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maybe someone could actually answer my question...except for you padthaiforlunch
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The Treas has spent Trillions trying to avoid the unavoidable. The course of action should have been to try to steer the economy in for a soft crash landing, (like on the Hudson River) instead... when things do hit bottom we will have spent trillions that could have been better employed later in rebuilding, as opposed to pissing it away propping up defunct companies... too late now, the horses have left the barn. Good money squandered.
Case in point, the current Bank of America situation. They agreed to buy Merrill Lynch Sept 15th, before the fan hit the excrement, for 50 Bil; yep fifty billion us dollars. Now they are so alarmed at the state of the portfolio and downside risks due to the mtg backed securities, and the latest qtrly loss of ML of 15.3 bil, that they are going back to Treas Dept for another 20 Bil in TARP money. This will not be the end of it, and by the time it is over, and yes the us gov't has now agreed to shoulder more of the ML losses... and take on more equity of B of A in exchange, they will have ingested more than the total book value of ML and B of A together... talk about stupid moves. They could have sold the assets off at a huge discount, let the free mkt value these assets and been done with it... But no, the gov't wanted to *AVOID PAIN*. We will all have more pain in the long run as a result, IMO.
Did you say precious metals outperforming... hmmm. Better get some; and if you have some, better get more... Deflation may drive prices of metals lower in the near term and if so, load up, because rampant inflation is an absolute must in the future. Just my thoughts and course of action.
Precious metals
Oh, and that rampant inflation, if it happens, will desimate the portfolio values of most ins companies that are holdiing large fixed income inv. Paper is devalued at times of high inflation; hard assets inflate with the devalued currency; hence commodities and metals.
Thanks insuranceexec...speaking of speech, is an agent allowed to explain in a speech (not a sale) that we have a Guarantee Association similar to the FDIC? I can't see why not as it is fact.
You can if you loan 120% of value to people with no income.Newark is a dump. You cannot giveaway homes to the masses.
What the Insurance Commissioner can say and what an agent can say legally are two different things.
You can if you loan 120% of value to people with no income.
Rick
The issue is, will just the weak companies be the ones to fail...? One or more of those cos that we think are golden could turn out to be weak... (ala AIG).
Yes, Ins cos like everyone else do forget and let their guard down in time. Things have been so good for so long, that you have execs in these companies that have known nothing else but Bull Mkt....> straight up...>.
My concern is that there are a few very large ins cos that will hit the wall and there will be so much carnage that the survivors won't be able to clean up the scraps... It won't take many to have lost $$$ in an ins co investment to ruin the integrity of the industry. I mean really, lets face it, AIG is insolvent. If the Treas hadn't stepped in and propped them up that would have done it right there... So my concern is that will be a lesser company, no too big to fail, that will start the domino effect, and a State guarantee fund will be useless if the spillage is too great. No comparison to FDIC coverage with the full faith and credit of Uncle Sugar behind them. Hope I am way off here.
Please remember that the AIG holding company is in trouble but the insurance company is solvent.
Also, a recent article showed that the industry has $281,000,000,000 over and above that needed to fulfill its obligations. The insurance industry is strong.