Posted on 03/16/2008 9:03:57 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson did the rounds of America's Sunday morning TV shows to talk up the U.S. economy, promote confidence that financial markets would get through their present troubles and reassure a skeptical American public that the Bush administration was on top of the situation. news
Speaking on ABC's "This Week," "Fox News Sunday" and "Late Edition" on CNN, Paulson defended the Federal Reserve's decision Friday to come to the rescue of Bear Stearns (nyse: BSC -
(Excerpt) Read more at forbes.com ...
Fed Takes New Steps to Ease Crisis [Discount Rate Cut 1/4 Point]
moral hazard?
Fed acts Sunday to prevent global bank run Monday ( Bear Stearns Taken over,...rates cut )
Yeah, as in, bailing out a company that doesn't deserve it.
This is a big statement. I don't know if I'm being overly dramatic, and I guess time may give a clue, but I think this is the sentence that caused the avalanche.
Developments in the Auction Rate Preferred Securities Markets
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Wednesday February 20, 5:10 pm ET
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but but but..
Chrysler
Eastern Airlines
Savings&Loans
Ain’t gonna be pretty today in Lower Manhattan. Hold on.
THIS is talking the economy UP??? Vote of CONFIDENCE???
Where'd they get these dunces from anyways???
Sheesh.
No, this is different. Apparently bear was double pledging its assets.
the auction rate market has been locked up for weeks. there seems to be a capital shortage.
Goldman Sachs, I think.
Thanks, that is a risky scheme.
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They're coming out of the woodwork:
Investors who find our ARPs attractive.
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The problem with today's economy: It's not just one thing. Maybe we'll call it The First Cockroach Recession. As one problem gets solved, another emerges. When I kill one cockroach, days later another appears. Not getting the message? Read this piece from today's Economist:
If at first you don't succeed
The Fed tries to flush out the credit markets once againbut the stink lingers
Illustration by Satoshi KambayashiTHIRD time lucky? The credit markets almost seized up in August, December and again this month and on each occasion the Federal Reserve has led a rescue attempt (see article). Its latest effort led to a bout of euphoria on Wall Street, with the S&P 500 index managing its biggest one-day increase in over five years on March 11th. But every time the Fed has unblocked the drains somewhere in the credit markets, they have bunged up elsewhere. Sure enough, on March 13th panicky investors sent the dollar tumbling below ¥100 and pushed gold above $1,000 an ounce.
The fear is that the financial markets have entered a negative spiral, the obverse of the kind of euphoria that drove dotcom stocks to absurd valuations in 1999 and early 2000. Back then, investors scrambled to buy shares regardless of their price. This time round, they are being forced to sell bonds and loans, whether or not they believe the borrowers will eventually repay. The problems are exacerbated by the demise of the securitisation market, and fears about counterparty risk. Both those factors are making banks less willing to lendeven to worthy borrowers. They will become ever more cautious the deeper America's economy tips into recession.
Debt, such an exalted financing tool a little more than a year ago, is now a four-letter word.
Fed is printing more money....
Just remember, I said "apparently."
Wish they’d send him back then!
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Google turned this up:
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Yes it did:
Opening Bell: The Great Hedge-Fund Unwind
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The hedge fund Carlyle Capital all but collapsed last night, stunning investors with the speed of its fall from being one of the biggest-name investment vehicles spawned by the late credit bubble to its latest victim.
Bloomberg reports the public company said late Wednesday it has defaulted on $16.6 billion in debt after its banks withdrew their money from the fund. Carlyles pleas to its lenders failed to prevent them from issuing margin calls (requirements to put up more collateral for investment loans) because of the plunging value of Carlyles investments, which spiraled uncontrollably until it wiped out all of the companys cash.
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