Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
cr
ParticipantWhat do the active traders here think – do financials and mortgages banks continue to drop or are they at the bottom of this subprime mess? And gold/siler are at or near all time highs – is it too late to get in, or will the dollar continue to decline?
Does anyone else think Google is overpriced?
cr
ParticipantWhat do the active traders here think – do financials and mortgages banks continue to drop or are they at the bottom of this subprime mess? And gold/siler are at or near all time highs – is it too late to get in, or will the dollar continue to decline?
Does anyone else think Google is overpriced?
cr
ParticipantWhat do the active traders here think – do financials and mortgages banks continue to drop or are they at the bottom of this subprime mess? And gold/siler are at or near all time highs – is it too late to get in, or will the dollar continue to decline?
Does anyone else think Google is overpriced?
cr
ParticipantWhat do the active traders here think – do financials and mortgages banks continue to drop or are they at the bottom of this subprime mess? And gold/siler are at or near all time highs – is it too late to get in, or will the dollar continue to decline?
Does anyone else think Google is overpriced?
cr
ParticipantNice find.
Just estimating I’d say that’s well over $1 TRILLION dollars in loans to reset in the next 5 years.
Can the FED lower rates to a negative number? Surely that would solve all problems.
cr
ParticipantNice find.
Just estimating I’d say that’s well over $1 TRILLION dollars in loans to reset in the next 5 years.
Can the FED lower rates to a negative number? Surely that would solve all problems.
cr
ParticipantNice find.
Just estimating I’d say that’s well over $1 TRILLION dollars in loans to reset in the next 5 years.
Can the FED lower rates to a negative number? Surely that would solve all problems.
cr
ParticipantNice find.
Just estimating I’d say that’s well over $1 TRILLION dollars in loans to reset in the next 5 years.
Can the FED lower rates to a negative number? Surely that would solve all problems.
cr
ParticipantEveryone is so surprised that the banks who bought and sold all the bad loans are now paying the price. There’s even talk that this will extend to car loans and credit card debt.
People are out of money. So what does Wall Street want? More rate cuts…
http://www.cnbc.com/id/21677381/site/14081545
Amazing.
cr
ParticipantEveryone is so surprised that the banks who bought and sold all the bad loans are now paying the price. There’s even talk that this will extend to car loans and credit card debt.
People are out of money. So what does Wall Street want? More rate cuts…
http://www.cnbc.com/id/21677381/site/14081545
Amazing.
cr
ParticipantEveryone is so surprised that the banks who bought and sold all the bad loans are now paying the price. There’s even talk that this will extend to car loans and credit card debt.
People are out of money. So what does Wall Street want? More rate cuts…
http://www.cnbc.com/id/21677381/site/14081545
Amazing.
cr
ParticipantEveryone is so surprised that the banks who bought and sold all the bad loans are now paying the price. There’s even talk that this will extend to car loans and credit card debt.
People are out of money. So what does Wall Street want? More rate cuts…
http://www.cnbc.com/id/21677381/site/14081545
Amazing.
cr
ParticipantI understand the argument of low MM or CD returns vs. inflation, but you have to then ask what the alternative is.
Compared to sitting idle in a 0% checking account 5% isn’t bad. Compared to 10%/yr on stocks it is worse, but there’s normally more risk in that, and in today’s market nothing is guaranteed. My CU has a tenure based 5.75 APY on a 4-month where I just put some money. That’s better than Countrywide.
As far as Everbank, someone else on here had a bad experience with them. JWM, have you had any issues with them?
cr
ParticipantI understand the argument of low MM or CD returns vs. inflation, but you have to then ask what the alternative is.
Compared to sitting idle in a 0% checking account 5% isn’t bad. Compared to 10%/yr on stocks it is worse, but there’s normally more risk in that, and in today’s market nothing is guaranteed. My CU has a tenure based 5.75 APY on a 4-month where I just put some money. That’s better than Countrywide.
As far as Everbank, someone else on here had a bad experience with them. JWM, have you had any issues with them?
-
AuthorPosts
