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US Federal Reserve Data On Loans During Crisis Released

oDDmON oUT writes "Pursuant to a FOIA request, Bloomberg has acquired numbers from the Fed on loans made to banks and businesses during the financial crisis between 2007 and 2009. They also posted a direct link to the spreadsheets in zipped format and updated their data visualization of the lending."

173 comments

  1. first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    first bailout!!!

    1. Re:first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Must be a lot of good stuff in here since they released it on Christmas Eve.

  2. FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by JimCanuck · · Score: 1

    Someone forgot they don't work for the Government when they approved the release.

    1. Re:FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by zill · · Score: 4, Informative
      That debate was finished two years ago. Please don't start it again.

      It’s one thing to say that the Federal Reserve is an independent institution. It’s another thing to say that it can keep us all in the dark.

    2. Re:FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by swalve · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm pretty sure FOIA laws don't just apply to strictly governmental institutions.

    3. Re:FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by JimCanuck · · Score: 1

      Then that would be a violation of the 5th Amendment as it can lead people to discriminate themselves. After all companies are legally citizens now.

    4. Re:FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by superwiz · · Score: 2

      That's an interesting argument against government take over of all industries. If any industry is taken over (even partially) by the government, then FOIA allows anyone to request all paperwork produced by that industry. This destroys ALL privacy in EVERYTHING. I wonder if anyone has tried to use FOIA to subpoena all medical records of all Medicare patients. I also wonder if it would hold up.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    5. Re:FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Then that would be a violation of the 5th Amendment as it can lead people to discriminate themselves.

      Are you trying to say 'incriminate'? Do you bother to look up the meaning of those big words?

    6. Re:FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by mrchaotica · · Score: 2

      With regards to Medicare, I'd imagine (hope?) that HIPAA would trump FOIA.

      You raise an interesting point though; I wonder if this means we could get documents from GM?

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    7. Re:FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it would violate it if the FOIA request came from the Government, but otherwise they may have to comply with FOIA law with respect to requests from non-governmental entities.

    8. Re:FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by pcwhalen · · Score: 1

      With regards to Medicare, I'd imagine (hope?) that HIPAA would trump FOIA.

      The concept of "preemption" in the law is exactly that - where a state has a law and the federal government has a similar law, the fed loses to the state law [Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 US 64 1938 (certain rights are "reserved by the Constitution to the several States" and not preempted unless there is a specific Constitutional basis)].

      However, the Congress has the right under the Constitution to regulate interstate commerce [which is practically everything] so can enact laws that specifically preempt State and other laws Congress has created.

      HIPAA is a very strong privacy statute. Without reading the language of both you can't say for sure, but it's damn likely no one gets records protected under HIPAA from a FOIA request. Double damn sure.

      --
      Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain with all your metadata.
    9. Re:FOIA from the Federal Reserve? by pcwhalen · · Score: 1

      FOIA is the Freedom of Information Act first signed into law by LBJ in 1966. Various states have similar laws that allow requests of state gov't bodies as well. The Act only deals with non-Constitutionally enumerated bodies [courts, Congress and the President] and instead deals only with executive branch government agencies. There are lots, as Rick Perry can attest. ["Name 3!"]

      The statute is intended to be broad in scope, with documents only excluded from a request based on specifically enumerated causes: national defense secrets, trade secrets, etc. [all are in the statute here: http://1.usa.gov/aaLL5o ]

      "Sunlight is the best disinfectant” is a well-known quote from U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis. FOIA lets the sun shine in.

      --
      Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain with all your metadata.
  3. Verizon got a bailout! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Is Verizon a bank?

    1. Re:Verizon got a bailout! by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 1

      Is Verizon a bank?

      In a sense. With some of their overpriced services, they're certainly making bank.

  4. Open Sourcing Numbers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now all we need is Slash-commentators that actually understand what the numbers mean.

    1. Re:Open Sourcing Numbers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      good luck on that

    2. Re:Open Sourcing Numbers. by JustOK · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's very simple. When you see the number `4`, a pony is killed. A `7' means they are all out of red paint, come back Tuesday. A `2` means water fountain. And so on and so forth.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    3. Re:Open Sourcing Numbers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good luck with that. Hell, judging by the state the economy is in not even economists understand what the numbers mean.

    4. Re:Open Sourcing Numbers. by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      Finally! It's all so clear now...

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    5. Re:Open Sourcing Numbers. by Beeftopia · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This is an important point. One of the biggest economic phenomena in history, the US housing bubble, was not even acknowledged by prominent economists, government or private. They solemnly intoned such a thing didn't exist and all was well. Economics remains firmly a social science. A worthwhile field of study, but not subject to scientific rigor and generally not yielding testable hypotheses.

      Many say the massive stimulus (deficit spending) saved the world economy. It's an unfalsifiable assertion.

      The Economist magazine had a most interesting discussion on the similarities between the 1930s and today, with a discussion of the responses.

  5. Can someone please explain the outrage here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is this a big deal? They loaned money and likely got all of it back with interest. Sure it was a bit below market rate, but I'm honestly OK with that. Individuals often are wanting handouts, not loans. Even people underwater with a mortgage likely don't want a below market loan, they want a principal reduction. There is a lot of difference between a loan and a handout.

    1. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      explain please what they did with all the profits? let's take the case of one huge member bank, Bank of America.......

    2. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      from the article: "An October 2008 report by Daniel Thornton, a vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, said the primary credit rate, which is paid by most borrowers from the Fed’s discount window, had been “consistently lower” than the certificate of deposit and Eurodollar rates since March 2008."

    3. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by zill · · Score: 5, Informative

      In other words, they take these low interest loans and buy treasury notes with them. All the interest they earn from the Treasury Department ends up being their profit.

      This is nothing more than common theft really.

    4. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by fafaforza · · Score: 2

      A possible outrage would be a bank that got taxpayer money to survive, refusing to refinance or restructure said taxpayers' mortgages. That would be the least they could do, considering that by refusing, all they're doing is adding to foreclosed property inventory and keeping housing and the economy down, prolonging everyone's suffering.

    5. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm fine with emergency bailouts to prevent a genuine (read as, not bs rhetoric) depression. That's scary shit.

      But now I want those asshats to pay for what they did. And by "pay", I don't just mean pay off the loans and go on with business as usual. I mean they owe us. They sunk their companies. Game over. And we came to the rescue because it was "save their necks or we all go down".

    6. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      The Federal reserve banks are not-for-profit, quasi-government institutions. Any "profit" they generate (through fees, bonds, or interest) is transferred to the US Treasury department.

    7. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by lurgyman · · Score: 1

      Did you mean "ends up being revenue?" Since the banks were taking losses from mortgage defaults, many did not turn profits until the tail end of that period.

    8. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Fucking wrong.

    9. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think its time to bring up something a great man, Peter Drucker, once said. There are no such thing as profits, only the future costs of staying in business. In fact not only did he say that, but he also said that until companies start discussing their perceived "profit" in terms of future costs and future employment, public sentiment would grow. This book was written in the 1980's...look at whats going on now. Its in vogue to hate on big business and corporate America. Now I'm not defending the banks here, just pointing out something interesting I read the other day that was predicted 30 years ago and is happening to the T.

      By the way, Drucker also scorned the CEO's who take excessive bonuses and performance pay based on 'profit' that has not been adjusted to correctly reflect inflation/deflation and other future costs as embezzlers.

      Something to think about...After all the 'profit' a company accrues can/will/must be used to employ future generations to survive.

      This was, along with many other interesting things such as population demographics can be read in the book, Managing in Turbulent Times if you are interested.

    10. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true! The Federal Reserve is owned by member banks. They each hold shares based on how many branches they have in a given district, thus the profit from these Federal Reserve banks go to... the banks!

    11. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That in fact is how the TARP was 'paid off'. Huge stealth monetization of their debt through cheap but guaranteed tax payer funded government interest payments.

    12. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      After all the 'profit' a company accrues can/will/must be used to employ future generations to survive.

      Or it can be paid out to shareholders in the form of dividends. A stable company in an established market can continue to make a profit and pay it out to shareholders without needing to grow, until someone introduces a disruptive technology into that market.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    13. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by TheLink · · Score: 2

      IT IS A HANDOUT IF THE LOAN INTEREST RATES ARE BELOW MARKET RATES! Because you can just put the money somewhere which earns higher rates and then pay back the Feds and keep the difference. And they were below market rates despite what the Feds claim.

      If the Feds loaned me a million at 1.39% (apparently it was 1.39% in certain cases) with easy repayment terms, I'd turn around dump it somewhere relatively safe that gives me 3% (for example), wait the required time, collect the 3%, pay the Feds their 1.39%, and keep the rest. How is that not a handout? It may not be a 1 million dollar handout but it is a 16 kilobux handout. If they loaned me 1 trillion, it is a 16 billion dollar hand out.

      So the Feds basically created money to bailout the banks. You may argue that the trillions loaned out don't count since they didn't actually hit the rest of the world but instead eventually returned to the Feds. But the "free billions" from the loaned trillions do count, and thus there was net creation of money.

      And every time the Feds create US dollars they are actually taxing everyone in the world who holds (or is owed) net positive amounts of US dollars. Because those US dollars become worth less.

      What they did it is just a fancy way to create money to bail out cronies. Fancy enough to fool lots of people it seems.

      It may be slicker than what Robert Mugabe and friends did in Zimbabwe (print money directly), but it's basically the same thing.

      The difference between the USA and Zimbabwe is China[1], Japan, Saudi Arabia, and the rest of the world don't sell/buy oil/electronics/toys in Zimbabwe dollars and aren't owed an immense value of Zimbabwe dollars.

      So it is a big deal to those who actually understand what is going on and will be (and have been) affected.

      Remember in Zimbabwe when Mugabe printed those Zimbabwe dollars, he gave some to his cronies (who support him), and the rest of the country became poorer. When the Feds created those US dollars, did they give some to the US citizens? If they didn't then the US citizens should realize they are no longer considered cronies and may wish to reconsider their continued support of their "US Mugabe".

      [1] the US likes to complain about China manipulating China's currency, but when the US owes China trillions of US dollars and then creates trillions/billions of US dollars to bail out cronies, who is really screwing who?

      --
    14. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      you do know we're talking about Chase, JP Morgan, Bank of America, etc.

      You care to revise your BULLSHIT assertion?

    15. Re:Can someone please explain the outrage here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or the CEO can axe the research department, stave off that disruption another quarter, and have their hand-selected board give him a billion dollar bonus while every single shareholder votes "abstain".

  6. foreign banks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    IANAB, but I wonder why the US Federal Reserve is loaning money to foreign banks. SHouldn't that country's equivalent be insuring its solvency?

    1. Re:foreign banks? by Trepidity · · Score: 2

      Foreign banks with branches in the U.S. are treated as U.S. banks for some purposes, though they're no longer eligible for FDIC insurance (since 1991). Some more info here.

    2. Re:foreign banks? by zill · · Score: 2

      Seems like fourth largest bailout recipient, Royal Bank of Scotland Group received $64bn from the UK government as well. Must be nice to double-dip into the gravy boat.

    3. Re:foreign banks? by WindBourne · · Score: 2

      That really is amazing how many foreign banks AND CORPS got LOADS of money.

      I can understand why they did not want this information getting out.
      Royal Bank of Scotland
      UBS
      Deutsche Bank
      Barclays
      BNP
      etc. etc. etc.

      That is just amazing.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    4. Re:foreign banks? by Brett+Buck · · Score: 1

      Gee, I got pilloried just yesterday for pointing that out. I am sure that their argument would have been that if foreign banks fail it drags us down. But the reason it was kept secret until now was because of the extreme backlash. This is the ultimate "Friday Document Drop" - it will get lost in the Christmas slow news days.

          QE1 and 2 were as much about devaluing the dollar to permit this as they were about the states purposes.

    5. Re:foreign banks? by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      I think that banks pay into various insurance funds, so if the above banks did this just like American banks, then it would make little difference if they're "foreign". After all, any of these create lots of jobs in the US.

    6. Re:foreign banks? by pesho · · Score: 3, Interesting

      All these banks have very large US operations, and their branches in US are essentially US banks. What puzzles me is that our friendly makers of luxury sports cars from Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (aka BMW), for some reason got upwards of $4B. Admittedly they have a finance branch, but I thought the idea was to save a couple of critical banks not profitable car makers.

    7. Re:foreign banks? by ath1901 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      From a very general view, banks manage cash flows. There are in flows and out flows from both loans, deposits and various instruments. There is never a one to one match between the in flows and the out flows and there are gaps in both time and nominal amounts. The banks manage these gaps by keeping a liquidity buffer by borrowing and lending from/to each other. Banks make money by making sure their inflows are greater than their outflows. For example, a very simple way is to lend money with long maturity (high interest) and borrow money with short or no maturity (deposits, low interest).

      In a liquidity crisis like the one we had, the inter bank borrowing and lending stops dead because no one knows who's gonna go bust next. So, even if a bank has solid finances with 100 billion of loans maturing next month they may still go bust if a client wants to withdraw 50 bucks and they simply don't have the cash today. That's why the government stepped in, to provide liquidity when no one else dared to (it was one of the official reasons anyway).

      This is also why they lent money to foreign banks. They had obligations in dollars and couldn't get dollars any other way. I'm not an expert on this large scale banking stuff but I was quite surprised to see RBS as number 4 on that list.

    8. Re:foreign banks? by zill · · Score: 2

      They received bailouts for the same reason GM and Chrysler received bailouts. "too big to fail" isn't just limited to banks.

    9. Re:foreign banks? by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

      But why didn't they charge reasonable interest? If the banks just needed a few short term loans, they can get them. At 1000% interest let's say. If the bank is as solid as you say it can survive that. Sure a few bonuses might have to be cut but why should the taxpayers not profit?

    10. Re:foreign banks? by Arker · · Score: 1

      They could have gotten dollars many other ways. They just would have had to pay market rates for them.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    11. Re:foreign banks? by ath1901 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The politicians wanted to "calm down" the markets so things would get back to normal. The loans were not that short (1+ years as far as I remember) because they wanted to "show strong, long term support". Banks have rather long mismatches in their balance sheets (like 30 year house loans but no 30 year deposits) which usually isn't a problem as long as the flow of new loans/deposits is more or less predictable over time. If the government had provided only short loans, the market would not know how long the banks would survive since the gov't could change its mind any day. The government had to provide loans that were long and large enough to make the market believe the banks would survive the crisis.

      Also, many banks were in really deep shit. Asking for a large interest could have caused a couple more defaults and thus added to the mess. Yes, it was a donation to the financial industry but the fear of the alternative (a long and deep liquidity crisis) was real. The liquidity crisis was rather short lived though so that actually worked out well. We still have a crisis but not a liquidity crisis. The real crisis is about bad debts all over the world. That has not been resolved yet.

      This is based on what I remember from the news and discussions back then so it may require a grain of salt or two. I'm sorry for sounding like a politician/banker. I don't exactly buy all the crap above but I do understand some of the reasoning behind it.

    12. Re:foreign banks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I was working for an Icelandic bank at the time. All the lines were cut. We couldn't buy or sell anything to anyone. In some cases we could make deals but we had to send our money or instruments in advance. Our counterparties would not trust us that the money/instruments would arrive next day. It's as if your house is on fire but your neighbor won't lend you water because he's afraid your house will burn down.

      Turns out our counterparties were right not to trust us...

    13. Re:foreign banks? by adolf · · Score: 1

      But AFAICT, BMW didn't have any manufacturing in the United States. Just dealers, drivers, mechanics, and the folks that manage them from an ivory tower somewhere. They are not the domestic employment juggernaut that is GM or Chrysler.

      Would they be missed if they were gone? Sure. But then, so is Saab. *shrug*

      (Disclaimer: I drive a BMW. It's a perhaps a bit older than relevant in this discussion, but I've had most of it apart. Almost every part is proudly stamped with the name of some European country or other, except for a random electronic module for the HVAC which was made in the US. Even the fuses and many of the bolts can be traced to their European origin.)

    14. Re:foreign banks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Wrong. They have a massive factory in Greenville-Spartanburg South Carolina.

    15. Re:foreign banks? by Thing+1 · · Score: 1

      Yes, it was a donation to the financial industry [...]

      I long for the days when the government made donations to the technology industry...

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    16. Re:foreign banks? by adolf · · Score: 1

      Wrong. They have a massive factory in Greenville-Spartanburg South Carolina.

      Ah, so they do. Looks like it employs ~7,000 heads.

      I still don't know if that's $4,000,000,000.00 worth of "too big to fail," but it's at least substantial.

      Thanks, AC.

    17. Re:foreign banks? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      If they had failed, then one of the other motor companies would probably have been quite interested in buying that factory at a knock-down price and employing all of that experience labour...

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    18. Re:foreign banks? by cojsl · · Score: 1
      NYT financial columnists Andrew Ross Sorkin's book "To Big To Fail" documents events approx from Lehman Brothers' collapse to TARP.

      Chapter 20 details how CEOs of the "big 9" we summoned to an unexplained a meeting by Henry Paulson and told by Treasury that they would all be participating in TARP, and how much each would receive: "Bank of America: $25 billion; Citigroup: $25 billion; Goldman Sachs: $10 billion; JP Morgan: $25 billion; Morgan Stanley: $10 billion; State Street: $10 billion, Wells Fargo: $25 billion." (the book omits who the last two banks were and how much they were to receive) When Wells Fargo CEO Dick Kovacevich objected, Henry Paulson to him "Your regulator is sitting right there" "And you are going to get a call tomorrow morning telling you you're undercapitalized and that you won't be able to raise money in the private markets".

      Other points of interest in the book- The picture of the $9 billion check Mitsubishi used to invest in Morgan Stanley

      Personally, I enjoyed Michael Lewis' "The Big Short" much more.

    19. Re:foreign banks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was talk about foreign nations suing or otherwise addressing US institutions for financial fraud. Maybe the BMW "loan" was to counter that threat to some extent.

  7. Re:prevented collapse? by shentino · · Score: 2, Informative

    We don't need our deposits protected.

    The FDIC already had that covered and actually makes banks LESS in need of protection, since their most important creditors, the american people who have deposits with them, can't get shafted if the bank goes bankrupt.

    Just let the banks fail already. Having the FDIC cover deposits is all the bailout we need.

  8. How many prosectutions ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    please remind me how many prosecutions there have been for the great heist carried out by these crooks at the banks ?

  9. Bullshit detector honks! by Kludge · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Individuals often are wanting handouts, not loans.

    Honk! bullshit! I'm an individual. I'd go for a no interest loan any time. Are you offering?

    There is a lot of difference between a loan and a handout.

    Honk! bullshit! The difference is in name only. They both save you money.

    The only difference between the banks and individuals is that rich powerful people run the banks, so they got the freebie loans.

    1. Re:Bullshit detector honks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. That incessant honking really is irritating. It's like you had something important to say and then made _sure_ no one would pay attention to you by prefacing it with a stupid noise. The only thing more pathetic was your inane attempt at political discourse.

      I'd suggest you either get it checked out by a professional or commit suicide, preferably both.

    2. Re:Bullshit detector honks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      y u no like honkers? honkers good. honkers honk. who would honk if honkers didn't honk? especially now, during honknika

    3. Re:Bullshit detector honks! by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Honk honk *quaaaaaack*

    4. Re:Bullshit detector honks! by Raenex · · Score: 1

      Honk!

      What are you, 8 years old?

  10. Freddie and Fannie losses much more... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...than the banks. Looks like only about $100 billion not paid back by banks, but the two government sponsored organizations are expected to have losses approaching $300 billion. SEC is now suing the former CEO's for fraud.

    1. Re:Freddie and Fannie losses much more... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So why are they not going to jail? Suing an individual that isn't Bill Gates or other billionaire sounds pointless at best. This is how the system buries the problem: "Look what we did to those criminals" when the criminals that caused the issue in the first place was Congress, the SEC, Bill Clinton's administration and every president after him including the current clod in the White House.

    2. Re:Freddie and Fannie losses much more... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      ...than the banks. Looks like only about $100 billion not paid back by banks

      Uh, no. The banks have borrowed 16 trillion , and haven't come close to paying it back. Despite getting their loans at 0% interest while continuing to charge their customers usurious interest rates (i.e., the same taxpayers that are bailing them out) or just buying Treasury Bonds.

      Man, I wish I could borrow money from the government at 0% interest, only to borrow that money back to the government and receive interest in return.

    3. Re:Freddie and Fannie losses much more... by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      You don't "borrow back," it is called loaning.

    4. Re:Freddie and Fannie losses much more... by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      It's called being willfully obtuse. Here, I'll make you a deal: you lend or borrow - use whatever term your heart desires - a million dollars to me, interest free.

      Then, I lend/borrow - again, whatever term your retentive heart desires - half of that money back to you, at 3% interest. Sound like a good deal to you?

    5. Re:Freddie and Fannie losses much more... by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      "derp" does not correct your statement, no.

  11. Bloomberg by dokebi · · Score: 5, Informative

    After this and other "bombshell" revelations by Bloomberg this year, they are apparently the only financial news organization worth its salt in the US. Kudos to them, and shame on everyone else (WSJ, FT, Economist, etc etc).

    --
    In Soviet Russia, articles before post read *you*!
    1. Re:Bloomberg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WSJ has always been obviously politically motivated in a very direct way while the Economist has favored spreading a sort of fud by promoting the positivist arguments to convince people that the economic empiricists are right that correlations do in fact imply causation. They start from the false premise that the social sciences can be studied like natural sciences(completely ignorant of the nature of the scientific methodology and its limitations and requirements) so as to justify all the positivist schools of economic thought, like the Neo-classical, Keynesian and Chicago schools. While most financial news does this, the Economist takes a special pleasure in picking whatever conclusion it wants and finding some data to fit to it somehow, causal or not. Even if the conclusions of a particular article are true, they make the argument using invalid reasoning.

  12. Re:prevented collapse? by Subratik · · Score: 5, Informative

    We don't need our deposits protected.

    The FDIC already had that covered and actually makes banks LESS in need of protection, since their most important creditors, the american people who have deposits with them, can't get shafted if the bank goes bankrupt.

    Just let the banks fail already. Having the FDIC cover deposits is all the bailout we need.

    I like how this got promoted to level 5 even though anyone who has taken a brief course in remedial business knows that the FDIC does NOT guarantee insurance on all funds, and for those funds, it is only insured up to 100,000$.

    Have fun getting only 100k or less of your retirement account back :)

    GG, better start reading other blogs

  13. Re:prevented collapse? by symbolset · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Your deposits are perfectly safe because they don't really exist. They could burn your dollars on deposit and print you new ones on withdrawal. To you it's precious acquired wealth - tokens representing the sweat of your brow, the profits of careful negotiation. To them, it's just not.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  14. This is pretty interesting if sorted by industy by Sollord · · Score: 1

    While all the banks on the list were in the crapper and unable to lend cash lots of major companies borrowed from the Fed I see BMW Toyota and Ford on the list along with GE and Caterpillar Verizon and even McDonald's this sort of implies things would of been a lot worse if these companies were unable to secure funds though other means though it is odd that Korea as in the country is on the list though its for a small amount. Ford seems to of borrowed money from the Fed for there credit arm Ford Motor Credit which is not the same as the bailout to GM and Chrysler but more likely used to allow them to finance auto loans for customers and it was paid back 100% in under a year

  15. Re:prevented collapse? by larry+bagina · · Score: 5, Informative

    The FDIC limit was bumped to $250,000 in 2008. SIPC insures $500,000 of security investments.

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  16. Re:prevented collapse? by flatulus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The magnitude of the losses would have been such that the FDIC fund would have been sucked dry in a heartbeat. Then it would be up to the U.S. Government to make up the shortfall, piling the new government debt on to the national debt pile. Haven't we been doing enough to "pile on" already?

    Also, there's a lot of "interconnected-ness" in the banking industry. If one large bank fails, it will drag another handful with it. They will drag others with them, etc. Only "smallish" banks can fail and have the system absorb the impact without massive "domino effect" collapse. "Too big to fail" is a sobering thought...

  17. Re:prevented collapse? by Mitreya · · Score: 1
    Have fun getting only 100k or less of your retirement account back :)

    Retirement accounts were not protected by FDIC insurance, since they are invested in various mutual funds and such. Most people have lost a significant fraction of their 401k despite any bailouts. Unlike financial sector salaries, I don't think 401K accounts have rebounded much, either.

  18. To Anyone Who Wants Information by exitcode0 · · Score: 3, Informative
  19. Re:prevented collapse? by Subratik · · Score: 1

    Have fun getting only 100k or less of your retirement account back :)

    Retirement accounts were not protected by FDIC insurance, since they are invested in various mutual funds and such. Most people have lost a significant fraction of their 401k despite any bailouts. Unlike financial sector salaries, I don't think 401K accounts have rebounded much, either.

    http://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2006/pr06029.html

    try again.

  20. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    1) The fact that someone's retirement is all in one basket is bad financial planning, and I'm fine with them failing. Everyone who does serious investing should know what the FDIC insurance covers and plan accordingly.

    2) A lot of people's retirement is actually in the stock market, bonds, or assets that wouldn't be impacted if their specific bank happened to fail.

  21. Re:prevented collapse? by taxman_10m · · Score: 1

    Assuming the FDIC doesn't go bankrupt, how long can a person expect to wait for their funds to be returned to them? How long can any of you be without your savings?

  22. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the link is what you meant then you need to read this yourself. $250,000 isn't much by today's standards for those that have saved for 30 or more years to a 401K as a replacement for a defined type of retirement account. It's a paltry sum in most cases (even though it's more than I've saved).

  23. misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

    It calls the money which FED lent "public money." But it wasn't money lent out of the US Treasury. It was money lent by the FED itself. The fact that the loans were branded as "emergency" just made them shorter term and lower interest loans (shorter term loans would always have to be lower interest). FED's main reason for operation is to be the underwriter of all banking. It lends money to banks which then re-lend it in smaller denominations. I am still not seeing why there is this large scale attempt to create an impression that this was tax-payer money which was lent. It was money lent out of FED's reserves. One could argue that those reserves are in-name only. But that's an argument against all the loans that FED makes rather than just these specific loans.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    1. Re:misleading article by Arker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The thing is, the Constitution delegated to Congress the rights to "coin money" for a reason. They have interpreted that instead as a right to delegate the right to print currency, and delegated said right to the Federal Reserve so they dont have to waste time actually doing their jobs. And every time the Fed turns on the printing press, by diluting the pool of currency, it's the same effect as milling coins or flat-out counterfeiting really - it's a hidden, involuntary tax. We all pay the bill through inflation and reduction in value of our savings and retirement. That makes it the people's money just the same if it were revenue taxed openly.

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    2. Re:misleading article by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Look, the Congress is the only entity endowed with the power to coin money. The fact that they have somehow transferred this power to private interests doesn't magically make it "private money". It's public money that is controlled by private banks.

      The FED doesn't have "reserves". They have a printing press. They use it to devalue the currency and to buy government bonds. And it's ultimately funded by savers and taxpayers.

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    3. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Isn't the "inflation tax" lower than any flat tax that's ever been proposed?

    4. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Isn't there a high demand for dollars? So isn't creating more just decreasing the artificial scarcity?

    5. Re:misleading article by Arker · · Score: 1

      Isn't there a high demand for dollars? So isn't creating more just decreasing the artificial scarcity?

      Which is a problem because we are talking about "currency" - something with no value at all outside of that artificial scarcity.

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    6. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      I addressed that point. What you are saying is an argument against FED being the underwriter of ALL borrowing. It's NOT an argument against these specific loans. My point is that this is being heralded as something out of the ordinary that FED did, but, in fact, it was FED doing what FED does. Whether or not FED should be the entity which is responsible for the levels of issued currency is a DIFFERENT argument.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    7. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      I have to reply to this with the same response I just gave below:

      "I addressed that point. What you are saying is an argument against FED being the underwriter of ALL borrowing. It's NOT an argument against these specific loans. My point is that this is being heralded as something out of the ordinary that FED did, but, in fact, it was FED doing what FED does. Whether or not FED should be the entity which is responsible for the levels of issued currency is a DIFFERENT argument.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    8. Re:misleading article by rohan972 · · Score: 2

      Isn't the "inflation tax" lower than any flat tax that's ever been proposed?

      Well if we had just an "inflation tax" perhaps that would be relevant, but it just gets piled on top of all the other taxes. As I see it, it isn't the level of taxation from inflation that is the problem, it's that it taxes savings. It is one more thing creating an environment hostile to wise personal financial decision making.

    9. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      Well, the money which would be issued by Congress wouldn't be "public money", either. It would be "issued money". And since you don't actually expect the Congressmen to operate minting presses, I expect they have to delegate that job one way or another.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    10. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      Well if we had just an "inflation tax" perhaps that would be relevant, but it just gets piled on top of all the other taxes.

      Actually, it would be much, much worse. At least today we have a notion of taxes so we have a language in place to discuss the effect of inflation. If inflation was the only tax, it would grow much faster (all corruption begins with nepotism because no one can deny their family and family also has family). It would be a rapid expansion of cronyism. In fact, once it is allowed to take foot hold, it would be all pervasive within a generation.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    11. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      The value is psychological. If we believe only scarce things have value, then the knowledge in wikipedia is worthless? Sunlight, air is valueless? The more freedom we have, the less it's worth?

      Note that physics doesn't operate on this principle. The more mass you have, the more gravity. Mass isn't "worth less" if there's more of it in physics equations.

      Psychology is changeable. One way of changing the idea that artificial scarcity creates value is to look at a graph of the money supply in the US. Notice how the great majority of the increase is due to private banks. So why isn't the currency devalued, psychologically, when such exponential increases take place?

      Bankers claim some sort of divine, exclusive right to create money, and automatically attach debt to it, because otherwise how would they get attention? But we'll still give them attention, poor dears, while voting for the govt to empower individuals instead of institutions with a basic income, and encouraging innovation (which is what physically raises standard of living) through challenges.

    12. Re:misleading article by Arker · · Score: 1

      No, it's not. Most people didnt understand what the Fed is and what it does. Until they do we wont get rid of it. This - letting people see what it is they do - helps. The fact that you are one of the small minority that already knows what they do is great - it's also not the point.

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    13. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      If you were guaranteed a basic income, you wouldn't need to devote so much wisdom to money matters, and could use it instead to advance knowledge and create technology that would further raise standard of living and keep the currency strong because we produce things others want. (Consider Japan with a 200% debt-to-gdp ratio and a currency whose value they consider too high.)

    14. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Your predictions remind me of y2k Armageddon!

    15. Re:misleading article by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      If you were guaranteed a basic income, you wouldn't need to devote so much wisdom to money matters

      Guaranteed income requires guaranteed production. You can't just get everyone to have enough by passing a law that it is so.

      The issue is one of population control. In my country, a previous government wanted to increase the retirement age. Their plan to do so was simply change the law so that compulsory superannuation paid out at a later age. I'd bet that all the people who supported introduction of compulsory superannuation didn't realize it would one day be used to tell them when they were allowed to stop work.

      If you organize your own retirement fund, you get to decide when to retire instead of having the government tell you. If that isn't the sort of thing that bothers you, I guess that we've got very different value systems. I don't mind having a safety net for people in times of need. A lifetime of financial dependence through induced incompetence is a nightmare, both for the individual and I'm convinced eventually for the society as well.

    16. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      These are not predictions. This is what happened in every country which switched to financing the government through inflation. y2k armageddon didn't happen because of the millions of man hours spent to avert it -- not because it wouldn't have happened otherwise.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    17. Re:misleading article by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Clearly you don't really understand the working of complex systems. The fact that the FED can print money, and has in the past, is inextricably linked to *these* loans. You cannot separate them. Your argument is obvious and facile. You want to say that *this* money for *these* loans somehow exists due to the hard work and savings of the FED, separate from all the money that they just print out of thin air due to their having been delegated the governmental authority to do so. It doesn't work that way, because money is fungible, leverage is ultimately all that matters, and the FED has infinite leverage.

      I mean, really, you expect anyone to fall for this argument? The FED has, on one hand, a printing press, and on the other, a pile of money derived from interest payments. One month they decide "there needs to be more money supply" because "that's just what the FED does" and so they print up a bunch of money and lend it out. The next month they decide to lend some of "their" pile of money to a bunch of foreign banks. Do you really think we're dumb enough to believe that these are separate issues?

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    18. Re:misleading article by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Let's put it this way. I'm guessing, in your fantasy world, that you believe since Northrop Grumman has been delegated the authority to build bombers for the US military, that those are somehow "private" bombers? Because that seems to be your argument when it comes to the FED.

      What would you be saying right now if, instead of the FED, we were talking about Northrop Grumman giving (and it *is* giving) stealth bombers to some other country, that they then turn around and use to bomb American cities?

      Would you be arguing that Northrop is a private institution and can do whatever they want? Would you be arguing that they are separate from the government?

      How is that at all different from the Federal Reserve *giving* free money to foreign banks, that they then use to buy up American assets? At a time when the US economy is collapsing, inflation is rampant, unemployment is at ridiculous levels, and most Americans haven't had a raise in 5 years, how is that anything other than outright treason?

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    19. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      Psychology is changeable.

      No.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    20. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing, in your fantasy world, that you believe since Northrop Grumman has been delegated the authority to build bombers for the US military, that those are somehow "private" bombers?

      You are arguing with a point which hasn't been made. That money isn't public or private. FED issues money by making short-term loans. It's issued money. It's not owned by the recipients because they have to repay them. The equivalent in your military manufacturing wouldn't be production and sale of bombers. It would be production and lease of bombers. Since your analogy doesn't hold, the rest is moot. My explanation was not a fantasy, by the way. It was factual. So the whole "in your fantasy world" snide was uncalled for.

      Federal Reserve *giving* free money to foreign banks

      No such thing happened. Money was lent at low interest. It wasn't given without an obligation to be returned.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    21. Re:misleading article by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Okay so let's say Northrop *leases* stealth bombers to some other country, which they use to bomb Americans. Is that a more accurate analogy?

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    22. Re:misleading article by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Or, if they understood what it is and what it does, they would whine less.

    23. Re:misleading article by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Well, retirement policy is no different than other issues surrounding socialism.

      Most people aren't able to do competent financial planning. Many people can. The people who can are almost certainly better off doing it themselves, and the majority who can't are better off if the government does it. However, socialism doesn't work if you can opt-out, since by its nature it requires transferring wealth from those who are more able to earn it to those who aren't.

      The problem is that we want to have our cake and eat it too. We don't want to take wealth away from those who can earn it, but we also don't want to see people starving on the streets. As a result we implement a half-baked form of socialism that tends to cost a lot of money and lead to a LOT of debt. One generation is basically raising their standard of living at the expense of the next.

      The main problem with socialism as I see it is that it leads to a form of reverse Darwinism that over time destroys the ability of society to produce (which was the start of your argument). I suspect that the only way it can be made sustainable is to essentially combine it with some kind of artificial selection process to counter that (which means regulating procreation - a VERY touchy subject).

    24. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Wait, it happened to Japan?

      Also, your fear of inflation is hyperbolic and irrational. "In 1920, I could buy a suit for $20!" But a computer cost $Infinity...

    25. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Debt is a complete distraction, a purely psychological phenomenon, not physical. We do not have a production capacity problem. The real problem is why should bankers have an exclusive, divine right to create money? Instead, let govt create it too, and empower individuals to create new technology and advance knowledge so that standard of living keeps increasing. (Note: I didn't say take anything away from the "job creationists", just provide a public option for those of us who don't function well under the perverse incentives and moral hazards of the free market.)

    26. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      "A lifetime of financial dependence through induced incompetence is a nightmare, both for the individual and I'm convinced eventually for the society as well."

      On the contrary, the government can stimulate innovation and empower individuals to take advantage of the natural creativity and scientific spirit they're born with, but is too often drummed out of them by the free market, as they are forced to give up their dreams and take menial jobs for unnecessarily low pay under little Napoleon control-freak bosses who seek attention by getting good at dominance games, not because of any necessity but purely because they can.

    27. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Think of Germany after WWII. Think of changing attitudes towards blacks, women voting, alcohol prohibition, etc. The strength of our species lies in its ability to change our psychology. Once we were convinced the earth was the center of the universe. Now we think of ourselves as one tiny point in a universe that is itself only one tiny part of a multiverse...

    28. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      I do not fear inflation. I simply point out its effects. Your attempt to smear me with a brush of someone irrational is just that -- a smear. Japan has a modern taxation system -- it does not rely on inflation as he main source of taxation, so I am not sure why you threw that in there. I suspect you are grasping for deflections (since you are unquestionably grasping for ad hominems).

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    29. Re:misleading article by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Most people aren't able to do competent financial planning.

      Most? If so, that's probably largely because they've been conditioned not to do it. If they were taught to and had to most people would do ok. How are the experts doing? I mean for us, not for themselves. I'm about mid-way through my working life and there is no reasonable prospect that my compulsory superannuation alone will be enough to sustain me through retirement (unless I plan to die pretty quickly after stopping work). So I have made my own plans, only time will tell how good they are. In the meantime, the main effect my super has is to make me more expensive to employ.

      The main problem with socialism as I see it is that it leads to a form of reverse Darwinism that over time destroys the ability of society to produce

      You've hit the nail on the head there.

      I suspect that the only way it can be made sustainable...

      Without re-engineering the human race, it can not be made sustainable as a whole philosophy. At some point, you have to harness self-interest, and that's capitalism (which also can't sustainably be implemented as a whole philosophy, necessary as it is).

      If most people are financially incompetent, rather than give in to that and have experts look after them, we should make financial literacy a core part of education curriculum.

    30. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      First, provide some data.

      Second, has any country explicitly made taxes voluntary and created money to fund the budget?

      What I'm proposing is to keep fundamental American freedoms (unlike Zimbabwe), and use the created money to stimulate innovation through providing everyone with a basic income and holding challenges (which biz can hold too, like google, netflix). We have not just lost a world war, so comparisons to Weimar are invalid.

      What matters is innovation and the advance of knowledge, because that is what raises standard of living and survival fitness by better allowing us to predict and adapt to sudden catastrophic change.

      The idea that a govt can only spend what it takes in is as feudal as the notion of divine right of rule.

    31. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Telsa was financially incompetent, but produced. Give the Teslas a chance to do what they do best. Don't force them to waste their intellect studying finance just because your ideology tells you they should.

      The economic problem is not the central problem of manking. Knowledge is.

    32. Re:misleading article by rohan972 · · Score: 1
      Most of your replies have had so little connection to what I've said that I haven't bothered to reply, especially since they are such nonsense anyway.

      Telsa was financially incompetent, but produced. Give the Teslas a chance to do what they do best. Don't force them to waste their intellect studying finance just because your ideology tells you they should.

      School systems cater mainly to the majority and provide a general education. Financial literacy should be considered part of a general education. We don't cut language, history, art, physical education, etc out of the curriculum because of "Teslas".

    33. Re:misleading article by Arker · · Score: 1

      You cant see the connection between the little control-freak in the office and the big ones in DC?

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    34. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      Financial literacy should not be required. Saying everyone should have to think about money is like saying everyone should have to think about sports, it's unnecessary and indicates a desire to control others' thoughts. The economic problem is not the central problem of mankind. Mankind survived without money for hundreds of thousands of years...

    35. Re:misleading article by blue+trane · · Score: 1

      That's why we should vote for govt to empower each of us with a basic income. Let the fed create money (as it has been doing) but instead of giving it to financial institutions, give it to each of us.

      Think of it like this: People are Corporations! Give us loans at 0.1% interest so we can buy t-bills at 3% and pocket the difference and keep the loans rolling over, just like banks do...

    36. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1
      Soviet Union had an income tax rate of roughly 15% to 17%. It had to essentially erase one zero from its currency in the 60s. And by 1985 most observers indicated that the consumer prices rose back to the 60s level. Since no accounting was done of the inflation it's hard to compare it to tax receipts. But tax receipts themselves were minimal. Only those "employed" in government jobs would pay taxes (ie, anyone participating in private economy did not because private economy was illegal). And inflation rate of 10 times over a period of 20 years is equivalent to roughly 12%-13% a year. That's on par with the "official" income tax rate. Soviet Union was rife with nepotism-based corruption. References to it permeated the popular culture through and through.

      What matters is innovation and the advance of knowledge.

      Matters to whom? Those who want to consume it? That's nice. But who would produce it when having "connections" become a larger factor in whether you can feed your family than having the useful skills? Innovation is a form of self-advancement. Anyone who even thinks that people innovate to better human kind has never created anything himself.

      The idea that a govt can only spend what it takes in is as feudal as the notion of divine right of rule.

      This is nonsense. At it does not in any way whatsoever follow from anything you said nor anything that is supported by historical evidence. Not to mention that you are going for a direct "freedom is slavery" logic by trying to equate less government with a feudal rule.

      We have not just lost a world war, so comparisons to Weimar are invalid.

      Our level of debt (relative to GDP) is currently higher than it was at the end of WWII. Except we don't have the option of cutting spending on a World War (because that's not where the money is going).

      stimulate innovation through providing everyone with a basic income and holding challenges

      providing everyone with basic income is a recipe for stifling innovation -- not for increasing it. I am not sure why I am arguing with you. You are completely dogmatic and the only counterpoints you offer are based on some gotcha "but the situation is not 100% identical" arguments. Parallels can still be drawn. You are insisting that we don't learn from history. That's volunteering insanity. I'll pass.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    37. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      In fact, your arguments are so implausible that it is more likely that you hold the opposite view and you are just testing to see how someone else might make your point for you. I think I'll pass on helping you out there as well.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    38. Re:misleading article by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      No harm in educating people, but I suspect that most people will become as skilled at finance as I am at painting. There are many who would not excel at any of the skills you list. What is to be done with them?

    39. Re:misleading article by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      If most people are financially incompetent, rather than give in to that and have experts look after them, we should make financial literacy a core part of education curriculum.

      You suggest that most people could be made competent through education. In my experience education is a relatively minor contributor to competence. Talent/ability is FAR more important. When you combine the two the results can be impressive, but you can't make up for a lack of talent simply by making people sit in classes and take tests.

      Better to allow those who are skilled at finance to use their skills for the betterment of society, and not simply themselves.

    40. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      No, our psychology does not change. Look at the effect of failed European states. They descended back into slave trade and tribalism. People stayed the same. The only thing which changed was lesser reliance on brute force to produce that which sustains life. We still chase that which we value. When it could be produced by those with weak physical abilities, then those who posses other abilities which hold value grow in affluence. If the capitalist system were to collapse, we'd see a re-emergence of slavery and patriarchal society again.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    41. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      As for the attitude towards people with higher level of skin pigmentation, it's a historical accident. They are unique American and they only persisted due to prolonged bitterness over the destruction in the South during the American Civil War. Over-reaction to bitterness over historical "injustice" is usually a cause for the rise of the next injustice (Godwin be damned, but Hitler rose to power mostly by exploiting Germany's legitimate historical grievances against France).

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    42. Re:misleading article by Arker · · Score: 1

      The Fed doesnt create money. It creates currency. Please meditate on the difference between the two until it becomes blindingly clear, and then act accordingly.

      While I certainly see the charm in your call to democratise larceny and let the benefits currently enjoyed by only the largest and most successful criminal enterprises to date, I fear your plan would ultimately be just as unsustainable and just as harmful to the general welfare.

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    43. Re:misleading article by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      There are many who would not excel at any of the skills you list. What is to be done with them?

      You don't have to excel at finance to manage your own money. Even if you don't want to manage it yourself, you should know enough to know when you are being sold snake oil. I'm not a financial genius. I have a very simple, boring plan. It will not make me a billionaire but I have substantial benefit compared to not following a plan.

      Look, there is an ongoing global finance crisis. Do you really think the prevailing experts are that much better than the average person? Most of those experts are mainly good at making money flow to them. They are not going to look after you any further than required in the process of looking after themselves, whether they work for the government or a corporation.

    44. Re:misleading article by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      Financial literacy should not be required. Saying everyone should have to think about money is like saying everyone should have to think about sports, it's unnecessary and indicates a desire to control others' thoughts.

      Sports are unnecessary, finance is not. I don't care what you think but I also don't want to pay for your upkeep because you couldn't be bothered doing it yourself.

      Mankind survived without money for hundreds of thousands of years...

      Yes, as hunter/gatherers or subsistence farmers. Most people don't want that anymore, but it that's your thing then you're welcome to it.

    45. Re:misleading article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These are not predictions. This is what happened in every country which switched to financing the government through inflation.

      Instead we finance the banks through inflation. And endless fees. And interest on the inflation.

      The anecdotes about financing the government through inflation are all where the country was doomed already anyways and inflation was their panic button of last resort.

    46. Re:misleading article by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      I am still not seeing why there is this large scale attempt to create an impression that this was tax-payer money which was lent. It was money lent out of FED's reserves.

      Any money the Fed has is taxpayer money - either created by expanding the balance sheet (printing digital money - which inflates the money supply and reduces the value of all FRN-holders' cash assets) or from interest payments from the taxpayers. Some of it is stored in their vaults as gold, but I didn't see that those actual assets were liquidated for this operation.

      I don't think that's the main complaint, though - many people would rather see capitalism work than have the Fed pick winners. Many banks and other companies failed during the same period.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    47. Re:misleading article by superwiz · · Score: 1

      Only until the "which they use to bomb Americans" part. FED lended that money to banks based in other countries because those banks also do a lot of their business in the US. Comparing doing business in the US (while using US banking system) with bombing of the US (while using US-manufactured bombers) does not make any sense.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    48. Re:misleading article by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      You don't have to excel at finance to manage your own money.

      Yes and no. I agree that most of money management is common sense. However, common sense isn't all that common. Just look at who they elect.

      Do you really think the prevailing experts are that much better than the average person? Most of those experts are mainly good at making money flow to them.

      Yes, they are better, but as you go on to say, they're better at serving their own interests. That is why the field needs regulation. I can buy that things got out of hand and a buyout was the lesser evil. However, if I were in charge I'd eminent domain the failing companies, use public money to get them into good shape, chop them up into little pieces, and then sell them for whatever they're worth to get them back out of government hands. Any money made off of the sale after paying back any money spent by the taxpayers would be paid out to the original shareholders as just compensation for the eminent domain. Most likely that would be little to nothing. While in government hands the companies would be run in the public interest with no regard to the well-being of the former shareholders. Also, while in government hands the company records would be extensively mined for evidence and the previous company officers would be criminally charged. I'd pay a law simply making it a crime to operate a company that ends up needing a takeover, so that the fact that a bailout took place would be sufficient to obtain a conviction, and no, the officers and board would have no say in whether a takeover takes place.

      And yes, none of this is likely to happen - those in power seek to use that power for their own benefit.

    49. Re:misleading article by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      You are tremendously over-simplifying the situation. The Fed does not simply "turn on the printing press". The Fed permits banks to make loans. When a bank makes a loan, they turn on the printing press, but when the loan is repaid, the printing press operates in reverse. This is the true problem with our current monetary system: banks make loans willy-nilly, causing a bubble. Then the most powerful banks suddenly stop making loans, causing a crash that wipes out millions of people's equity, and the powerful banks' weakest competitors. Then the Fed has to bribe the powerful banks to start making loans again otherwise there is no money. Billions and billions of loans have been made, but, as you may have noticed, there has not been appreciable inflation.

      Our current credit-based monetary system is extremely corrupt, but it is better than what we had before: a hybrid commodity-backed/credit-backed system. It is vastly better than what we never had, and what simpletons clamor for the "return" of: a purely commodity-backed system, "the gold system". How do we keep the benefits of fiat money and eliminate the corruption? Do what the founding fathers said to do: have the federal government print our money. Where the founding fathers screwed up is that they failed to close the other loophole: we also need to ban fractional reserve lending. The government should print a certain amount of money each year based upon that year's productivity, and on one else gets to print any. What should they do with the money? Distribute it amongst the citizens equally. This is the "dividend' that Clifford Hugh Douglas so eloquently and so scientifically puts forth the rational for in his seminal work, Social Credit.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    50. Re:misleading article by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      How do you know that the banking cartel, who are vastly more powerful than various small countries, didn't purposefully destabilize the economies of the countries that tried the experiment. And PLEASE, don't even whisper the words, "Weimar Republic". That mess was a deliberate setup to destroy the German economy, and set the stage for yet another huge war, which some people, cough Rothchilds cough, find very profitable.

      Don't be so damned naive. There is a tiny cadre who profit immensely through the central bank system, and will stop at nothing to destroy any serious challenge to it's world-wide hegemony.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    51. Re:misleading article by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Why not? Either way, Americans are getting screwed.

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
  24. Re:prevented collapse? by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    The "shadow banking system" took huge deposits from institutions and wasn't subject to FDIC regulation or insurance.

    There was a real risk of a domino effect. Look at the near-collapse that followed the Lehman bankruptcy.

  25. Re:prevented collapse? by TFAFalcon · · Score: 1

    How would that differ from the debt that was piled on to bail out the banks?

  26. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    you know what happened last time we had institutions that were "too big to fail"? We broke those institutions up. Of course, they didn't like it last time; so now they have paid off our government enough now to prevent such a repeat.

  27. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BofA has about $1T on deposit. All banks have about $13T.

    FDIC has reserves measured in $Bs. Expect to wait and get repaid in Fed-printed $s if your bank goes bust.

    Anyone who still has $ in the Too-Big-To-Fail banks is a bit dim, IMHO

  28. Re:prevented collapse? by shentino · · Score: 1

    So what?

    Between government debt from covering the FDIC underflow and government debt from propping up the banks I'd let the greedy banks take a well deserved fall over innocent depositors any day.

    Besides, if the banks get bailed out every time they fuck up they have no incentive to behave themselves.

    I'd say that having the feds NOT bail out banks will actually make them MORE reliable, since they'll start smartening up and quit sucking Uncle Sam's thumb.

  29. Re:prevented collapse? by shentino · · Score: 1

    Long now, shorter in the future on average once the bad banks get eaten alive in liquidation, and the leftover banks get enough of a fear of bankruptcy in them to not goof off and then expect the feds to cover them.

  30. Re:prevented collapse? by shentino · · Score: 1

    Let them fail.

    Right now those institutions are using their "too big to fail" status as leverage to get away with irresponsible behavior.

  31. Re:prevented collapse? by westlake · · Score: 2

    We don't need our deposits protected.

    The protection is not unlimited.

    This matters in your retirement and estate planning. Deposit Insurance Summary

    Just let the banks fail already.

    When a bank is in trouble what usually happens is that its assets and customers are absorbed by a larger and much stronger bank.

    You have fewer choices. Local branches are more distant. That is a small problem for the rich --- and a world of hurt for the poor. All benefit programs are moving to direct deposit. You must have a bank account.

    No matter how hard it may be to maintain the minimal balance required and and avoid being mulcted by transaction fees and other charges,

  32. Re:prevented collapse? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

    The magnitude of the losses would have been such that the FDIC fund would have been sucked dry in a heartbeat. Then it would be up to the U.S. Government to make up the shortfall, piling the new government debt on to the national debt pile. Haven't we been doing enough to "pile on" already?

    Would have been better to add debt by bailing out citizens' bank accounts than to add debt by bailing out the banks who would then just give their execs massive bonuses while laying people off.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  33. Re:prevented collapse? by datavirtue · · Score: 1

    I'm sure that if you are not vigilant you could lose money in a 401k. I switched funds (401k investments) and made money (good solid returns) during the 2008-2009 years. Also, government pension funds are doing very well. You will see dips and "losses" during economic turmoil but these can be temporary. Real companies a that offer needed services and well managed funds are insulated against major losses. Hearkening back to the Enron example, their employees had all of their 401k invested in ONLY(!) Enron stock. That is not diversification! Sure they experienced windfalls (which will never happen in a well manged and diversified fund) but they also felt the bite of total loss.

    --
    I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
  34. Re:prevented collapse? by datavirtue · · Score: 1

    My investment experience is limited to Fidelity funds and 401k's (and some stocks purchased individually). These are well managed and yield positively over the long run. [No, I'm not a shill] Playing stocks on your own (sole nest egg) is a tricky game and best left to the people who get paid to do it (professionals). Fidelity is a solid and trustworthy company (in my opinion) . Stay away from banks and non-professional investment as a means to retirement. The funds held and managed by a professional investment firm benefit from the power wielded by their massive interest in the companies. When their funds are invested in a particular company it is usually a significant sum and they are actively involved in communicating with and researching the companies they invest in. This tends to keep things in check, for if the fund managers detect any funny business they get out and put the money elsewhere. The fund manager's main concern is the firm's reputation and stock holder yields. If you care to research for yourself there are a several funds and firms which have weathered the entire economic downturn. It can be done. The news media loves doom and gloom (only conflict sells), so these success stories are not the average parrot garble.

    --
    I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
  35. Re:prevented collapse? by fotbr · · Score: 1

    These days, even small banks have internet banking. I'm far from rich, but I have no problem not having a "local" branch. My bank is nearly 300 miles away from me, has been for years, and has not been an issue, even when purchasing a house. Internet banking and old-school fax machines solve any need to actually set foot in a bank.

    As for minimum balances and fees.....again, small banks often don't have those. Get away from the "big" national banks and one can avoid the nonsense.

    That's not even considering the idea of small credit unions -- I've never dealt with them, so I can't claim to know anything about them or their practices.

  36. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You do realize that the amount of money that was gone, by "insured" depositors was several magnitudes larger than the FDIC reserves? You do realize that the money in most corporations, by corporate charter is held in money market accounts that aren't insured, and all that money was/is gone? That in two weeks without action, if the banks failed, all economy activity was likely to have stopped? Of oourse you don't, otherwise you wouldn't have this position.

  37. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have fewer choices. Local branches are more distant. That is a small problem for the rich --- and a world of hurt for the poor. All benefit programs are moving to direct deposit. You must have a bank account.

    No matter how hard it may be to maintain the minimal balance required and and avoid being mulcted by transaction fees and other charges,

    Please say what country you're talking about. If it's the UK I can advise you on how to collect your money without a bank.

  38. Character Assignment by Niscenus · · Score: 1

    This is slashdot. You are expected to know that the opening inclusion symbol (left curly-brace) or, "{", is the symbol for fountains. The number 6-9 are not used, while 1-5 are warnings given by the Ring of Warning.

    --
    "Yeah...it was the numbers that were irrational, not the murderous cult of vegetarians...." -- Hippasus of Metapontum
  39. Re:prevented collapse? by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Too big to fail" is a sobering thought...

    Which is why one iether does not let them get too big or restricts them so that they cannot engage in practices and businesses likely to make the fail. The fact that we spent the last twenty or so years removing these constraints were at the root of this particular downturn. The fact that this problem has not been addressed as a result is our shame.

    --
    That is all.
  40. $7 trillion = $250B in Treasuries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Or alternatively, they took the $7 trillion at 0.01%, invested 250 billion of it in treasuries at 3%, then had $6.75 trillion in working capital.

    In effect, he handed them $6.75 TRILLION dollars, and received $250 billion of government bonds back for the money.

    Those derivatives, CDRs CDS's etc. they are just Ponzi schemes, they work only as long as they pay out less than money coming in. When that happens, they take a huge bonus to reward themselves. When it turns, they would collapse normally like any betting shop. They only pay out more than investor money coming in, because the Federal Reserve extends more and more credit against less and less assets.

    When one of them gets too far ahead (e.g. lending at 40:1 where others are only allowed 20:1) the Fed gets a little embarrassed about the free money and lets that one fail.

    If the Fed obeyed its own rules and only lent dollars against hard assets then none of this would be a problem. Wallstreet ponzi schemes would collapse quickly, they'd lose their assets and we'd move on. But with the Fed involved this theft (I agree it is theft) will keep going till it finally collapses into a Russian Ruble style meltdown.

    You earn the value in the dollar, but Wallstreet gets to spend it, and that will continue as long as there's so much crossover between the Federal Reserve and Goldman Sachs et al.

    The crossover needs to be stopped, the Fed needs to be forced to obey the rules it was constructed under (even if it means criminal sanctions against Fed officers), and Wallstreet parasites won't have any more money to lob at the Gingriches of this world.

  41. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's no such debt today - the banks got over the liquidity crunch and paid back the emergency funds. This was the Fed's assumption when they made the temporary, short-term funds available - which assumption was correct.

    The deficit increase you are referring to is largely the result of the unfunded Bush tax cuts and of the unfunded Bush wars.

  42. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    recently bumped to an infinite amount in non-interest accounts....check the small print next time your at the checkout counter.

  43. Re:prevented collapse? by SydShamino · · Score: 1

    I have a small selection of companies I've picked and like, and invest in. There's an equally small list of companies I've picked that burnt me, but I always got out before I lost too much. Overall I'm ahead. Some of the ones I've held onto are way up in value and I'll sell them as soon as I think they can't sustain that value. At least one stock hasn't gained -anything- in the 3-4 years I've held it, but they consistently pay out about 8% annually in dividents, and I consider that a pretty good return.

    I've learned the most about investing through the stocks I bought myself. It's not that bad to take $2000 or so, find a company whose products you believe in, and invest. You'll learn a lot about how the market works.

    We have a pretty wide selection of savings on top of that - 401k, two Roth IRAs (one of which is a 2010 conversion of a 2009 401k rollover), cash savings, company stock (held only as long as I have to), home equity - so I feel we're as diversified as we can be to hedge against losses. I'm the type of person that never really closes an account (we have four credit union accounts in two states) so it doesn't bother me to spread out investments with different companies and methods.

    --
    It doesn't hurt to be nice.
  44. Re:prevented collapse? by Dainsanefh · · Score: 1

    This is the USA where all our life has been under the control of the Jewish bankers and their buddies in the government. Cash will soon be banned so they can monitor all facets of our life. It has been told in the bible. You need a mark to buy anything, and that mark is your bank account.

    Merry Christmas to you all.

    --
    Twitter: @dainsanefh
  45. Happy New Year by Dainsanefh · · Score: 0

    2012 is coming. The Jewish bankers which behind Goldman Sachs and all these tyrannies, which includes their buddies in the U.S. government and the Federal Reserve, will soon meet their fate.

    The Jews , self proclaimed "the chosen race" in the bible, make up 99% of the 1%. 2012 will change all that. The meeks shall inherit the planet, once again.

    --
    Twitter: @dainsanefh
  46. Re:prevented collapse? by witherstaff · · Score: 1

    Also some services (Such as Merrill Lynch) will gladly auto-split your large deposit accounts into multiple accounts, thereby covered by the FDIC. It's not hard to be covered.

  47. Mod Parent Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is nothing you can do. When things like these are being modded down, you know something is up.

  48. Re:prevented collapse? by Aighearach · · Score: 2

    So much derp, so many mods, must be slashdot.

    FDIC is not insurance that waits for banks to fail and then pays off claims. They don't work that way. It isn't what it is. They follow the banks' finances closely, and during the crisis they did in fact step in and take over banks that were in danger of not being able to cover their deposits if there was a run. To be covered, banks have already given up a lot of autonomy; in fact that lack of autonomy is the main benefit to depositors.

    They step in before a bank fails, when they only have enough left to pay out depositors. The 100k thing is window dressing. In reality you get back more than that, because FDIC prevents the bank from squandering the deposited funds before it gets that bad. Generally in the case of "failed" banks, most depositors get all their money back. Except that they don't get it "back," they just don't lose it; their bank gets a new name. Just ask WAMU customers.

  49. Re:prevented collapse? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    Love it or hate it, but most of TARP is already paid back, and the rest is on schedule.

  50. Re:prevented collapse? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    and a world of hurt for the poor. All benefit programs are moving to direct deposit. You must have a bank account.

    No matter how hard it may be to maintain the minimal balance required and and avoid being mulcted by transaction fees and other charges,

    Well, no, here in Oregon the benefit programs go to direct deposit and they contract with one of the banks (US Bank) to give out special debit cards that are only for the benefit accounts. They let you use an ATM for free 2 times per month, which is the same as you would get if they were sending out checks. And if you have a normal bank account, you just move it twice a month and then use ATMs as much as you want, and if you don't have a regular account, you probably couldn't cash government checks without going to a "Check Cashing" business and paying a large fee.

    So automated banking is an improvement even for the poor.

  51. [ditto] Re:To Anyone Who Wants Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  52. Re:prevented collapse? by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    Back in the Enron days it was typical that companies would match 401k contributions with company stock, and employees were not free to reallocate this money until they neared retirement age.

    So, that means that your employer ended up being about half of your 401k by default if you didn't buy a dime of their stock voluntarily.

    In the case of Enron the value of the stock went up with the bubble so that what started out as half of the value of account could easily become 90%+ of it.

    Since Enron was an accounting scam, the reality is that most of that 401k value never really existed at all except on paper. The day of the collapse was just the day that everybody realized it.

    Part of me thinks that retirement benefits in general need a lot more regulation. Companies promise pensions/etc to employees, but from time to time they fail to deliver on that promise. The employee can't take back the years of faithful service - companies shouldn't be able to go back on their end of the bargain. Companies shouldn't be allowed to manage pension funds - they should have to put it in a fund that the employee has complete control over. The valuation of these contributions should also be regulated, so that a company can't promise an employee 50% of their salary during retirement if they only are putting in enough money to realistically cover 20%.

  53. Re:prevented collapse? by Rich0 · · Score: 1

    The downside to this approach is that lots of people simply are dumb. Should they be unable to retire as a result of being born of average or below-average intelligence? Keep in mind that half of the people alive fit this description.

    Retirement in general needs a lot more regulation - and better regulation (which means being upfront about what it really costs and not promising something the government can't deliver). Either that, or we need to do something to make the elderly more employable.

  54. Re:prevented collapse? by Bardwick · · Score: 1

    What was paid back to not lower the debt though, it was spent on other programs... Technically your correct, but if i owed you $20 then went out and invested it on your behalf for something you can't cash for 10 years, are you really paid back?

  55. Re:prevented collapse? by Qzukk · · Score: 1

    The IRA coverage and stuff is for uninvested cash and insured CDs (ie from American, not Antiguan banks), not for investments. The grandparent isn't exactly right, but not wrong either. I'm not exactly familiar with every single 401k plan out there, but every single one I've ever seen, you pick an investment strategy and the plan manager puts your contributions into appropriate mutual funds selected by risk level.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  56. Re:prevented collapse? by shentino · · Score: 1

    The so called liquidity crunch already had plans in place, the discount window with the federal reserve.

    Why TARP needed to get involved in the first place is beyond me.

  57. Re:prevented collapse? by shentino · · Score: 1

    Right now, banks have the so far valid assumption that they are too big to fail and the feds won't let them suffer for their mistakes.

    This makes them arrogant bastards who are pretty much free to squander their money and get away with it.

    In the long run more will be saved by getting the banks to behave themselves and not mooch off the feds than will be lost in the short run by letting things go to hell.

  58. Re:prevented collapse? by ogdenk · · Score: 1

    Your hard-earned "wealth" in your account is nothing more than a couple fields in an Oracle database. No printing even required. Just an UPDATE query. Your magic plastic suddenly has a positive value for a while.

  59. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Subratik, I think shentino might have (gasp) less than $100k in his bank account. Shocking, I know.
    I almost knocked the good scotch off my butler's tray when I abruptly reached this conclusion myself.

  60. Re:prevented collapse? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do you do about google getting too big to fail?