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#221 |
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(loop (#_fork))
Feb 2006
Cambridge, England
23×11×73 Posts |
Who in the five heavens would buy bonds backed by student loans in the first place, and who in the eleven hells would attempt to sell the accursed things? Are there any positive aspects to attaching all the fun of speculative leveraged investment to education in the way that it's been attached to housing, so that the price of a university place goes up to the maximum that an optimist can at the time attempt to afford in annual interest on the cheapest loan available?
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#222 | |
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Nov 2003
22×5×373 Posts |
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I have a 54 mile drive to get to/from work. I live in Boston suburbs and there is no public transit to get me to work. It costs me about $55/week in gasoline costs just to commute to work. And I don't drive an SUV. The U.S. is a LOT bigger than England. We are more spread out. |
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#223 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
Quote:
Barely surviving on credit cards: No longer able to turn their homes for cash, Americans are increasingly using plastic to meet their basic living expenses. But many can't afford to pay the bills. Like I said, an economy built on the dual rotten fundamentals of growth-via-ever-increasing-debt and perpetually low fuel prices can't shift to a more rational sustainable model overnight. Disclosure: I live within 10 miles of work [not for lack of offers involving much-longer commutes] and take public transit to work. But 50-mile-or-more daily commutes are the norm here in the SF Bay area, and 100 or more miles a day is not at all unusual. And based on bus ridership, folks like me appear to be the exception. |
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#224 |
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Bamboozled!
"𒉺𒌌𒇷𒆷𒀭"
May 2003
Down not across
2A2116 Posts |
Are you sure about that?
Where I live, there's about 2 buses a day, neither of which travel at time suitable for commuting. Consequently, I commute by motorbike each day. Cambridge (UK) has traffic levels comparable with Cambridge (Mass.) as far as I can tell (having experienced both cities) but has poorer roads and much poorer parking provision. Riding a bike allows me to bypass the traffic jams and to park pretty much anywhere I want. Anyway, Cambridge/Boston (Mass.) has the T, which I've used on a number of occasions. Cambridge (UK) has no such equivalent. I've no idea how the bus provision compares between the two Cambridges, having never tried to use the Mass. bus service. Paul Last fiddled with by xilman on 2008-05-09 at 21:25 Reason: Adde para about the T. |
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#225 | |
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Bamboozled!
"𒉺𒌌𒇷𒆷𒀭"
May 2003
Down not across
250418 Posts |
Quote:
The bus provision is completely useless for commuting purposes (as noted in my reply to Bob's post) and although I could drive 2 miles to the nearest bus stop (the Trumpington Park and Ride if anyone's sufficiently interested) there doesn't seem much point. Consequently, I commute by motor bike directly to where I work. Disclosure: I ride a gas-guzzler which does 45-55mpg (Imperial gallon, of course) depending on riding conditions. It's a Honda 1100cc Pan-European which I usually describe as being a touring machine. You'd be shocked at how many well-educated people fail to spot that one. Paul Last fiddled with by xilman on 2008-05-09 at 21:17 Reason: Fix speeling misteak |
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#226 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
U.S. Economy: Trade Deficit Narrows as Imports Fall
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#227 | |
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Aug 2002
Termonfeckin, IE
1010110011002 Posts |
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#228 | ||||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
170148 Posts |
Ernst,
This afternoon's All Things Considered (NPR) has an interesting piece titled "Global Pool of Money Got Too Hungry" explaining something I'd been wondering about: Just what started the chain of events that led to our current subprime crisis? There wasn't anything in the NPR account that I hadn't heard before (or wasn't posted in this thread!) except for one factor. It's not especially profound, but I hadn't seen it connected with the other facts before, and to me it completes the connection I'd been seeking. (My own conclusion, not part of the NPR broadcast: It could be said that the current subprime crisis is an unintended consequence of the successful extension of free-market principles into China and other developing countries ... or, if one prefers, an unintended consequence of the end of the Cold War and fall of communism.) Scanning back through this thread, I find that something you posted last December 18, #36 in this thread, has most of the facts (except that one factor) scattered through an article whose main emphasis (justifiable negativity about Alan Greenspan) was elsewhere. Quote:
Quote:
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One of your rare strawmen, Ernst. Tsk, tsk. That's getting off my subject, but there is a reason I mention this: "a global surplus in savings that drove down interest rates and pushed up housing prices in countries around the world." That part is real. The "global pool of money" to which the NPR story refers, or the "global surplus in savings" as it is termed in the NYT article, largely comes from the collective savings by the newly-wealthy citizens of all those recently-surging economies in China, India, Brazil, Russia, and so on. It was about $35 trillion in 2000, but by 2006 had doubled to $70 trillion. (For comparison, the total money spent by every person, business and government in the world in a year is less than $70 trillion, according to NPR.) So, during the past few years there was an enormous amount of money looking for safe places to be invested. Here's the connection I hadn't seen before: To the global investors, one of the best places, safe with high return, was the U.S. housing market -- not buying the houses, but investing in the mortgages. But there weren't enough U.S. mortgages available for that enormous amount of money. Answer: create (or greatly enlarge) a new category of U.S. mortgage: subprime. Thus began the tumble, fueled, as usual, by greed. Quote:
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Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2008-05-09 at 23:33 |
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#229 |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19·613 Posts |
Good call, cheesehead - I was so busy ragging on Greenspan that I sloppily substituted U.S. savings rates [negative] with global ones. Greenspan was right about the glut in global savings and that money having to go somewhere, but was disingenuous in that fact in and of itself having anything to do with the U.S. housing bubble. As you point out, without insanely easy credit and lax lending policies here in the U.S. [both direct results of Greenspan's policies of low interest and laissez faire lending oversight at the Fed] there never would have been a rapidly ballooning pool of [supposedly] high-yielding mortgage-backed bonds to attract all that foreign money.
Which leads me to wonder 2 things: 1) To what extent was that global savings glut responsible for the earlier bubble in U.S. technology and dotcom stocks in the late 90s and 2000? 2) If Greenspan hadn't in essence blown a second bubble [housing] in the wake of the collapse of the first [dotcom], would that foreign money have started chasing commodities [e.g. oil, gold, etc] much sooner, i.e. might we have seen a runup in oil prices already in the early part of the decade? |
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#230 | ||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
Quote:
Note that the global money was looking for safe places to be invested. I can't recall whether the NPR piece specifically stated that, or whether "safe" was my own synthesis from what was said. Weren't there several currency collapses and other economic upheavals in Asia during the late 90s? That would have led investors (especially Asia) to be looking for more safety as time went on. So it would be the supply of safe investment avenues that was insufficient, and the U.S. housing market was viewed, from overseas, as relatively safe compared to what was happening over there. So, it may be that the global savings glut (GSG), AKA global pool of money (GPoM), was not especially interested in the U.S. stock market because it was not viewed as safe enough, despite having (AFIAK, without checking) considerably higher capacity to absorb new money than the mortgage market had. Thus, I'm inclined to say the GSG/GPoM was not the principal player in the dotcom bubble (especially since the dotcoms would not have looked as safe as other stocks in general). Quote:
First, a background digression: As a former oil industry worker who thinks the Hubbert Peak theory is basically sound, I've been advising folks for years to prepare for a runup in oil price, telling them it wouldn't manifest itself as one single sudden dramatic event, but instead as a sucession of higher highs, separated by lows that show a long-term upward trend themselves. U.S. domestic oil production peaked in the early 1970s. That was the Hubbert Peak for U.S. domestic oil production -- such production has steadily declined since then. This would not have manifested itself as a dramatic event if it had not been for the additional influence of the 1973-74 Arab oil embargo, which crimped U.S. imports precisely at the time when they would otherwise have compensated for the decline in domestic production. It's true that U.S. oil demand was increasing throughout this period, but there was no sudden surge. If there had been no political factor like the Arab oil embargo to sharply alter the supply/demand balance, the U.S. would simply have imported more oil to meet demand as domestic production declined, without dramatic fluctuation. Now, with that background, my opinion: The global Hubbert Peak will be played out on a grander scale than the U.S. Hubbert Peak was. There will be multiple crises such as the recent runup in oil price. I don't know whether the GSG/GPoM is playing a major role in the current runup, or whether it would have played a role in your scenario. But there will be more oil crises in the future. Public opinion may attach a particular cause to each crisis (perhaps later blaming GSG/GPoM for the current one?), but only one will be the most fundamental cause -- that the oil is running out. Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2008-05-11 at 14:50 |
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#231 | |||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
República de California
19×613 Posts |
While I also buy the fundamental peak oil hypothesis, I disagree with the doomsayers - after all, there is plenty of oil still there which could be extracted, but can only be profitably extracted if oil prices stay above $100 or even more. I see a decades-long trend where oil production gradually falls [on the order of 1% a year], and prices continue to trend higher, though actually at a slower rate than the past few years. There may be some short-term speculative runups to close to $200 per barrel in the next year or two, but long-term, the reduction in demand that will result - and which we're already starting to see - will bring prices more back in line with supply/demand fundamentals. But no way do we see $50 a barrel again, unless the dollar magically triples its value relative to other world currencies. Will be especially interesting to see how this plays out in the red-hot "road warrior" economies like China - signs are [see e.g. article below] that it's really starting to bite there, because it's not so much fatassed citizens driving SUVs that need the oil as it is their entire industrialization paradigm.
Also, forgot to ask rhetorical question #3 last Friday: 3) To what extent is the "global savings glut" simply the U.S.' own long-term and massive trade imbalance coming back to the U.S. in the form of foreign investment? Now, on to today's news: Inflation Surges in China Quote:
Top Candidate for Government Housing Bailout Found Quote:
This script is sounding all-too familiar of late: MBIA Posts huge loss on credit derivatives: Stock surges nesrly 10%! Quote:
Interestingly, despite this horrendous 8-quarter losing streak, Moody's and S&P *still* have MBIA rated AAA - and we know how stingy they are with their coveted AAA ratings. [Sorry, no eye-roll emoticon can do justice here]. Now, if this follows the same script as Fannie Mae did last week, the stock will stay up most of the day as the big-money managers keep it propped up to give themselves a golden parachute and squeeze out a bunch of short sellers. Then, late today or starting tomorrow the big selloff will come, leaving the herd of "greater fools" buying this today holding the bag. |
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