Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#17
![]()
posted to alt.sailing.asa
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Frank Boettcher wrote:
*And it didn't help that the lowest yielding, most secure tranches were often rated AAA by the rating agencies, so investors thought they were getting a sound investment. *It turns out that many of those so called triple A's became riddled with defaults. True enough... part of the problem is that these were a new type of instrument that nobody knew how to assess the risk of; but it's also true that there was little accountability and due diligence as these intruments were marketed thru-out the finance world. The default rate, as a percent, has only gone up a small amount. A bigger problem is the crisis of confidence... when it turns out that even the safest-rated instruments can be hit by default, *and* the insurance is worthless, then people panic and want to dump their investment before they lose the whole pie. After all, what makes a $20 bill worth $20? The fact that people will accept it as valuable for a certain range of goods & services... pretend for a moment that terrorists had broken into the Mint and infected random $20 bills with AIDS (or something), then you'd have the same effect... free-fall! And this is *still* only part of the problem, as I see it... we've been thru cycles of tight credit before, and cycles of loan default (remember the junk-bond scandals). The answer is, people who have money to loan insist on higher interest rates. But now we (the U.S.A. is not just addicted to credit, we need CHEAP credit! We cannot afford to take on higher debt just to service the debt we've already taken on! The country is balancing on the edge of a cliff here and Paulson & Bernanke are desparate not just to ease credit but to keep interest rates low. But Doug, when problem solving you always need to look for root cause. Agreed. And I think the CRA (you might as well add in President Bush's 'Ownership Society') is indeed part of what got us here. I just don't see it as The Big Cause. The red X in statistical DOE terms. *There are many contributing factors, however the root cause, the red X is simply setting up a system to give people who could not afford these properties and loans in the first place a way to get them with no skin in the game. But they *did* have skin in the game. The same as you or I... keep paying or lose your home. Dave's point about computers enabling the dizzying array of mortgage loan terms is also a good one. IMHO one of the inherent factors in being "conservative" means to be leery of new things such as new types of financial instruments. Regards- Doug King |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Is it true... | General | |||
It's True, It's True | ASA | |||
Ain't it true! | ASA | |||
True "true wind" & the Raymarine ST60, or other | Electronics |