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gandalf
ParticipantYou’re correct.
In the early 1990’s, I worked through the RTC cleanup as an analyst on a mortgage bond trading desk, whole loan securitization, pouring over pools of mortgages, working with underwriters, analyzing characteristics of the underlying debt instruments so as to optimize the return on the securitization process for the bank.
The quality of debt in circulation now is easily 3-5 times worse, and I suspect that’s a conservative estimate. If total losses end up in the range of $1-2T, I believe that puts us about 30% of the way through the write-downs. Many more failures on the way, major institutions beyond Bear and IndyMac.
Also, I would suggest that the impact of today’s crisis has spread far beyond subprime and the secondary mortgage market. The larger market for credit has become extremely tight, which exerts further downward pressure on the economy just as we are entering into a fairly serious business cycle correction / contraction.
On top of this, we’re going to have to cut spending at the state and local levels — again, just as we’re entering into a contraction. The federal side is in a bind as well, walking the monetary tightrope between stagant growth and inflation. Things are precarious right now, and I’m quite concerned.
gandalf
ParticipantYou’re correct.
In the early 1990’s, I worked through the RTC cleanup as an analyst on a mortgage bond trading desk, whole loan securitization, pouring over pools of mortgages, working with underwriters, analyzing characteristics of the underlying debt instruments so as to optimize the return on the securitization process for the bank.
The quality of debt in circulation now is easily 3-5 times worse, and I suspect that’s a conservative estimate. If total losses end up in the range of $1-2T, I believe that puts us about 30% of the way through the write-downs. Many more failures on the way, major institutions beyond Bear and IndyMac.
Also, I would suggest that the impact of today’s crisis has spread far beyond subprime and the secondary mortgage market. The larger market for credit has become extremely tight, which exerts further downward pressure on the economy just as we are entering into a fairly serious business cycle correction / contraction.
On top of this, we’re going to have to cut spending at the state and local levels — again, just as we’re entering into a contraction. The federal side is in a bind as well, walking the monetary tightrope between stagant growth and inflation. Things are precarious right now, and I’m quite concerned.
gandalf
ParticipantYou’re correct.
In the early 1990’s, I worked through the RTC cleanup as an analyst on a mortgage bond trading desk, whole loan securitization, pouring over pools of mortgages, working with underwriters, analyzing characteristics of the underlying debt instruments so as to optimize the return on the securitization process for the bank.
The quality of debt in circulation now is easily 3-5 times worse, and I suspect that’s a conservative estimate. If total losses end up in the range of $1-2T, I believe that puts us about 30% of the way through the write-downs. Many more failures on the way, major institutions beyond Bear and IndyMac.
Also, I would suggest that the impact of today’s crisis has spread far beyond subprime and the secondary mortgage market. The larger market for credit has become extremely tight, which exerts further downward pressure on the economy just as we are entering into a fairly serious business cycle correction / contraction.
On top of this, we’re going to have to cut spending at the state and local levels — again, just as we’re entering into a contraction. The federal side is in a bind as well, walking the monetary tightrope between stagant growth and inflation. Things are precarious right now, and I’m quite concerned.
gandalf
ParticipantYou’re correct.
In the early 1990’s, I worked through the RTC cleanup as an analyst on a mortgage bond trading desk, whole loan securitization, pouring over pools of mortgages, working with underwriters, analyzing characteristics of the underlying debt instruments so as to optimize the return on the securitization process for the bank.
The quality of debt in circulation now is easily 3-5 times worse, and I suspect that’s a conservative estimate. If total losses end up in the range of $1-2T, I believe that puts us about 30% of the way through the write-downs. Many more failures on the way, major institutions beyond Bear and IndyMac.
Also, I would suggest that the impact of today’s crisis has spread far beyond subprime and the secondary mortgage market. The larger market for credit has become extremely tight, which exerts further downward pressure on the economy just as we are entering into a fairly serious business cycle correction / contraction.
On top of this, we’re going to have to cut spending at the state and local levels — again, just as we’re entering into a contraction. The federal side is in a bind as well, walking the monetary tightrope between stagant growth and inflation. Things are precarious right now, and I’m quite concerned.
August 23, 2008 at 10:24 PM in reply to: Off Topic: Obama Sued in Philly Fed Court by Dem Activist #260896gandalf
ParticipantObama is a Senator, on the Foreign Relations Committee, and a candidate for President. His life has been investigated in minute detail, rest assured.
Serious times right now.
This topic is such crap.
August 23, 2008 at 10:24 PM in reply to: Off Topic: Obama Sued in Philly Fed Court by Dem Activist #261096gandalf
ParticipantObama is a Senator, on the Foreign Relations Committee, and a candidate for President. His life has been investigated in minute detail, rest assured.
Serious times right now.
This topic is such crap.
August 23, 2008 at 10:24 PM in reply to: Off Topic: Obama Sued in Philly Fed Court by Dem Activist #261105gandalf
ParticipantObama is a Senator, on the Foreign Relations Committee, and a candidate for President. His life has been investigated in minute detail, rest assured.
Serious times right now.
This topic is such crap.
August 23, 2008 at 10:24 PM in reply to: Off Topic: Obama Sued in Philly Fed Court by Dem Activist #261155gandalf
ParticipantObama is a Senator, on the Foreign Relations Committee, and a candidate for President. His life has been investigated in minute detail, rest assured.
Serious times right now.
This topic is such crap.
August 23, 2008 at 10:24 PM in reply to: Off Topic: Obama Sued in Philly Fed Court by Dem Activist #261195gandalf
ParticipantObama is a Senator, on the Foreign Relations Committee, and a candidate for President. His life has been investigated in minute detail, rest assured.
Serious times right now.
This topic is such crap.
gandalf
ParticipantThe arguments in the article aren’t really the point. Susan Eisenhower is ‘establishment’ GOP. Her departure is another bad sign for the party.
I’ve left and I’m not going back. I’m voting for Obama come November. Obama’s a pragmatic centrist, more conservative on foreign policy and fiscal issues than today’s republicans. Biden’s a respected expert on foreign policy.
I used to like McCain but I don’t anymore. He seems desperate, willing to say anything to win. Also, he’s very old and I think he’s losing his mind.
gandalf
ParticipantThe arguments in the article aren’t really the point. Susan Eisenhower is ‘establishment’ GOP. Her departure is another bad sign for the party.
I’ve left and I’m not going back. I’m voting for Obama come November. Obama’s a pragmatic centrist, more conservative on foreign policy and fiscal issues than today’s republicans. Biden’s a respected expert on foreign policy.
I used to like McCain but I don’t anymore. He seems desperate, willing to say anything to win. Also, he’s very old and I think he’s losing his mind.
gandalf
ParticipantThe arguments in the article aren’t really the point. Susan Eisenhower is ‘establishment’ GOP. Her departure is another bad sign for the party.
I’ve left and I’m not going back. I’m voting for Obama come November. Obama’s a pragmatic centrist, more conservative on foreign policy and fiscal issues than today’s republicans. Biden’s a respected expert on foreign policy.
I used to like McCain but I don’t anymore. He seems desperate, willing to say anything to win. Also, he’s very old and I think he’s losing his mind.
gandalf
ParticipantThe arguments in the article aren’t really the point. Susan Eisenhower is ‘establishment’ GOP. Her departure is another bad sign for the party.
I’ve left and I’m not going back. I’m voting for Obama come November. Obama’s a pragmatic centrist, more conservative on foreign policy and fiscal issues than today’s republicans. Biden’s a respected expert on foreign policy.
I used to like McCain but I don’t anymore. He seems desperate, willing to say anything to win. Also, he’s very old and I think he’s losing his mind.
gandalf
ParticipantThe arguments in the article aren’t really the point. Susan Eisenhower is ‘establishment’ GOP. Her departure is another bad sign for the party.
I’ve left and I’m not going back. I’m voting for Obama come November. Obama’s a pragmatic centrist, more conservative on foreign policy and fiscal issues than today’s republicans. Biden’s a respected expert on foreign policy.
I used to like McCain but I don’t anymore. He seems desperate, willing to say anything to win. Also, he’s very old and I think he’s losing his mind.
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