Forum Replies Created
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March 25, 2009 at 8:51 PM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373053
equalizer
ParticipantThis one is only 4.5%, but has less restrictions:
Focus Bank
Jonesboro, AR* Minimum of 10 debit card purchases (ATM usage does not count toward the 10 purchases)
* Receive your monthly account statement electronically
* Sign in to your online banking account at least onceMarch 25, 2009 at 8:51 PM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373336equalizer
ParticipantThis one is only 4.5%, but has less restrictions:
Focus Bank
Jonesboro, AR* Minimum of 10 debit card purchases (ATM usage does not count toward the 10 purchases)
* Receive your monthly account statement electronically
* Sign in to your online banking account at least onceMarch 25, 2009 at 8:51 PM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373509equalizer
ParticipantThis one is only 4.5%, but has less restrictions:
Focus Bank
Jonesboro, AR* Minimum of 10 debit card purchases (ATM usage does not count toward the 10 purchases)
* Receive your monthly account statement electronically
* Sign in to your online banking account at least onceMarch 25, 2009 at 8:51 PM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373553equalizer
ParticipantThis one is only 4.5%, but has less restrictions:
Focus Bank
Jonesboro, AR* Minimum of 10 debit card purchases (ATM usage does not count toward the 10 purchases)
* Receive your monthly account statement electronically
* Sign in to your online banking account at least onceMarch 25, 2009 at 8:51 PM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373665equalizer
ParticipantThis one is only 4.5%, but has less restrictions:
Focus Bank
Jonesboro, AR* Minimum of 10 debit card purchases (ATM usage does not count toward the 10 purchases)
* Receive your monthly account statement electronically
* Sign in to your online banking account at least onceequalizer
Participant[quote=barnaby33]
We are being so robbed. Bernake could have taken that trillion and offered Americans 4% mortgages and loans. Our economy would be skyrocketing.
Wow, you just don’t get it. What an entitlement mentality. Almost as bad as the robbers on Wall St. Its low interest rates that got us into trouble in the first place. The govt has no business handing out money to any party, neither bankers nor people looking to buy more crap that they can’t afford.
4% is historically far too low a rate to compensate someone for the use of their money for up to 30 years. That is just flat out insane.
Those of you predicting a tide of inflation have been wrong so far, and for the foreseeable future you’ll continue to be wrong, at least with respect to asset prices. Berspankme may end up driving food and fuel prices up, but only in the short term. The deflationary tide has landed. Social mood is darkening and people don’t want to borrow. Once that happens an economy built on selling crap made in 3rd world countries that you don’t need is going to have a hard time recovering, regardless of how low interest rates go.
Josh
[/quote]
Thanks for that ugly truth. Now you are bad guy here, not me!BTW, paypal just sent me a note that most purchases from ebay for next 10 days will get 15% cash back! got get my gold, ammo, oil, moonshine.
see ya.equalizer
Participant[quote=barnaby33]
We are being so robbed. Bernake could have taken that trillion and offered Americans 4% mortgages and loans. Our economy would be skyrocketing.
Wow, you just don’t get it. What an entitlement mentality. Almost as bad as the robbers on Wall St. Its low interest rates that got us into trouble in the first place. The govt has no business handing out money to any party, neither bankers nor people looking to buy more crap that they can’t afford.
4% is historically far too low a rate to compensate someone for the use of their money for up to 30 years. That is just flat out insane.
Those of you predicting a tide of inflation have been wrong so far, and for the foreseeable future you’ll continue to be wrong, at least with respect to asset prices. Berspankme may end up driving food and fuel prices up, but only in the short term. The deflationary tide has landed. Social mood is darkening and people don’t want to borrow. Once that happens an economy built on selling crap made in 3rd world countries that you don’t need is going to have a hard time recovering, regardless of how low interest rates go.
Josh
[/quote]
Thanks for that ugly truth. Now you are bad guy here, not me!BTW, paypal just sent me a note that most purchases from ebay for next 10 days will get 15% cash back! got get my gold, ammo, oil, moonshine.
see ya.equalizer
Participant[quote=barnaby33]
We are being so robbed. Bernake could have taken that trillion and offered Americans 4% mortgages and loans. Our economy would be skyrocketing.
Wow, you just don’t get it. What an entitlement mentality. Almost as bad as the robbers on Wall St. Its low interest rates that got us into trouble in the first place. The govt has no business handing out money to any party, neither bankers nor people looking to buy more crap that they can’t afford.
4% is historically far too low a rate to compensate someone for the use of their money for up to 30 years. That is just flat out insane.
Those of you predicting a tide of inflation have been wrong so far, and for the foreseeable future you’ll continue to be wrong, at least with respect to asset prices. Berspankme may end up driving food and fuel prices up, but only in the short term. The deflationary tide has landed. Social mood is darkening and people don’t want to borrow. Once that happens an economy built on selling crap made in 3rd world countries that you don’t need is going to have a hard time recovering, regardless of how low interest rates go.
Josh
[/quote]
Thanks for that ugly truth. Now you are bad guy here, not me!BTW, paypal just sent me a note that most purchases from ebay for next 10 days will get 15% cash back! got get my gold, ammo, oil, moonshine.
see ya.equalizer
Participant[quote=barnaby33]
We are being so robbed. Bernake could have taken that trillion and offered Americans 4% mortgages and loans. Our economy would be skyrocketing.
Wow, you just don’t get it. What an entitlement mentality. Almost as bad as the robbers on Wall St. Its low interest rates that got us into trouble in the first place. The govt has no business handing out money to any party, neither bankers nor people looking to buy more crap that they can’t afford.
4% is historically far too low a rate to compensate someone for the use of their money for up to 30 years. That is just flat out insane.
Those of you predicting a tide of inflation have been wrong so far, and for the foreseeable future you’ll continue to be wrong, at least with respect to asset prices. Berspankme may end up driving food and fuel prices up, but only in the short term. The deflationary tide has landed. Social mood is darkening and people don’t want to borrow. Once that happens an economy built on selling crap made in 3rd world countries that you don’t need is going to have a hard time recovering, regardless of how low interest rates go.
Josh
[/quote]
Thanks for that ugly truth. Now you are bad guy here, not me!BTW, paypal just sent me a note that most purchases from ebay for next 10 days will get 15% cash back! got get my gold, ammo, oil, moonshine.
see ya.equalizer
Participant[quote=barnaby33]
We are being so robbed. Bernake could have taken that trillion and offered Americans 4% mortgages and loans. Our economy would be skyrocketing.
Wow, you just don’t get it. What an entitlement mentality. Almost as bad as the robbers on Wall St. Its low interest rates that got us into trouble in the first place. The govt has no business handing out money to any party, neither bankers nor people looking to buy more crap that they can’t afford.
4% is historically far too low a rate to compensate someone for the use of their money for up to 30 years. That is just flat out insane.
Those of you predicting a tide of inflation have been wrong so far, and for the foreseeable future you’ll continue to be wrong, at least with respect to asset prices. Berspankme may end up driving food and fuel prices up, but only in the short term. The deflationary tide has landed. Social mood is darkening and people don’t want to borrow. Once that happens an economy built on selling crap made in 3rd world countries that you don’t need is going to have a hard time recovering, regardless of how low interest rates go.
Josh
[/quote]
Thanks for that ugly truth. Now you are bad guy here, not me!BTW, paypal just sent me a note that most purchases from ebay for next 10 days will get 15% cash back! got get my gold, ammo, oil, moonshine.
see ya.equalizer
Participant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook]Jp: Don’t you find it strange that Bernie Madoff did not go to trial, but, rather, took the full weight (150 year sentence) and went straight to prison?
What do you want to bet that, for almost all of these guys (like Allen Stanford, of Stanford Financial), there won’t be a trial at all?
I think if the US government opens up that particular door, there will be a huge backlash with potentially lethal consequences for a lot of those folks involved in the fiasco.
There were AIG employees afraid to go to work because of the potential for violence. There were death threats left on voice mail and email and people actually out in front of the office.
This is going to get ugly, especially as the situation worsens.[/quote]
Alan,
No one, no one, no one ever is to blame.
Certainly not guys working seventy hours a week counting all their commissions.BTW: I’ve steered jp to gold jewelry place, make her forget all about knives.
equalizer
Participant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook]Jp: Don’t you find it strange that Bernie Madoff did not go to trial, but, rather, took the full weight (150 year sentence) and went straight to prison?
What do you want to bet that, for almost all of these guys (like Allen Stanford, of Stanford Financial), there won’t be a trial at all?
I think if the US government opens up that particular door, there will be a huge backlash with potentially lethal consequences for a lot of those folks involved in the fiasco.
There were AIG employees afraid to go to work because of the potential for violence. There were death threats left on voice mail and email and people actually out in front of the office.
This is going to get ugly, especially as the situation worsens.[/quote]
Alan,
No one, no one, no one ever is to blame.
Certainly not guys working seventy hours a week counting all their commissions.BTW: I’ve steered jp to gold jewelry place, make her forget all about knives.
equalizer
Participant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook]Jp: Don’t you find it strange that Bernie Madoff did not go to trial, but, rather, took the full weight (150 year sentence) and went straight to prison?
What do you want to bet that, for almost all of these guys (like Allen Stanford, of Stanford Financial), there won’t be a trial at all?
I think if the US government opens up that particular door, there will be a huge backlash with potentially lethal consequences for a lot of those folks involved in the fiasco.
There were AIG employees afraid to go to work because of the potential for violence. There were death threats left on voice mail and email and people actually out in front of the office.
This is going to get ugly, especially as the situation worsens.[/quote]
Alan,
No one, no one, no one ever is to blame.
Certainly not guys working seventy hours a week counting all their commissions.BTW: I’ve steered jp to gold jewelry place, make her forget all about knives.
equalizer
Participant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook]Jp: Don’t you find it strange that Bernie Madoff did not go to trial, but, rather, took the full weight (150 year sentence) and went straight to prison?
What do you want to bet that, for almost all of these guys (like Allen Stanford, of Stanford Financial), there won’t be a trial at all?
I think if the US government opens up that particular door, there will be a huge backlash with potentially lethal consequences for a lot of those folks involved in the fiasco.
There were AIG employees afraid to go to work because of the potential for violence. There were death threats left on voice mail and email and people actually out in front of the office.
This is going to get ugly, especially as the situation worsens.[/quote]
Alan,
No one, no one, no one ever is to blame.
Certainly not guys working seventy hours a week counting all their commissions.BTW: I’ve steered jp to gold jewelry place, make her forget all about knives.
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