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| Posted by: Boldwin
- [510591420] Wed, Dec 24, 2014, 08:39
Remember that guy who posted the original Real Estate Bubble thread which preceded the last financial debacle? This guy right here.
Junk investments are back with a vengeance.
With interest rates paid by traditional safe vehicles barely above 2%, kept artificially low by a determined Fed's quantitative easing policies, a bubble has formed in junk investments that the investors were driven to.
Leveraged Loan Bubble

It's not just that too many too-big-to-fail institutions have untenable loans on their books...no, that's not bad enuff. They of course are the first to realize they are in trouble and they started laying off their bad debt onto the rest of the less regulated investment community in the form of CDO's. CDO's are Collateralized Debt Obligations. The banks are just bundling their bad leveraged loan packages into CDO's and distributing them into the entire financial system.

Do I need to spell it out any clearer until everyone catches the wiff of 2008 all over again?
I've even heard it said that the FED is actually more desperate to prop up this shaky bond market situation than anything else. That is supposedly the true secret behind the seemingly unending quantitative easing policies. |
| | | 1 | Boldwin
ID: 510591420 Wed, Dec 24, 2014, 08:40
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One of these days we won't be the world's reserve currency and we won't have that to help us get back on top when the smoke clears.
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| | | 2 | Boldwin
ID: 510591420 Wed, Dec 24, 2014, 08:57
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I am inclined to agree with Elizabeth Warren.
Let that sink in.
The recent Cromnibus deal allowing more banks to get into the shaky derivatives market [aka weakening Dodd-Frank] was a disaster.
Of course I suspect she was just trying to protect her Big Bank contributors by keeping smaller competitors out of the market. But she was onto something big by accident.
Even unweakened, Dodd-Frank was insufficient. There are still derivative positions out there [insurance against a crash] 10x all the money in the world. Which will all fail in a crash. They were never allowed to unwind and just stay fixed.
There are still not clearinghouses to prevent the derivative market from getting out of control.
I generally abhor talk about greedy bankers...and I didn't blame bankers who made all those real estate loans last time. But these bankers who insist on making bad loans to the riskiest segments of the market, then unload their risk onto the rest of us and then come to us for bailouts...next time, I'm thinking about all those unoccupied lampposts and thinking next time might be different.
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| | | 3 | Boldwin
ID: 510591420 Wed, Dec 24, 2014, 09:27
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Hmmm...I guess I wrong on that Dodd Frank thing.
Pre-Cromnibus all lending institutions that received government deposit insurance were prohibited from derivative trading.
Disasterous, Elizabeth Warren and the Tea Party tried to save us.
Even Pelosi voted against it, tho I noticed she didn't try to whip it, which she would have done if she wasn't just posturing.
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| | | 4 | Boldwin
ID: 112382716 Sat, Apr 18, 2015, 19:16
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Imagine what will happen to the markets when the Western welfare states finally go broke? It will make 2008 look like a picnic.The 2008 crash was a warm up.
Many investors think that we could never have a crash again. The 2008 melt-down was a one in 100 years episode, they think.
They are wrong.
The 2008 Crisis was a stock and investment bank crisis. But it was not THE Crisis.
THE Crisis concerns the biggest bubble in financial history: the epic Bond bubble… which as it stands is north of $100 trillion… although if you include the derivatives that trade based on bonds it’s more like $500 TRILLION.
The Fed likes to act as though it’s concerned about stocks… but the real story is in bonds. Indeed, when you look at the Fed’s actions from the perspective of the bond market, everything suddenly becomes clear.
Bonds are debt. A bond is created when a borrower borrows money from a lender. And at the top of the financial food chain are sovereign bonds like US Treasuries.
These bonds are created when someone lends the US money. Why would they do this? Because the US SPENDS more money than it TAKES IN via taxes. So it issues debt to cover its extra expenses.
This cycle continued for over 30 years until today, when the US has over $11 TRILLION in size. Because we never actually pay our debt off (or rarely do), what we do is ROLL OVER debt when it comes due, so that investors continue to receive interest payments but never actually get the money back… because the US Government doesn’t have it… because it’s still spending more money than it takes in via taxes.
This is why the Fed cut interest rates to zero and will likely do everything in its power to keep them low: even a small raise in interest rates makes all of this debt MORE expensive to pay off.
This is also why the Fed had the regulators drop accounting standards for derivatives… because if banks and financial firms had to accurately value their hundreds of trillions of derivatives trades based on bonds, investors would be terrified at the amount of leverage and the margin calls would begin.
The bond bubble is also why the Fed started its QE programs. Because by buying bonds, the Fed put a floor under Treasuries… which made investors less likely to dump bonds despite bonds offering such low rates of return.
This is also why the Fed is terrified of deflation. Deflation makes future debt payments more expensive. So the Fed prefers inflation because it means the dollars used to pay off debt down the road will be cheaper than Dollars today.
Again, when you look at the Fed’s actions through the perspective of the bond market… everything becomes clear. This is an international phenomenon because ruinous social spending far beyond the ability to ever repay, is ubiquitous around the world. Along with it's last desperate 'papering over', QE at unprecedented levels.
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| | | 5 | Boldwin
ID: 112382716 Sat, Apr 18, 2015, 19:20
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Someday I'll explain why Frank-Dodd is the most amazing anti-democratic frankenstein monster ever. Barney Frank's last turd was a masterpiece. We almost need a constitutional convention to dismantle it because it's a cancer immune to curing.
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| | | 6 | Bean
ID: 14147911 Sun, Apr 19, 2015, 08:05
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"This is also why the Fed is terrified of deflation. Deflation makes future debt payments more expensive. So the Fed prefers inflation because it means the dollars used to pay off debt down the road will be cheaper than Dollars today."
Yup, and I still say, money is just a number, inflation is a tax on savers and in the end, in the big picture, none of it really matters all that much for US citizens if you accept that inflation is a viable fiscal policy.
The biggest problem with inflation is in the international market place. International trade requires a stable currency, which is defacto the US dollar. If we pursue an inflationary fiscal policy, it will disrupt international trade. But I say "F*** those a$$holes. Where were they when we were fighting all the world's battles, spending and dying like crazy while they just bought "butter". They are all vacationing here now, while we make hamburgers for minimum wage, f*** that $hit. Our allies, gotta love em.
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| | | 7 | Bean
ID: 14147911 Sun, Apr 19, 2015, 08:12
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Or should I say our alliances, "I'm loving it".
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| | | 9 | Bean
ID: 14147911 Mon, Apr 20, 2015, 19:24
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Silver walks up to Gold in a bar and says, "AU, get outta here!".
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| | | 10 | biliruben
ID: 105572020 Mon, Apr 20, 2015, 20:27
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Your links make me happy you have SS coming to you. If you are trading on those articles, I wouldn't want you eating cat food.
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