Quote from nitro:
The books on the tragedy that is the financial system are coming out fast and furious to the point where I can't keep up with them anymore. But I think this one is worth adding to the list:
Confidence Game: How a Hedge Fund Manager Called Wall Street's Bluff (Hardcover)
~ Christine S. Richard
http://www.amazon.com/Confidence-Ga...=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1274981569&sr=8-1
One thing that made me go almost ballistic when I read it is this part from the introduction:
"...How was it that MBIA could write insurance on hundreds of billions of dollars of debt and yet tell its investors that it guaranteed only bonds on which it expected to pay no claims? In an article for Bloomberg Markets magazine called "The Insurance Charade," Darrell Preston and I exposed part of the secret by looking into various public projects that weren't supposed to be obligations of the taxpayer. Yet when the insured bonds issued to finance these projects threatened to default , taxpayers were called on to cover those losses. MBIA had a nearly perfect track record in the municipal bond market because it wasn't the real insurer of debt: Taxpayers were..."
Guess what, the consumer and the public in general are on the hooks in situations that we don't expect to be. Take for example the BP oil spill. People are trying to figure out how to punish BP for their negligence. So they say, ok, we will not buy BP gasoline. Then they realize, wait, that is some small business owner that we are screwing. Scratch that. Wait, I know, we will sell BP stock and punish them. Stock is up 5% today and it will be back up to previous levels soon. Ugh. Wait, we will fine them billions of dollars, we will in addition require them to clean every last drop of oil from the area. We will sue them for the lost revenue to shrimpers. Hmm, maybe we are getting somewhere?
Guess what, BP and the rest of their ilk will will pass those costs on to the people that buy their oil, and we will pay like it or not. Ultimately we are on the hook for just about any asinine mistake that corporations make, especially ones in a oligopoly (I wonder if that should have been spelled oilgopoly) market so crucial to the every day functioning of society.
If I never had to deal with a bank or an oil company again in my life...Give me a fusion reactor. Give me the ability to to pay my bills without a bank of parasites.
great post, nitro.