It's obvious that economics isn't your strong point, the more condescending, the more ignorant. Don't know which is more annoying, your arrogance or your ignorance. What strikes even more that you don't simply even bother to read what others write, you just make it up... assume your condescending views your so full of. Yeah, good 'ol Landru.God, I hope not. You really have no idea what you're talking about on this issue, do you? It's all from googling. — Landru Guide Us
Deregulation typically makes banks or financial institutions to compete of market share. Deregulation is one of the things that do get a speculative bubble moving.We already know how the Bush Meltdown happened: deregulation of mortgage lenders (the gutting of Glass-Steagall) plus deregulation of credit default swaps plus falling income due to the income gap resulting in middle class people using their only major asset (their homes) to pay for health care and their kids' college. — Landru Guide Us
My my. Corporate finance isn't one of Landru's strongpoints either. And do note that already established stock companies can issue more stock. It's a convenient way if you can yourself (or the owner) can decide just what kind of "interest rate" they might choose in the way of dividends. They can opt not to pay dividends at hard times. But the competitiveness of financing companies through issuing more stock is of course rubbish according to Landru.The purpose of an IPO is not to obtain investment capital, but for the owners to cash out. Usually a large portion of the IPO capital goes to the founders as part of the deal.
So the notion that a falling market starves out struggling IPOs is simply a fantasy. If you're in a position to go public, capital is not a problem.
In any case, this is absurd. IPOs are a vanishingly de minimus part of stock market transactions even in the boom times. They have no impact on a $17T economy. — Landru Guide Us
Here the Strawman-Landru goes again. What ought I be talking about? Ah... I got it: the ridiculous argument of Welfare queens and Clinton being the reason! That's what you think anybody saying anything other than exactly your view will be talking about.The point is SSU's analysis of the Bush Meltdown is rubbish. If conservatives hadn't prevented regulation of tabletop mortgage lenders and CDSs, if they hadn't gutted Glass-Steagall, if they hadn't given the rich the biggest transfer of wealth in US history with the Bush tax cut, the Meltdown wouldn't have happened. — Landru Guide Us
You don't explain at all why my argument is rubbish — ssu
Blissfully unaware? Landru, old man, you seem to totally forget our discussion years ago. But oh wait, you came to the site in 2010, not when were discussion in the old PF about the crisis.You apparently were blissfully unaware of CDSs and their role in the Bush Meltdown, until I pointed it out to you. — Landru Guide Us
China isn't as irrelevant as you may think. China has an effect on the global market today. Long are the time since the Chinese economy was the size of the Netherlands. Yes, the Chinese statistic are exxaggerated, but there has happened a real economy growth sprint on a historical level in China.This sell-off is an odd one in that it seems to be driven by good news (the oil price collapse) and irrelevant news (the China stock market losses). — Landru Guide Us
That Manhattan Project you have wished will not happen. Sorry to say that, even if it would mean good things to the whole World.I suspect most of this money went into T-bills, which is good for the country, especially if we can oust the GOP congress and start investing in infrastructure on low rate bonds. — Landru Guide Us
There's a huge number of shorts on oil, so basically it's "the casino" that is responsible for the huge drop.Obviously the current economic problems are directly related to oil prices dropping, which comes from the US overproducing shale, right? — discoii
The Saudis are, apparently, making enough money on oil to take the risk of lowering the price by pumping away, partly to drive US wells out of production (or producers out of business) and partly to keep Iran from getting too much income from its oil. In the US, leveraged operations can't stand a large fall in profitability, because they have a lot of loan payments to make. They go broke. Production is reduced. — Bitter Crank
Well over 90% of any commodities like oil are just "paper" transactions, no physical commodity changes hands, the casino play. And why would the rich suffer? They only suffer if they have to sell their stock cheap. Who suffer are the countries that desperately need oil income. The actual seller and buyers of a commodity are just price takers. Price volatility comes from the shorting of price and other casino games.The handful of rich people that own the oil companies also, in turn, use it to buy up ownership of companies in the investment markets, including the stock market. Whenever oil prices drop, a major section of the rich suffer from a profitability squeeze, and as such, start selling their shares in the market. And this one major explanation for the current market drop. — discoii
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