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To: Zeddicus
Show him this essay Denninger just posted up a few minutes ago:

# All pension funds, private and public, are done. If you are receiving one, you won't be. If you think you will in the future, you won't be. PBGC will fail as well. Pension funds will be forced to start eating their "seed corn" within the next 12 months and once that begins there is no way to recover.

# All annuities will be defaulted to the state insurance protection (if any) on them. The state insurance funds will be bankrupted and unable to be replenished. Essentially, all annuities are toast. Expect zero, be ecstatic if you do better. All insurance companies with material exposure to these obligations will go bankrupt, without exception. Some of these firms are dangerously close to this happening right here and now; the rest will die within the next 6-12 months. If you have other insured interests with these firms, be prepared to pay a LOT more with a new company that can't earn anything off investments, and if you have a claim in process at the time it happens, it won't get paid. The probability of you getting "boned" on any transaction with an insurance company is extremely high - I rate this risk in excess of 90%.

# The FDIC will be unable to cover bank failure obligations. They will attempt to do more of what they're doing now (raising insurance rates and doing special assessments) but will fail; the current path has no chance of success. Congress will backstop them (because they must lest shotguns come out) with disastrous results. In short, FDIC backstops will take precedence even over Social Security and Medicare.

# Government debt costs will ramp. This warning has already been issued and is being ignored by President Obama. When (not if) it happens debt-based Federal Funding will disappear. This leads to....

# Tax receipts are cratering and will continue to. I expect total tax receipts to fall to under $1 trillion within the next 12 months. Combined with the impossibility of continued debt issue (rollover will only remain possible at the short duration Treasury has committed to over the last ten years if they cease new issue) a 66% cut in the Federal Budget will become necessary. This will require a complete repudiation of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, a 50% cut in the military budget and a 50% across-the-board cut in all other federal programs. That will likely get close.

# Tax-deferred accounts will be seized to fund rollovers of Treasury debt at essentially zero coupon (interest). If you have a 401k, or what's left of it, or an IRA, consider it locked up in Treasuries; it's not yours any more. Count on this happening - it is essentially a certainty.

The time we've all been waiting for appears to have arrived...

75 posted on 03/05/2009 8:56:26 AM PST by semantic
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To: semantic

It’s only noon, and I’m working, but that post has me thinking it might be a good time for a drink.


84 posted on 03/05/2009 9:00:16 AM PST by LostInBayport (When more than 98% of the Republicans on Capitol Hill vote against a bill, it is not bipartisan.)
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To: semantic

Is Denninger usually reasonable and rational? I’ve heard mixed reviews about him- so I’m trying to keep perspective on his prognosis.


90 posted on 03/05/2009 9:03:23 AM PST by SE Mom (Proud mom of an Iraq war combat vet)
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To: semantic

It is like skydiving, without a chute: The first thousand feet you hardly notice the ground coming up.

It is more obvious in the last 500 feet. We are in the last 100 feet, I think.


97 posted on 03/05/2009 9:08:56 AM PST by RobRoy
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To: semantic
Question to anyone who knows better about these things: I have a 401k. It is currently down by half, and not looking good. I finally parked (way too late, stupid on my part) what remains in the safest havens in the plan, but even those are not 100% safe. Given that we are really going into some scary times, would I be better off leaving it alone, or should I take what I can out of it, pay the tax and the 10% penalty, lick my wounds and use it to buy the things I think we're really going to need (guns/ammo/canning supplies/etc...).

I don't want to sound panicked, but I am deeply concerned. I have a family of four (five if you count the arthritic Yellow Lab) depending on me as the sole bread-winner and am scared to death that things are more likely to go kaput than turn around.

146 posted on 03/05/2009 10:16:55 AM PST by IYAS9YAS (Obama - what you get when you mix Affirmative Action with the Peter Principle.)
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