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August 15, 2007 at 8:03 AM in reply to: Federal Reserve poised to pump more money into markets #75641August 15, 2007 at 8:03 AM in reply to: Federal Reserve poised to pump more money into markets #75643kewpParticipant
My wallet just got lighter!
Wierd!
kewpParticipantAs much as I dislike Cramer, I don’t think he’s advocating for *everyone* to do this. Just those that purchased in the last few years in the bubble-zones and are going to be underwater.
I happen to agree with him. For many people, it makes much more sense to just toss the keys. Especially if they are new owners and have little emotional involvement in the house.
Remember, these are people that had no business being buying in the first place.
kewpParticipantAs much as I dislike Cramer, I don’t think he’s advocating for *everyone* to do this. Just those that purchased in the last few years in the bubble-zones and are going to be underwater.
I happen to agree with him. For many people, it makes much more sense to just toss the keys. Especially if they are new owners and have little emotional involvement in the house.
Remember, these are people that had no business being buying in the first place.
kewpParticipantAs much as I dislike Cramer, I don’t think he’s advocating for *everyone* to do this. Just those that purchased in the last few years in the bubble-zones and are going to be underwater.
I happen to agree with him. For many people, it makes much more sense to just toss the keys. Especially if they are new owners and have little emotional involvement in the house.
Remember, these are people that had no business being buying in the first place.
August 12, 2007 at 7:31 PM in reply to: Can someone explain to me what the FED did this week? #74008kewpParticipantPatientrenter,
Thanks for the clarification, I’m stuck in the woods in SJ at the moment visiting family and slumming on dial-up. So I haven’t been able to get the details that I would like.
So I’ll have to admit I don’t understand what the banks are getting out of this, other than a stay of execution, so to speak.
August 12, 2007 at 7:31 PM in reply to: Can someone explain to me what the FED did this week? #74128kewpParticipantPatientrenter,
Thanks for the clarification, I’m stuck in the woods in SJ at the moment visiting family and slumming on dial-up. So I haven’t been able to get the details that I would like.
So I’ll have to admit I don’t understand what the banks are getting out of this, other than a stay of execution, so to speak.
August 12, 2007 at 7:31 PM in reply to: Can someone explain to me what the FED did this week? #74134kewpParticipantPatientrenter,
Thanks for the clarification, I’m stuck in the woods in SJ at the moment visiting family and slumming on dial-up. So I haven’t been able to get the details that I would like.
So I’ll have to admit I don’t understand what the banks are getting out of this, other than a stay of execution, so to speak.
August 12, 2007 at 5:32 PM in reply to: Can someone explain to me what the FED did this week? #73960kewpParticipantFrom what I understand (kinda out of the loop at the moment) the Fed did two big things this week.
1. Open the discount window.
2. Buy up many billion dollars of mortgage securities.
Re: point 1, this is what Cramer was ranted about recently. Again, from my understanding, this is creating special short-term loans to banks at very low rates. I assume this is to get some liquidity into over-leveraged banks to keep them from failing.
Re: point 2, this is more interesting (IMHO). Considering that a mortage is like an IOU, a CDO is just a big bag of IOU’s. And since every IOU has some risk associated with it, they are graded and stuffed into bags of supposedly similarly risky loans and then sold to investors.
Now, the problem that is surfacing, is that apparently these valuations are turning out to be largely worthless. Ergo, investors don’t want to touch even highly-rated mortage securities now, let alone the crap (subprime) ones. At least until they can be re-graded to something that more resembles reality.
At this point, Enter the Fed. In what I think is an unprecedented move, the Fed just went in and bought up a big chunk of the highest-risk (subprime) loans. They claim this was done with ‘reserve’ currency, which I think is BS. I’m sure they just threw more coal into the boiler that powers the printing presses.
The short-term effects of this remain to be seen. They may have averted a panic (no way to know, however) or may incite one, as this is a clear indicator that the secondary mortgage market is becoming insolvent.
The long-effects of this is that all of our wallets and saving accounts just got a little bit lighter, as the new dollars erode the value of the existing ones.
August 12, 2007 at 5:32 PM in reply to: Can someone explain to me what the FED did this week? #74081kewpParticipantFrom what I understand (kinda out of the loop at the moment) the Fed did two big things this week.
1. Open the discount window.
2. Buy up many billion dollars of mortgage securities.
Re: point 1, this is what Cramer was ranted about recently. Again, from my understanding, this is creating special short-term loans to banks at very low rates. I assume this is to get some liquidity into over-leveraged banks to keep them from failing.
Re: point 2, this is more interesting (IMHO). Considering that a mortage is like an IOU, a CDO is just a big bag of IOU’s. And since every IOU has some risk associated with it, they are graded and stuffed into bags of supposedly similarly risky loans and then sold to investors.
Now, the problem that is surfacing, is that apparently these valuations are turning out to be largely worthless. Ergo, investors don’t want to touch even highly-rated mortage securities now, let alone the crap (subprime) ones. At least until they can be re-graded to something that more resembles reality.
At this point, Enter the Fed. In what I think is an unprecedented move, the Fed just went in and bought up a big chunk of the highest-risk (subprime) loans. They claim this was done with ‘reserve’ currency, which I think is BS. I’m sure they just threw more coal into the boiler that powers the printing presses.
The short-term effects of this remain to be seen. They may have averted a panic (no way to know, however) or may incite one, as this is a clear indicator that the secondary mortgage market is becoming insolvent.
The long-effects of this is that all of our wallets and saving accounts just got a little bit lighter, as the new dollars erode the value of the existing ones.
August 12, 2007 at 5:32 PM in reply to: Can someone explain to me what the FED did this week? #74087kewpParticipantFrom what I understand (kinda out of the loop at the moment) the Fed did two big things this week.
1. Open the discount window.
2. Buy up many billion dollars of mortgage securities.
Re: point 1, this is what Cramer was ranted about recently. Again, from my understanding, this is creating special short-term loans to banks at very low rates. I assume this is to get some liquidity into over-leveraged banks to keep them from failing.
Re: point 2, this is more interesting (IMHO). Considering that a mortage is like an IOU, a CDO is just a big bag of IOU’s. And since every IOU has some risk associated with it, they are graded and stuffed into bags of supposedly similarly risky loans and then sold to investors.
Now, the problem that is surfacing, is that apparently these valuations are turning out to be largely worthless. Ergo, investors don’t want to touch even highly-rated mortage securities now, let alone the crap (subprime) ones. At least until they can be re-graded to something that more resembles reality.
At this point, Enter the Fed. In what I think is an unprecedented move, the Fed just went in and bought up a big chunk of the highest-risk (subprime) loans. They claim this was done with ‘reserve’ currency, which I think is BS. I’m sure they just threw more coal into the boiler that powers the printing presses.
The short-term effects of this remain to be seen. They may have averted a panic (no way to know, however) or may incite one, as this is a clear indicator that the secondary mortgage market is becoming insolvent.
The long-effects of this is that all of our wallets and saving accounts just got a little bit lighter, as the new dollars erode the value of the existing ones.
kewpParticipantHave the fundamentals changed at all in 8 months? Nope. I can’t explain this, except to say that it appears tech is kicking back lately and creating yet another bubble.
Lots of folks, myself included, think we are in the midsts of a Web 2.0 bubble. Should end the same as the last one.
In the interim, there is money to made buying/selling on the way up and shorting on the way down.
kewpParticipantHave the fundamentals changed at all in 8 months? Nope. I can’t explain this, except to say that it appears tech is kicking back lately and creating yet another bubble.
Lots of folks, myself included, think we are in the midsts of a Web 2.0 bubble. Should end the same as the last one.
In the interim, there is money to made buying/selling on the way up and shorting on the way down.
kewpParticipantHave the fundamentals changed at all in 8 months? Nope. I can’t explain this, except to say that it appears tech is kicking back lately and creating yet another bubble.
Lots of folks, myself included, think we are in the midsts of a Web 2.0 bubble. Should end the same as the last one.
In the interim, there is money to made buying/selling on the way up and shorting on the way down.
kewpParticipantHave you considered moving within easy commuting distance to your place of employment? I.e., walking or biking, to hedge against rise oil prices?
Have you diversified your portfolio into precious metals, foreign currency baskets and commodities funds? To hedge against inflation?
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