![]() |
|
|
#530 | |
|
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Quote:
One poster mentions "similar scams originating in the Philippines", but doesn't seem to have read the articles mentioning the apparently-extensive provenance-related paperwork accompanying at least a lrage chunk of the bonds in the current case. And again with respect to counterfeiting - who in their right mind is going to take a billion-dollars or more in bonds as payment without doing some really thorough background checking? A billion bucks buys a whole of due diligence ... well, perhaps unless you're an ex-client of Bernie Madoff. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#531 | |
|
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
In one of his blog posts today, ZeroHedge`s Tyler Durden links to the following outstanding article in Caijing (a Beijing-based independent finance & economics magazine) about recent market action - Really good stuff, I provide the (to my tatse) juiciest snips in the quotes below but the full article is a worthwhile read. The existence of an independent, highly critical financial periodical like Caijing is all the more remarkable given the constraints they must operate under, many of which are described in the Wikipedia entry I linked above. For example:
Also at issue is whether the magazine will be sued due to so-called "false reports." According to the academic paper "Media Defendants in the Chinese Courts" by Professor Zhiwu Chen, specializing in finance at the Yale School of Management, judges in China tend to put protection of people's reputation as a top priority. So facing any court case with accusations of false reporting, if Caijing could not prove that its entire article was true, then the judge would most likely treat the article as false and side with the plaintiff. Caijing has already lost one trial with Shiji Xinyuan, a listed company, following this judicial line of reasoning. A report in Caijing claimed the company manipulated its financial statements to hide financial weaknesses. Shiji Xinyuan then sued Caijing and won because a small part of the article was "false," though the majority was true. Andy Xie: Tight Spot for Fed, Blind Spot for Investors: Market chatter over green shoots and rising prices has fueled a bear market rally that won't last, despite policymaker 'noise.' Quote:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#532 | |
|
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Continuation from above post:
Quote:
I disagree completely. We`ve not yet had a genuine capitulation event; the animal spirit never died. Capitulation, an emotional event, was thwarted by intervention. Bullish sentiment never really died, and that was one of the purposes of the intervention. Sure, people moved around a shitload of money. But people continued to believe in the markets and the future, and the movements were short term. People continue to believe in the power of the Fed. Greatest economic catastrophe ever, and we`re recovering after a year and a half? Doesn`t anyone study history anymore? When people call their brokers en masse and say "fuck you, gimme back my money, you lying cheating son-of-a-bitch", that`s capitulation. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#533 |
|
"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
170148 Posts |
"What Board Games Taught Us About the Economy: The not-so-great financial lessons we learned as kids."
http://www.thebigmoney.com/slideshow...-about-economy |
|
|
|
|
|
#534 |
|
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#535 | ||
|
Dec 2008
Boycotting the Soapbox
24·32·5 Posts |
Quote:
Quote:
Paying out $200 for passing 'Go' is a time-dependent increase in money supply and highly correlated to economic growth, since players use the money to purchase properties and build houses and hotels. The reason the game works so well, is because the rules are compatible with reality. The players develop properties by putting houses on them, and if they don't develop properties and stay in hotels they cannot afford, they go bankrupt. If someone inflates the growth of money supply to e.g. $200,000 for passing 'Go', players have a reduced incentive to create wealth, because the differences between owning every property on the board with hotels on them, and being a hobo are zero, since the hobo gets a free ride and can afford the same lifestyle of living in a hotel roughly half the time (22/40 - statistical jail time), without worrying about repairs, paying taxes, etc. Lesson: High inflation creates the incentive to become a hobo. The economic illiteracy rate among socialists is not surprising - if they were literate, they wouldn't be socialists. |
||
|
|
|
|
|
#536 | |
|
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Obama Lays Out `Sweeping Overhaul' of Financial Oversight Following Crisis: President Barack Obama said his plan to refashion supervision of the U.S. financial system is needed to fix lapses in oversight and excessive risk taking that helped push the economy into a prolonged recession.
Quote:
1) Most of the "failure of the entire" system could have been prevented if longstanding common-sense regulatory frameworks, many forged in the wake of the market meltdown which led to the Great Depression (e.g. the Glass-Steagal Act, repealed on Clinton`s watch), had not been dismantled in a multi-decade orgy of ideologically-driven deregulatory frenzy, and if the remaining regulators (SEC, OTS, the Fed) had not been led by similar deregulatory laissez-faire ideologues like Greenspan at the Fed (a trend which reached its peak under W. Bush). The existing regulations would have worked just fine, had they actually been actively enforced. 2) The Fed is absolutely the last institution which should be given even *more* power in this area. It was the Fed (mostly the Greenspan-led one, but Bernanke was a longtime loyal acolyte of the Greenspan Dogma) which caused one speculative asset bubble after another - each one bigger and more potentially ruinous that the last - to be blown in the past 2 decades, and which did everything in its power to encourage excessive borrowing-driven economic "growth", reckless and unsustainable lending practices, and the replacement of large sectors of what used to be an actual productive economy with the Ponzi-finance FIRE economy (finance, insurance, real estate). But (2) is perfectly in accord with Mish Shedlock`s Fed Uncertainty Principle, corollary 2: "The government/quasi-government body most responsible for creating this mess (the Fed), will attempt a big power grab, purportedly to fix whatever problems it creates. The bigger the mess it creates, the more power it will attempt to grab. Over time this leads to dangerously concentrated power into the hands of those who have already proven they do not know what they are doing." Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2009-06-17 at 20:49 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
#537 | ||
|
∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Karl Denninger has an update on the saga of the Bearer Bonds which raises more questions that it answers. U.S. Treasury officials say "fake", but confirm there is a whole lot more of genuine BBs still out there than had been previously admitted. Question of why someone would eve attempt to forge a $500M bearer bond remains open. According to KD's sources, the 2 Japanese nationals have been released, which if true is even more bizarre, because (if we take the Treasury folks` words as truth, which I am not ready to do at this point due to the weirdness of the whole thing) this would be by far the biggest counterfeiting attempt in history.
The whole affair is bizarre beyond words... Barry Ritholtz has some major problems with the Obama proposal for financial-sector regulatory reform - I give only the headline items he discusses in detail: Quote:
Quote:
Code:
War / Years of War Spending Total Military Cost of War Cost % of GDP (Peak Year)
Current Year$ Constant FY2008$ Year War Total Defense
------------------------------------ -------------------------------- --------------------
American Revolution 1775-1783 101 million 1.83 billion NA NA
War of 1812 1812-1815 90 million 1.18 billion 1813: 2.2% 2.7%
Mexican War 1846-1849 71 million 1.80 billion 1847: 1.4% 1.9%
Civil War: Union 1861-1865 3183 million 45.20 billion 1865:11.3% 11.7%
Civil War: Confederacy 1861-1865 1000 million 15.24 billion NA NA
Spanish American War 1898-1899 283 million 6.85 billion 1899: 1.1% 1.5%
World War I 1917-1921 20 billion 253 billion 1919:13.6% 14.1%
World War II 1941-1945 296 billion 4114 billion 1945;35.8% 37.5%
Korea 1950-1953 30 billion 320 billion 1952: 4.2% 13.2%
Vietnam 1965-1975 111 billion 686 billion 1968: 2.3% 9.5%
Persian Gulf War 1990-1991 61 billion 96 billion 1991: 0.3% 4.6%
Iraq 2003-Present 616 billion 648 billion 2008: 1.0% 4.2%
Afghanistan/GWOT 2001-Present 159 billion 171 billion 2007: 0.3% 4.0
Post-9/11 Domestic Security 2001-Present 28 billion 33 billion 2003: 0.1% 3.7%
Last fiddled with by ewmayer on 2009-06-18 at 20:59 Reason: Whoops - the alternating between million/billion in the original data caused me to drastically overestimate Civil War costs. |
||
|
|
|
|
|
#538 | ||
|
"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
11110000011002 Posts |
Quote:
The case is "TOO BIG TO PROSECUTE". Quote:
Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2009-06-18 at 22:06 |
||
|
|
|
|
|
#539 |
|
Jul 2007
Tennessee
60810 Posts |
The bearer bonds were counterfeit, the Japanese nationals are innocent, and the stars are aligned for prosperity.
Move along. There's nothing to see here. Move along. |
|
|
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| k*2^n-1 Primes in 2009 | Kosmaj | Riesel Prime Search | 3 | 2011-01-05 04:26 |
| your 2009-2010 holiday plans | ixfd64 | Lounge | 2 | 2009-12-23 02:40 |
| INTEGERS Conference 2009 | Dougy | Math | 2 | 2009-09-16 21:34 |
| PRP (LLR) 2009 Status | Joe O | Prime Sierpinski Project | 0 | 2009-08-15 14:23 |
| Happy New Year 2009! | 10metreh | Lounge | 7 | 2009-01-01 08:21 |