Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Leak blows Iceland banking scandal wide open
- This topic has 40 replies, 7 voices, and was last updated 16 years, 4 months ago by
yooklid.
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August 6, 2009 at 6:08 AM #442235August 6, 2009 at 9:19 AM #441520
yooklid
ParticipantI’m an Irish expat living in the bay area. Only advice I can give you is to NOT live in Dublin, and I say that as a Dub. Whole country has “lost the run of itself” as we used to say back home.
You think people here are self entitled? You should meet Irish people under the age of 25…
August 6, 2009 at 9:19 AM #441717yooklid
ParticipantI’m an Irish expat living in the bay area. Only advice I can give you is to NOT live in Dublin, and I say that as a Dub. Whole country has “lost the run of itself” as we used to say back home.
You think people here are self entitled? You should meet Irish people under the age of 25…
August 6, 2009 at 9:19 AM #442050yooklid
ParticipantI’m an Irish expat living in the bay area. Only advice I can give you is to NOT live in Dublin, and I say that as a Dub. Whole country has “lost the run of itself” as we used to say back home.
You think people here are self entitled? You should meet Irish people under the age of 25…
August 6, 2009 at 9:19 AM #442121yooklid
ParticipantI’m an Irish expat living in the bay area. Only advice I can give you is to NOT live in Dublin, and I say that as a Dub. Whole country has “lost the run of itself” as we used to say back home.
You think people here are self entitled? You should meet Irish people under the age of 25…
August 6, 2009 at 9:19 AM #442294yooklid
ParticipantI’m an Irish expat living in the bay area. Only advice I can give you is to NOT live in Dublin, and I say that as a Dub. Whole country has “lost the run of itself” as we used to say back home.
You think people here are self entitled? You should meet Irish people under the age of 25…
August 6, 2009 at 11:31 AM #44160034f3f3f
ParticipantUsing shares as collateral for a loan is probably a little shaky, but a novel way to cover your losses when those shares tumble.
August 6, 2009 at 11:31 AM #44179734f3f3f
ParticipantUsing shares as collateral for a loan is probably a little shaky, but a novel way to cover your losses when those shares tumble.
August 6, 2009 at 11:31 AM #44213034f3f3f
ParticipantUsing shares as collateral for a loan is probably a little shaky, but a novel way to cover your losses when those shares tumble.
August 6, 2009 at 11:31 AM #44219934f3f3f
ParticipantUsing shares as collateral for a loan is probably a little shaky, but a novel way to cover your losses when those shares tumble.
August 6, 2009 at 11:31 AM #44237534f3f3f
ParticipantUsing shares as collateral for a loan is probably a little shaky, but a novel way to cover your losses when those shares tumble.
August 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM #441627AK
Participant[quote=qwerty007]Using shares as collateral for a loan is probably a little shaky, but a novel way to cover your losses when those shares tumble.[/quote]
I seem to recall that it was not unknown during the dot-com era … Stamps.com and former CEO John Payne come to mind.
But Kaupthing seems to have taken it to a new level … granting loans for the purchase of its own stock, then announcing it as an infusion of capital.
August 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM #441824AK
Participant[quote=qwerty007]Using shares as collateral for a loan is probably a little shaky, but a novel way to cover your losses when those shares tumble.[/quote]
I seem to recall that it was not unknown during the dot-com era … Stamps.com and former CEO John Payne come to mind.
But Kaupthing seems to have taken it to a new level … granting loans for the purchase of its own stock, then announcing it as an infusion of capital.
August 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM #442157AK
Participant[quote=qwerty007]Using shares as collateral for a loan is probably a little shaky, but a novel way to cover your losses when those shares tumble.[/quote]
I seem to recall that it was not unknown during the dot-com era … Stamps.com and former CEO John Payne come to mind.
But Kaupthing seems to have taken it to a new level … granting loans for the purchase of its own stock, then announcing it as an infusion of capital.
August 6, 2009 at 12:23 PM #442227AK
Participant[quote=qwerty007]Using shares as collateral for a loan is probably a little shaky, but a novel way to cover your losses when those shares tumble.[/quote]
I seem to recall that it was not unknown during the dot-com era … Stamps.com and former CEO John Payne come to mind.
But Kaupthing seems to have taken it to a new level … granting loans for the purchase of its own stock, then announcing it as an infusion of capital.
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