Make no mistake about it - it was Wall Street that caused this debacle.
Yeah the same geniuses that think up great bottom-line enhancements like paying 3% per year to hold your money and charging 10% every time you take a $20 bill out of an ATM.
Yeah, inserting those risky loans into securitised investments and pawning them off globally - with the ratings stamp of approval, has bit them more than we yet know.
It must be really ugly to lose so much money - so fast and it truly is cascading out of control.
But lets say globally $1 Trillion is almost certain to end up in the wastebasket. You hope and pray value will return - but doesn't soon or even after postponement.
BUT all the theatrics allow for you to - since August - unwind with all the pumping of liquidity so you salvage say 1/4 of that.
Then Big Ben and company let the big boys in on these induced moves so they can load up and leverage off each and every one - to collect another say 1/4. Then they save another 1/4 say from write-downs. . .and the rest the shareholders eat!
In two to three years all that money lost will be made up through more think tank ingeniusness, but come on who is getting in the way of that tank and getting really hurt (you and me)?
Must be nice to not have to pay for your mistakes
pS