Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
ucodegen
Participant“I am no fan of Wagoners, but I have to ask the geniuses behind the bank bailouts: When are you going to ask the TARP and bailout recipients to step down? Ken Lewis being asked to step aside after many years of running BofA ? How about Blankfein? Pandit? And the rest of the TARP recipients?”
Evidently people have a short memory. The TARP was given to both healthy and ill banks at the same time so as to make it less likely that there would be a ‘run on the bank’. This also makes it harder to tell the healthy from the sick.. Because of the restrictions that were added on after the fact, many of the good banks are now trying to pay the money back. As for BofA, they were going to step out of the purchase of Merrill Lynch, but were forced to the alter via a $20Bil shotgun (otherwise BofA would not do the deal – I am amazed about how many people get this one part wrong…. I wonder if BofA now thinks $20Bil was enough to complete it). BofA is looking at starting repayments as early as this April, possibly paying it all back by fy2010/2011…. Can GM/Chrysler do the same?
ucodegen
Participant“I am no fan of Wagoners, but I have to ask the geniuses behind the bank bailouts: When are you going to ask the TARP and bailout recipients to step down? Ken Lewis being asked to step aside after many years of running BofA ? How about Blankfein? Pandit? And the rest of the TARP recipients?”
Evidently people have a short memory. The TARP was given to both healthy and ill banks at the same time so as to make it less likely that there would be a ‘run on the bank’. This also makes it harder to tell the healthy from the sick.. Because of the restrictions that were added on after the fact, many of the good banks are now trying to pay the money back. As for BofA, they were going to step out of the purchase of Merrill Lynch, but were forced to the alter via a $20Bil shotgun (otherwise BofA would not do the deal – I am amazed about how many people get this one part wrong…. I wonder if BofA now thinks $20Bil was enough to complete it). BofA is looking at starting repayments as early as this April, possibly paying it all back by fy2010/2011…. Can GM/Chrysler do the same?
March 26, 2009 at 8:22 AM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373213ucodegen
ParticipantWhat are the fees on the use of those Debit Cards?? Considering the number of transactions they want as a minimum, I suspect they are planning to recoup the interest in debit card fees..
http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/Banking/Betterbanking/P86737.asp
March 26, 2009 at 8:22 AM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373495ucodegen
ParticipantWhat are the fees on the use of those Debit Cards?? Considering the number of transactions they want as a minimum, I suspect they are planning to recoup the interest in debit card fees..
http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/Banking/Betterbanking/P86737.asp
March 26, 2009 at 8:22 AM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373667ucodegen
ParticipantWhat are the fees on the use of those Debit Cards?? Considering the number of transactions they want as a minimum, I suspect they are planning to recoup the interest in debit card fees..
http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/Banking/Betterbanking/P86737.asp
March 26, 2009 at 8:22 AM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373710ucodegen
ParticipantWhat are the fees on the use of those Debit Cards?? Considering the number of transactions they want as a minimum, I suspect they are planning to recoup the interest in debit card fees..
http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/Banking/Betterbanking/P86737.asp
March 26, 2009 at 8:22 AM in reply to: REWARDChecking accounts often had a top yield of 6.01 percent. Currently, the top yield is 5.15 percent. #373826ucodegen
ParticipantWhat are the fees on the use of those Debit Cards?? Considering the number of transactions they want as a minimum, I suspect they are planning to recoup the interest in debit card fees..
http://moneycentral.msn.com/content/Banking/Betterbanking/P86737.asp
ucodegen
ParticipantWhile I don’t want to promote socialism or argue against the lesson of the story, I would think that in a college class, some of the students would start to take leadership roles and would put peer pressure on all to study.
This falls apart though because it will take just a few to bring everyone down. You are trusting in someone’s altruism. In the class, hard work would only return about 1/30th of the normal return in grade. Besides, to be effective ‘coercers’, you would have to be the big ‘brawny’ type.. which tends to be the ones not known for studying (pass the brewsky types)
ucodegen
ParticipantWhile I don’t want to promote socialism or argue against the lesson of the story, I would think that in a college class, some of the students would start to take leadership roles and would put peer pressure on all to study.
This falls apart though because it will take just a few to bring everyone down. You are trusting in someone’s altruism. In the class, hard work would only return about 1/30th of the normal return in grade. Besides, to be effective ‘coercers’, you would have to be the big ‘brawny’ type.. which tends to be the ones not known for studying (pass the brewsky types)
ucodegen
ParticipantWhile I don’t want to promote socialism or argue against the lesson of the story, I would think that in a college class, some of the students would start to take leadership roles and would put peer pressure on all to study.
This falls apart though because it will take just a few to bring everyone down. You are trusting in someone’s altruism. In the class, hard work would only return about 1/30th of the normal return in grade. Besides, to be effective ‘coercers’, you would have to be the big ‘brawny’ type.. which tends to be the ones not known for studying (pass the brewsky types)
ucodegen
ParticipantWhile I don’t want to promote socialism or argue against the lesson of the story, I would think that in a college class, some of the students would start to take leadership roles and would put peer pressure on all to study.
This falls apart though because it will take just a few to bring everyone down. You are trusting in someone’s altruism. In the class, hard work would only return about 1/30th of the normal return in grade. Besides, to be effective ‘coercers’, you would have to be the big ‘brawny’ type.. which tends to be the ones not known for studying (pass the brewsky types)
ucodegen
ParticipantWhile I don’t want to promote socialism or argue against the lesson of the story, I would think that in a college class, some of the students would start to take leadership roles and would put peer pressure on all to study.
This falls apart though because it will take just a few to bring everyone down. You are trusting in someone’s altruism. In the class, hard work would only return about 1/30th of the normal return in grade. Besides, to be effective ‘coercers’, you would have to be the big ‘brawny’ type.. which tends to be the ones not known for studying (pass the brewsky types)
March 17, 2009 at 12:12 PM in reply to: Rental prices in North County…going down…not the way I see it. #367857ucodegen
ParticipantLooking in the newspaper is a good idea…i didn’t realize that they still printed those relics of history. 😉
Try the soft copy version…
http://classifieds.signonsandiego.com/March 17, 2009 at 12:12 PM in reply to: Rental prices in North County…going down…not the way I see it. #368149ucodegen
ParticipantLooking in the newspaper is a good idea…i didn’t realize that they still printed those relics of history. 😉
Try the soft copy version…
http://classifieds.signonsandiego.com/ -
AuthorPosts
