Are you Rapture Ready?
Call me crazy, but lack of regulation combined with human greed can never lead to good things. I can't remember who said this but it struck me as rather wise, "Self-regulation is to regulation what self-importance is to importance."Money market accounts breaking the buck is frightening indeed because no one, but no one, ever considered them "risky" investments. The sub-prime fiasco from my Canadian vantage point seems like the predictable result of the greedy (financial institutions and/or mortgage brokers) hoodwinking the naive, foolhardy or just plain dumb into buying property they simply could not afford.
I find it incredible that he would use language like that while asking taxpayers to send a trillion dollars to Wall Street because investment banks made irresponsible investments and aren't able to live up to their obligations.In any loan transaction there are at least two parties. If I give my unemployed and uneducated brother-in-law a half a million dollar loan wouldn't I be just as irresponsible giving it as he is taking it? Moreover, a large majority of borrowers did not have financial training to be able to understand complex mortgage terms and risks of the underlying investments. Investment banks have armies of Ph Ds working for them that helps them analyze market risks and credit exposure. They got it wrong too! It strikes me as strange that unsophisticated borrowers are being held to much higher standard than ultra-sophisticated bankers.
The New York Times reports this evening that "foreign banks, which were initially excluded from the [Wall Street bailout] plan, lobbied successfully over the weekend to be able to sell the toxic American mortgage debt owned by their American units to the Treasury, getting the same treatment as United States banks."The Times further reports that two of the biggest foreign banks in need of such relief are Barclays and UBS. In fact, my understanding is that UBS is more on the line here than any other foreign bank.Let's add this up.John McCain's top economics advisor, who is widely believed to be his choice for Treasury Secretary, should he win in November, is former Sen. Phil Gramm. (Indeed, just last night his spokesman refused to say Gramm wouldn't be McCain's choice for Treasury Secretary.)Gramm is both vice chairman of UBS's US division and a lobbyist for UBS.If UBS successfully lobbied over the weekend to get in on the bailout, what was Gramm's role in the lobbying?
I would however also like to see better financial education in schools, aimed at the average person about how finances, mortgages, credit and so on actually works. I am continually amazed at the lack of understanding of these issues (interest structure in an amortized mortgage is but one example) on the part of folks who are unable to understand the financial agreements that they enter. Most people have no ability to understand the basics so the bamboozling is all too easy.
I would however also like to see better financial education in schools, aimed at the average person about how finances, mortgages, credit and so on actually works. I am continually amazed at the lack of understanding of these issues (interest structure in an amortized mortgage is but one example) on the part of folks who are unable to understand the financial agreements that they enter. Most people have no ability to understand the basics so the bamboozling is all too easy.If I am unable to understand how something really works, I am not going to sign on for it. Period. Having said that, dumb is one thing, irresponsible, greedy and misleading is another and the penalty for each ought to be quite different.
My boss said that even though Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were in trouble - the guys in charge got million++ bonuses this year anyway.
Quote from: monrein on September 22, 2008, 04:48:12 AMI would however also like to see better financial education in schools, aimed at the average person about how finances, mortgages, credit and so on actually works. I am continually amazed at the lack of understanding of these issues (interest structure in an amortized mortgage is but one example) on the part of folks who are unable to understand the financial agreements that they enter. Most people have no ability to understand the basics so the bamboozling is all too easy.If I am unable to understand how something really works, I am not going to sign on for it. Period. Having said that, dumb is one thing, irresponsible, greedy and misleading is another and the penalty for each ought to be quite different.Monrein, have you ever considered that most people aren't rich here in the USA? When they finally are able to build up a credit line, having never really had money, it turns into a spending spree, and the credit companys just keep sending credit cards, on and on. I am not condemning the Rich, its just that they, having been born with a silver spoon, never had to worry much about what they bought, or how much things cost.
JP, what makes you think I'm talking about the rich?
In fact, some of the most basic details, including the $700 billion figure Treasury would use to buy up bad debt, are fuzzy."It's not based on any particular data point," a Treasury spokeswoman told Forbes.com Tuesday. "We just wanted to choose a really large number."