Posted on 04/04/2023 9:51:46 AM PDT by Kaiser8408a
As am I...but in the fast-food commercial sector. Have long-term leases on the properties, so they're holding up fine.
Which is why I have moved large amounts of liquid assets out of the banks and purchased 4-week US Treasuries.
I stagger my purchases by allocating 25% of my liquid assets each week to 4-week bill purchases. It all gets invested over the course of a month, but I always have 25% maturing each week to keep liquidity in place.
Can't get a more pristine investment than that...
C'mon! SVB was no "victim" - and yes, I am in the startup world.
SVB had the absolute WORST risk management strategy (or none) known to mankind.
That is why they went insolvent.
The only "victims" are those who have to pay higher bank fees as a result.
The Fed does not print money.
In fact, the Fed is pretty useless overall. They've lost control - thinking altering the Fed Funds rate will have a material effect.
Monetary deflation is driving this market on a global scale - the Fed is just a propaganda machine attempting to blame it on something else.
Monetary deflation - not price inflation - will be the demise of the global economy...
The properties are all cheap fast-food joints. They're going gang-busters right now...
Nobody cooks anymore, and they can still afford the cheap and greasy places.
How do you do this when loan maturities are never fixed? I would speculate that something like 80% (or more) of 30-year mortgages never reach their maturity before they are paid off.
But you can drive the economy back towards deflation. This is preferable to runaway inflation that will not abate when the politicians have no backbone to do what is necessary. Japan may not be thrilled about it, but it did keep their economy from imploding.
No, rates must continue to rise, jobs must continue to be lost, and the economy must contract. Getting back into a stable balance will not be achieved by continuing the status quo.
The government is already the problem when you consider where we are now, too many entitlements and too many unwarranted bailouts. That ship has already sailed. Uncle Sugar is already the source of millions of Americans livelihoods, and yet another reason we’re at this juncture.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't it Credit Suisse that UBS bought up, and SVB's were bought by First Citizen's Bank of North Carolina?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.