, stop buying things you dont need and especially things you cant afford (zomg thats unamerican!!!)Its true that what you spend money on this month will have more say in the system than your vote in November.anyone that thinks change can come from the top is delusional (thats not a shot at Obama but more our government as a whole)
10/8/2008 11:01:19 AM
Reactionaries. "Will the Dow hit 4000"? Are you retarded?It's a global economy. Is this news to you? Have you never heard the term, "When America coughs, the rest of the world catches the flu"?Europe is likely to get hit the hardest, followed by America and then Asia. But the sky is not falling. We'll see a nasty recession lasting through most of 2009 and maybe even a true contraction (depression), but markets will bounce back.[Edited on October 8, 2008 at 11:28 AM. Reason : 2]
10/8/2008 11:27:35 AM
Along the lines of high-level corporate responsibility, general honesty, etc, comes an article from the NYT about a retired economist delivering bagels in the DC area. Pretty fascinating:http://tinyurl.com/2ng8lr
10/8/2008 11:42:37 AM
That's a pretty amusing article. Funny how he says that he doesn't even bother with lawyers and telecoms anymore.
10/9/2008 12:37:29 AM
Yeah that was a good read.
10/9/2008 8:39:05 AM
guarantee this thread will be 100 pages. this sh!t is serious business.
10/9/2008 10:27:04 AM
the markets ALWAYS bounce back. when they do, everybody who decided to go crazy and sell is gonna wish they bought. the key to beating the markets... since I am an expert... is basically do the opposite of what the masses [stupid people] do. id start buying now if you haven't already and in 5 years, you'll be set. this isn't one of those get rich quick schemes, but hey, guess what, it took a little while, but i did!!!!!
10/9/2008 6:37:26 PM
Now would be a terrible time to buy into the market. You don't try to catch a falling knife. Let things stabilize, then start putting money into investments again. Sure, you may get lucky and catch it on the curve, but you may also get caught on the down and hammered hard. Obviously there are some good opportunities out there, even right now, but as a general strategy I would keep my money safe right now and wait for the volatility to pass.
10/9/2008 7:06:15 PM
If the knife is made of gold I should be able to afford a few stitches.
10/9/2008 10:35:28 PM
Now is definitely the time to buy. Just go back and look at the people who bought companies during the first crash.
10/9/2008 10:42:42 PM
gambling is illegal at bushwood sir
10/9/2008 11:38:41 PM
so like when is this economic failure thing gonna affect me?
10/9/2008 11:49:21 PM
last time i saw a mouth like that, it had a hook in it
10/9/2008 11:53:19 PM
10/10/2008 2:20:28 AM
Everybody loves capitalism until capitalism happens to them.
10/10/2008 2:50:04 AM
Well, should we all jump off tall buildings or inhale exhaust fumes to end the suffering?
10/10/2008 2:51:19 AM
Sure, you first
10/10/2008 2:55:09 AM
*Sigh* And socialism is your solution?
10/10/2008 3:05:41 AM
don't know what the solution is, but when people stop getting paychecks its going to be UNREAL. i don't see a plan for this turning around.just throwing ca$h at it by the TRILLIONS and further decreasing interest rates is not the fix. we should have let those banks TANK and increased the interest rates to make cash harder to get, thus increasing its value.we're depreciating the sh!t out of the currency now.
10/10/2008 7:46:31 AM
10/10/2008 10:24:51 AM
10/10/2008 10:27:19 AM
10/10/2008 10:33:21 AM
I think this much worse than 87.87 was one bad day and then a bounce back. We've lost about 17% this week and a secular trend downward. Also, the notion that Fannie and Freddie are in some way responsible for this crisis needs to be cut off. I understand people have their biases for or against government but these issues are serious and going to ridiculous roads is not helpful.The only effect that Fannie and Freddie had on this crisis was to mitigate it. Agency debt is the only thing that is still selling. Agency backed mortgages are the only ones that are still flowing to consumers. Agency debt is the only asset that is not falling. Agency mortgages are the only ones that are paying off at anywhere near model-forecasted rates.In what way would we be better off without Agency backed securities? While I try to make a point that this crisis is not just subprime it is important to remember that subpime and Alt-A were a big part of it. Subprime and Alt-A are by definition loans that are not backed by Fannie or Freddie.
10/10/2008 10:38:40 AM
10/10/2008 10:43:07 AM
^ Well, the 1987 crash was certainly more than one bad day of trading. Stocks took their biggest dive on a single day, yes, but they didn't fully recover until 1989. I guess that's relatively quick considering the size of the drop (especially compared to the length of time it took to recover from the 1929 crash), but it certainly isn't over night.
10/10/2008 10:56:11 AM
THIS IS WORSE THAN ANY OTHER TIME !!!1 this sh!t is alarming . . . the only way to patch this up that I can see is to globalize the economy and open up the borders between Canada and Mexico.
10/10/2008 11:13:37 AM
question what do you think globalizing the economy will solve?
10/10/2008 11:19:57 AM
10/10/2008 11:32:09 AM
The canadian-mexican border is a tough one to guard in the first place, since no one knew it existed.
10/10/2008 12:03:48 PM
Economy Pwnt. Stay home.
10/10/2008 12:28:45 PM
10/10/2008 12:38:58 PM
how did this apparently slip by the radar without a blip?http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1008/14346.htmlThe guy that Paulson appointed (without confirmation) to oversee the distribution of the $700B is a 35 year old former Goldman Sachs banker!W.T.F.!! It's already bad enough, and hasn't gotten enough press, that Henry Paulson went straight from being the CEO of Goldman Sachs to being the Treasury Secretary, who then took $700B to funnel back into his old company and their competitors. But now he's hired another GS employee to actually distribute the funds?! And a 35 year old one at that, who graduated business school in 2002?my. god. ..... the people running this country are more crooked than I had ever thought.....
10/10/2008 11:25:28 PM
10/10/2008 11:34:07 PM
my point is, it's already bad enough that the Treasury Secretary came straight from being CEO at Goldman Sachs, where he apparently nearly ran the place into the ground (with the results of his actions showing up 1.5-2 years after he left, i.e. now) then turned around and insisted that he needed a virtual blank check to give back to, in part, a company he used to run. But now, he has to pick an #2 guy to actually oversee the distribution, and he picks a guy from his old firm? I know GS is huge and has many of the best bankers in the world, but does that just not reek of cronyism of the worst kind? Do you not think he could have shown just a hint of good faith and found someone from a company that he didn't run 2 years ago?And furthermore, he picked a 35 year old, basically fresh out of business school guy to do it? Hey, guess what - I got my MBA in 2002 also, the same year Kashkari did. Maybe he should have picked me![Edited on October 10, 2008 at 11:47 PM. Reason : .]
10/10/2008 11:47:21 PM
http://djiaunder9000.ytmnd.com/This is needed here
10/11/2008 5:31:10 PM
10/11/2008 5:43:01 PM