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Posts Tagged ‘rescue’

Revisionism Anyone?

November 20th, 2009

Yesterday (11/19/09) on Capital Hill, Rep. Kevin Brady R-Texas got into a little a little “tiff” with Timothy Geithner (Treasury Secretary) during a Joint Economic Committee hearing.

It seems that Rep. Brady rankled Mr. Geithner a bit by insisting that he resign, blaming him for rising unemployment, growing federal deficits and accounting flaws in the number of stimulus jobs created, among other economic problems.

All of the articles that I’ve read about the exchange focused on how unusually forceful Mr. Geithner was and how hot the debate ended up getting. Included in most articles is this statement by Mr. Geithner:

“The economy fell into the worst crisis in generations after almost a decade — certainly, eight years — of basic neglect of basic public goods, in health care, in education, in public infrastructure, in how we use energy.”

Whaaaaaat?  I thought it was a credit crunch, lax regulation, an irresponsible banking system colluding with atimmy hurtsn irresponsible public piling on debt they couldn’t afford to buy things they didn’t need. Since when was the current economic crisis caused by not addressing health care? Or education? Or how we use energy?  That’s pretty far out there… even for you Tim.

Seriously, Timmy… If this is what you believe caused the economic crisis, then maybe you should step down. That kind of a statement is either simple felony stupid or reckless historical revisionism to get political points.

The Basis of My Angst

July 17th, 2009

This is fairly succint and seems to sum up pretty well what my big-picture concerns are about not just the economy, but society… at present. (I am an optimist/realist.)

“You cannot legislate the poor into freedom by legislating the wealthy out of freedom. What one person receives without working for, another person must work for without receiving. The government cannot give to anybody anything that the government does not first take from somebody else. When half of the people get the idea that they do not have to work because the other half is going to take care of them, and when the other half gets the idea that it does no good to work because somebody else is going to get what they work for, that my dear friend, is about the end of any nation. You cannot multiply wealth by dividing it.”

Dr. Adrian Rogers, 1931

Yes We Can!

February 25th, 2009

In the last two paragraphs of my last post, I chastised “The Great Orator” (BHO) for being so down in the dumps and putting forth what I feel was an excessively pessimistic view as a part of an agenda to get his stimulus package passed.

This past weekend I was sitting with my Grandson, eating Cocoa Puffs together on the sofa and watching on the boob tube the Yes We Can!kinds of stuff that appeals to your average five year old…. and that’s when I heard it… that fimiliar refrain… “Yes We Can”

That’s where BHO got it! That’s where he got it all, the chant and the building stuff about putting the American people back to work in construction jobs! This has to be the genesis, the root, the seed of the Great Economic Recovery and Ego Act: “Yes We Can!”

On a serious note: I was, in fact, a little less distraught at last night’s speech. It seemed more hopeful and “Rooseveltian” now that he’s gotten the package passed. I think the hopeful message that he put out there is a bit of the salve that Americans need at the moment.

As usual, I just wasn’t finding much substance to the whole thing. The FDR flashback is a very popular faddish image at the moment for “pseudo-economists” to grab a hold of, but the problem is that most serious students of economic history concede that FDR’s plan didn’t really work.

The market’s action since early January when the plan started to come to light seems to be saying that BHO’s plan may not work any better. Back in Roosevelt’s day, the whole world at war finally snapped us out of it. Although it worked, nobody wants that kind of a stimulus plan.

Enough Already!

February 17th, 2009

OK… The world is not coming to an end already…. Yes, we have problems… Yes, they are serious… and yes, they will take years (probably many) to resolve.

We have some massive deleveraging as a country and as individuals to work through. Deleveraging is painful, whether you are a nation or a household. As we pay down debt (individually and collectively), those funds have to come from somewhere… Maybe they come from curtailing our spending, maybe we curtail our investing and saving.

If you can think about what you would do personally if you find yourself having to “de-lever”, then you know exactly what is happening with our economy. You know why spending has evaporated, why no one is buying cars, or houses, or Rolexes right now.

You see, it’s not just that credit has tightened up, it has. But, I think we have to recognize that the demand for credit has evaporated as well. It’s for this reason that I believe that simply making credit more available will not solve our problem… We all have to de-lever… pay off debt, pay down mortgages, get off the credit cards, etc.

It doesn’t matter whether you personally find yourself in the position where you must de-lever. If you don’t, your neighbor probably does and the country definitely does… and this is what matters: There’s A LOT of it that is going on.

The solution? Time. Time for Americans to do what they’ve always done: Get up in the morning, work hard and pay our bills. We will take the kids to school and soccer practice and buy a house or a car if we need it.

And we’ll do this all the while and over and over and over until the problem solves itself. It will solve itself because it will all be done with a new attitude, one of frugality and a new conciousness of the difference between a WANT and a NEED.

Maybe we can learn the lessons that our ancestors learned during the Great Depression without having to plumb the same depths of despair.selling-pencils

Frankly, what we don’t need right now is the excessive hand-wringing and scare-tactic speeches that our President has been making as a ploy to get his package passed. And we don’t need the media hype and horror stories thrown at us every single day. We get it… the economy sucks.

What we do need to do is to stop, take a deep breath, relax and to look around. Most Americans are working, have good jobs and are not in trouble with their mortgages. Most Americans are already doing what needs to be done to get us out of this thing. We’re a lot more resilient and creative than ‘they’ think we are!

‘Memmer Last Septemmer?

February 10th, 2009

A couple of months before I started writing blog entries, I “looked into the abyss” on my own personal trading screens here at the office.  It was mid-September or so, right after the Fed let Lehman fail and before the significance of what just happened was really felt by anyone but a few… yet.

Early the morning of the 15th of September as I look at my screens, I’m thinking that I’m seeing a “blip”… you know, a data error, an internet outage, the ghost in the machine… whatever.

Specifically, what’s confusing is that the couple of trust preferreds that I follow (like bonds, but traded on exchanges in $25 hunks rather than the off-Broadway $1000 chunks that a regular bond trades), traded at around $15.00 or so a minute ago and now many of them are now being “bid” at an odd $.50 or so. For a few minutes, I thought the system totally freaked. After a while the 50 cent bids finally were replaced by 3 to 5 dollar bids… then up to about 7 to 8 bucks… finally settling in at about two-thirds of what was bid the day before.

Of course today, I now know it wasn’t the ghost in the machine… it was the abyss. I had looked “over the edge”. I had seen the financial “white light”.

And apparently Hank had seen it too. He met with Congress, made the talk show rounds (white as a ghost, btw) and said SOMETHING to Congress and they gave him the money. So, what was the SOMETHING that scared him so badly?

OK, so thanks to Representative Kanjorski of Pennsylvania (maybe he was talking out of school??), we’ve got a pretty decent idea what happened that day. He says that…

“On Thursday, September 15, 2008 at roughly 11 a.m., the Federal Reserve noticed a tremendous draw-down of  money market accounts in the USA to the tune of $550 Billion dollars in a matter of an hour or two. Money was being removed electronically.

The treasury tried to help with $150 billion. But could not stem the tide. It was an electronic run on the banks The Treasury intervened, but, had they not closed down the accounts, they estimated that by 2 p.m. that afternoon. Within 3 hours. $5.5 trillion would have been withdrawn and collapsed within 24 hours the world economy.”

Watch the video, his explanation starts at about 2 minutes and 20 seconds into it. I also double-checked some additional congressional testimony tapes where Rep. Kanjorski questions Mr. Paulson about this very thing because I didn’t want to foist some “conspiracy theory” crap off on my loyal readers. In the tapes, Mr. Paulson does not deny what happened.

[[He also mentions that there was only the 'lone gunman' and there was no alien autopsy.... Sorry gang.]]

Now we know.

House Approves Auto Industry Rescue Plan

December 10th, 2008

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