Pimco’s Bill Gross: USA is Giant ‘Ponzi’ Scheme

Quote from schizo:

Have you not heard of "Great Depression"?

And here comes one of the biggest fallacies in terms of Bernanke's logic. He is supposedly one of the preeminent thinkers when it comes to the reasons behind the Great Depression. Just because he has thought it about a lot does not mean that he has come to the correct conclusion regarding cause and effect. There are many many many supposedly "highly intelligent" people that come to wrong conclusions. In fact, given Bernanke's recent history of statements regarding the US economy, I would come to the conclusion that he has no idea what he is talking about. We are placing the entire future of the US in some person's hands who has no "stop-loss" in place and firmly believes he is "right". It is a recipe for disaster. We are going down in flames - it is just a matter of when the margin call comes.
 
Quote from sprstpd:

And here comes one of the biggest fallacies in terms of Bernanke's logic. He is supposedly one of the preeminent thinkers when it comes to the reasons behind the Great Depression. Just because he has thought it about a lot does not mean that he has come to the correct conclusion regarding cause and effect. There are many many many supposedly "highly intelligent" people that come to wrong conclusions. In fact, given Bernanke's recent history of statements regarding the US economy, I would come to the conclusion that he has no idea what he is talking about. We are placing the entire future of the US in some person's hands who has no "stop-loss" in place and firmly believes he is "right". It is a recipe for disaster. We are going down in flames - it is just a matter of when the margin call comes.

The problem with this and all the previous titular heads of The Printing Press Inc. is that they're forgetful of their given duties. Their job description describes them as regulators, not firemen. And yet they always play the role of firemen and not regulators. Had they regulated properly in the first place, there wouldn't have been the inferno we have come to know as Great Recession.
 
Quote from schizo:
Does it make any difference when the Fed is the largest holder of U.S. debt? Fed is the US Treasury for all I know.

(Source: http://www.dailypaul.com/156292/federal-reserve-passes-china-now-biggest-holder-of-us-debt)
Well, this is plain silly... Suggesting the Fed and the Treasury are one and the same just because the Fed owns a lot of Treasuries is rather absurd.
Erm, do you happen to know the size of Lehman balance sheet in 2008 (with or without Repo 105, which is peanuts)? What about Bear and Merrill? Three of the five investment banks are gone. What's that in terms of failure rate? 60%? Point is that Wall Street actually paid a high price for the crisis, no matter which objective measure you use. It isn't anywhere near enough and, in some cases, it actually resulted in more concentration, which is a very bad thing.
One important point not to be overlooked: Fed Names Recipients of $3.3 Trillion in Crisis Aid

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-...llion-of-aid-during-u-s-financial-crisis.html

See for yourself who got the major windfall of the Fed's assistance.
Well, it's not like this "crisis aid" was only offered to the large institutions. Sure, they took advantage of it disproportionately, since they had ginormous balance sheets to fund. All this means is that the industry is concentrated to an unhealthy degree, but I have already agreed with you on that.
 
Quote from Martinghoul:


Erm, do you happen to know the size of Lehman balance sheet in 2008 (with or without Repo 105, which is peanuts)? What about Bear and Merrill? Three of the five investment banks are gone. What's that in terms of failure rate? 60%? Point is that Wall Street actually paid a high price for the crisis, no matter which objective measure you use. It isn't anywhere near enough and, in some cases, it actually resulted in more concentration, which is a very bad thing.

Per Lehman, you mean the "cooked" balance sheet. I can't believe you're trying to steer me down that path.

Anyway, yes, concentration of power is very bad. But only within the context of "too big to fail". Had Lehman, Merrill and Bear been broken up into baby Lehman and baby Merrill, etc. under antitrust, we might have fared better IMHO.

Did Wall Street pay a high price for the crisis as you claim? Well, their stock prices tell me otherwise.
 
Quote from schizo:
Per Lehman, you mean the "cooked" balance sheet. I can't believe you're trying to steer me down that path.
I am not trying to steer you down anything... I suggested that you look at the bank failures on and off Wall Street by comparing the assets of the failed banks in these two groups. For a broad comparison, $50bn or so in Repo 105 is irrelevant (as I have pointed out earlier). Anyways, according to the TARP report (as of Dec 2009), total assets of failed banks stood arnd $473bn. For contrast, official Lehman assets stood at $639bn, when it failed.
Anyway, yes, concentration of power is very bad. But only within the context of "too big to fail". Had Lehman, Merrill and Bear been broken up into baby Lehman and baby Merrill, etc. under antitrust, we might have fared better IMHO.
100% agree... However, that's one of 'em "woulda, shoulda, coulda" things, innit?
Did Wall Street pay a high price for the crisis as you claim? Well, their stock prices tell me otherwise.
Whose stock prices? LEH, BSC? Or maybe C and BAC?

My point isn't that the price paid was enough or that they didn't deserve it. I am saying that objectively large banks and investment banks specifically, paid more than many others. Should they have paid more and should they be broken up? Hell, yeah, but that doesn't change the facts.
 
Quote from Martinghoul:

I all for breaking up TBTF banks. As to the Fed being made up of Wall Street firms (more or less), that's a rather otherworldly statement.

You noticed? There's two good reasons for this... Firstly, I can offer substance upon request and provided there's a meaningful discussion. Secondly, I have gone through this so many times already in other, older threads, I can't be bovvered to repeat the same thing over and over again without making sure that the discussion is meaningful.

I respect contributions on other threads... which I monitor for trading reasons but do not contribute.

but you seem to be a FED apologist...
it says on the FED website the FED is owned by the regional FedReserved banks.

So owns the regional federal reserve banks?

its pretty clear to me the fed is reserve system is not publically traded.
its not owned by the govt

We can only guess... but its clear it must be at least part goldman and part JPM right?

What percent do they own?

Who else?
 
Quote from Scataphagos:

Noble, but sad.
Just posted an example that a Parent Offers Body Parts To Pay Off Child's $200,000 Student Loans whereas governments are involved in giant multi-trillion dollars ponzi schemes.

Why not governments donate $1 million to each and every citizen instead of continuing giant ponzi schemes
 
Quote from jem:
I respect contributions on other threads... which I monitor for trading reasons but do not contribute.

but you seem to be a FED apologist...
it says on the FED website the FED is owned by the regional FedReserved banks.

So owns the regional federal reserve banks?

its pretty clear to me the fed is reserve system is not publically traded.
its not owned by the govt

We can only guess... but its clear it must be at least part goldman and part JPM right?

What percent do they own?

Who else?
Oh no, we're not having this discussion again, are we? We're not gonna be discussing the Rothschilds and Alien Brtiney next, are we?
 
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