Bailout Agreement Voted Down - Stock Markets drop

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
31,475
11,424
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Here's a "from out of left field" possible solution. The US government does NOT give the
failing companies a single dime. The $700,000,000,000.00 is dived up to all home owners
and people with mortgages (good or bad...) to invest into the market as they see fit. If they
drop it onto their bad mortgage, it's now a good mortgage. If the next guy drops most of it
on his mortgage and the rest pays off his credit cards, he's still injected his portion into the
market place. If the next guy say's "screw it" and puts nothing on his mortgage and blows
his portion on a new car, his money still gets injected back into the market place.

The people, through their own spending habits, save themselves and the market in a free
market style. Many companies will still fail and many will not, but the bad will be weeded
out and the healthy will be left. The government can still claim to be hero's in staving off a
global economic disaster by throwing out the impressively big$ number of 700BILLION
(where did that number ever come from anyway???) but to the people, not the banks...

Consumer confidence will go up. They'll have a new Leader in a couple of weeks (it doesn't
matter which one) and that'll increase consumer confidence, and any change for the better
(or the illusion of it) will increase consumer confidence...which is half the battle...

This will still hurt, but it's no more (or less) crazy that anything else that is being proposed.
The real downfall for the government would be that the people would have the power to
choose their own future as opposed to being told what their future will be, and will empower
the people which means the government would have less power. This is the big reason why
the above idea wouldn't be allowed to be implemented.

Think of a finite amount of power and money (like energy and mass). there has to be a law
of conservation at work here in that their really isn't less money now than a week or a month
or a year or a decade ago...it's just in different hands. Give the cash to the masses and the
Big Dogs will gobble it back eventually instead of just getting it directly. This might just work
BUT their must also be a law of conservation with respect to political power...and the ones
with the power (Republicans and Democrats both) don't want to surrender any of that back
to the people. That's the rub...

Remember, not only am I not an Economist, but I'm also the same guy advocating to have
public outhouses on the street corners in Toronto and Winnipeg. Just throwing out an
alternative to see if one you truly bright folks can dissect and rework this into a workable
plan.
 

Trex

Electoral Member
Apr 4, 2007
917
31
28
Hither and yon
Here's a "from out of left field" possible solution. The US government does NOT give the
failing companies a single dime. The $700,000,000,000.00 is dived up to all home owners
and people with mortgages (good or bad...) to invest into the market as they see fit. If they
drop it onto their bad mortgage, it's now a good mortgage. If the next guy drops most of it
on his mortgage and the rest pays off his credit cards, he's still injected his portion into the
market place. If the next guy say's "screw it" and puts nothing on his mortgage and blows
his portion on a new car, his money still gets injected back into the market place.

The people, through their own spending habits, save themselves and the market in a free
market style. Many companies will still fail and many will not, but the bad will be weeded
out and the healthy will be left. The government can still claim to be hero's in staving off a
global economic disaster by throwing out the impressively big$ number of 700BILLION
(where did that number ever come from anyway???) but to the people, not the banks...

Consumer confidence will go up. They'll have a new Leader in a couple of weeks (it doesn't
matter which one) and that'll increase consumer confidence, and any change for the better
(or the illusion of it) will increase consumer confidence...which is half the battle...

This will still hurt, but it's no more (or less) crazy that anything else that is being proposed.
The real downfall for the government would be that the people would have the power to
choose their own future as opposed to being told what their future will be, and will empower
the people which means the government would have less power. This is the big reason why
the above idea wouldn't be allowed to be implemented.

Think of a finite amount of power and money (like energy and mass). there has to be a law
of conservation at work here in that their really isn't less money now than a week or a month
or a year or a decade ago...it's just in different hands. Give the cash to the masses and the
Big Dogs will gobble it back eventually instead of just getting it directly. This might just work
BUT their must also be a law of conservation with respect to political power...and the ones
with the power (Republicans and Democrats both) don't want to surrender any of that back
to the people. That's the rub...

Remember, not only am I not an Economist, but I'm also the same guy advocating to have
public outhouses on the street corners in Toronto and Winnipeg. Just throwing out an
alternative to see if one you truly bright folks can dissect and rework this into a workable
plan.

Wouldn't work and it would be totally unfair.
First off you have to divide up all the money between anyone that owns property (paid off or not) then include all the mortgages (first, second, third, held on vacation property, held on investment properties).
That would divide up your capital to about $100 per person.

The only people it would exclude would be the truly needy and underemployed who couldn't afford a mortgage in the first place.

The super rich with multiple properties would get the most back.

The least deserving would get the most and the poorest, most deserving would get nothing.

I understand the concept of "trickle down economics" and " priming the fiscal pump" but I don't think this one will fly.
 

scratch

Senate Member
May 20, 2008
5,658
22
38
I initially thought this was a North American problem but banks are in trouble to some degree all over the world, some worse, some better........ So it is not just an American problem. Our banking system has had an injection of cash as well.

And juan Britain and the European Union put mega-bucks into the system early this morning.

Japan a couple of weeks ago did the same thing WITHOUT ANY results so far.

This regardless of what the `Roos do is going to be bad !
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
Wouldn't work and it would be totally unfair.
First off you have to divide up all the money between anyone that owns property (paid off or not) then include all the mortgages (first, second, third, held on vacation property, held on investment properties).
That would divide up your capital to about $100 per person.

The only people it would exclude would be the truly needy and underemployed who couldn't afford a mortgage in the first place.

The super rich with multiple properties would get the most back.

The least deserving would get the most and the poorest, most deserving would get nothing.

I understand the concept of "trickle down economics" and " priming the fiscal pump" but I don't think this one will fly.

Goodeven Trex, It seems that capitalism is on the proverbial skids, I for one will be adding my boots to it's head in an effort to ensure it is never getting up again. There is no fix, the disaster will be deep, long and bloody but at the end the planet should be devoid of free capitalists and we can all look at real human progress for once, going forward the world will enjoy the socialist nirvana including but not limited to universal health care, GAIs for the entire human race, a return of the fish, free education, heavily funded community based permaculture, enourmous expenditures of formerly elite wealthy assets to spur the solar economy and lastly but not leastly free weekend family excursions to the zoos where the last remaining capitalists can be witnessed eating each other. :lol:
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
31,475
11,424
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Wouldn't work and it would be totally unfair.
First off you have to divide up all the money between anyone that owns property (paid off or not) then include all the mortgages (first, second, third, held on vacation property, held on investment properties).
That would divide up your capital to about $100 per person.

The only people it would exclude would be the truly needy and underemployed who couldn't afford a mortgage in the first place.

The super rich with multiple properties would get the most back.

The least deserving would get the most and the poorest, most deserving would get nothing.

I understand the concept of "trickle down economics" and " priming the fiscal pump" but I don't think this one will fly.

Again I'm not an Economist and just throwing things out there but...the truly needy and
the underemployed aren't the ones I'd picture as being the ones applying for loans in
order to be turned down due to a tightening up of credit. They wouldn't be the ones
driving the economy. Therefore you might be mentally cutting the pie (fair of not) into
too many pieces. The underemployed and the truly needy would have (maybe or maybe
not) paid the least into the tax base, and will pay the least to dig the country out of the
financial hole.

I'm not saying even I agree with my own idea...I'm throwing it out there for dissection to
see what'll come of it. Now rip this apart. Maybe it'll inspire you to come up with a better
plan that someone else'll rip apart and come up with a better plan...and so on and so forth.
 

TenPenny

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 9, 2004
17,467
139
63
Location, Location
I found this at loweringthebar.net, and felt it was somehow appropos:

Now that the bailout has gone down in flames, and the nation's soup kettles are starting to heat up, it is worth taking a moment to wonder why so many people seem to be wondering how this all came about. What could possibly explain this meltdown?
Here's one piece of evidence: the Orange County Register reported on Monday that, during just the last year, a single family in California bought 43 different properties, which they were able to do with the help of 43 different mortgages, totaling $24.5 million, provided by helpful Washington Mutual. You remember good old WaMu -- the nation's biggest savings-and-loan until it became the nation's biggest failure (so far)?
I remember having to jump through at least a few hoops when I got my first and so far only mortgage a while back. I did not then go ahead and ask for another 42 mortgages, partly because of a feeling that, had I done so, they might ask some awkward questions about whether I could pay all that money back. But I guess I was just being naive.
Not only did Washington Mutual not raise any particular concerns about mortgage 2, 3, 4, or 5 through 43, it also somehow missed the fact that it was making these loans to felons. The Sonis were convicted in 2003 of "numerous felonies," all unsurprisingly involving real-estate fraud. Well, I guess that would be a surprise to Washington Mutual.
The family sold 22 of the properties it bought with this money, earning $3.7 million. The average profit was 48 percent, and the average time between purchase and sale was only 92 days. Authorities say they sometimes sold to other family members at inflated prices, with the sales then being used by appraisers to justify high prices for other properties. In July 2007, they bought a house for $440,000 in Santa Ana, then resold it 38 days later for $660,000 to Javier Hernandez, who was, coincidentally, their gardener. He later defaulted, making Washington Mutual the proud owner of a house that is now worth only $377,000. But the bank kept loaning them money. I'm not an economist, but this sort of thing might explain what's going on.
"This is a quality-control problem," said Paul Leonard of the Center for Responsible Lending and Ridiculous Understatement. "It certainly is curious WaMu's fraud-detection system didn't pick this up." Yes, it certainly is. Especially since, as an investigator put it, "any idiot can see these sale prices are excessive." Well, that's not strictly true, because we know these idiots didn't. So let's say that most idiots can see the prices were excessive, although there may well be a subset of idiots, such as possibly bank managers, who suffer from Hyper-Price Vision Impairment Syndrome.
Washington Mutual, or whatever is left of it, may lose as much as $2.7 million just on these transactions, and that's if no more of them go bad. Luckily, though, Washington Mutual is hard at work, or at least its spokespeople are. "We have extensive controls in place to protect the integrity of our portfolio and loan processes," said one, apparently referring to controls that were put in place during the last 15 minutes
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
I found this at loweringthebar.net, and felt it was somehow appropos:

Now that the bailout has gone down in flames, and the nation's soup kettles are starting to heat up, it is worth taking a moment to wonder why so many people seem to be wondering how this all came about. What could possibly explain this meltdown?
Here's one piece of evidence: the Orange County Register reported on Monday that, during just the last year, a single family in California bought 43 different properties, which they were able to do with the help of 43 different mortgages, totaling $24.5 million, provided by helpful Washington Mutual. You remember good old WaMu -- the nation's biggest savings-and-loan until it became the nation's biggest failure (so far)?
I remember having to jump through at least a few hoops when I got my first and so far only mortgage a while back. I did not then go ahead and ask for another 42 mortgages, partly because of a feeling that, had I done so, they might ask some awkward questions about whether I could pay all that money back. But I guess I was just being naive.
Not only did Washington Mutual not raise any particular concerns about mortgage 2, 3, 4, or 5 through 43, it also somehow missed the fact that it was making these loans to felons. The Sonis were convicted in 2003 of "numerous felonies," all unsurprisingly involving real-estate fraud. Well, I guess that would be a surprise to Washington Mutual.
The family sold 22 of the properties it bought with this money, earning $3.7 million. The average profit was 48 percent, and the average time between purchase and sale was only 92 days. Authorities say they sometimes sold to other family members at inflated prices, with the sales then being used by appraisers to justify high prices for other properties. In July 2007, they bought a house for $440,000 in Santa Ana, then resold it 38 days later for $660,000 to Javier Hernandez, who was, coincidentally, their gardener. He later defaulted, making Washington Mutual the proud owner of a house that is now worth only $377,000. But the bank kept loaning them money. I'm not an economist, but this sort of thing might explain what's going on.
"This is a quality-control problem," said Paul Leonard of the Center for Responsible Lending and Ridiculous Understatement. "It certainly is curious WaMu's fraud-detection system didn't pick this up." Yes, it certainly is. Especially since, as an investigator put it, "any idiot can see these sale prices are excessive." Well, that's not strictly true, because we know these idiots didn't. So let's say that most idiots can see the prices were excessive, although there may well be a subset of idiots, such as possibly bank managers, who suffer from Hyper-Price Vision Impairment Syndrome.
Washington Mutual, or whatever is left of it, may lose as much as $2.7 million just on these transactions, and that's if no more of them go bad. Luckily, though, Washington Mutual is hard at work, or at least its spokespeople are. "We have extensive controls in place to protect the integrity of our portfolio and loan processes," said one, apparently referring to controls that were put in place during the last 15 minutes

Are you related to Paulson or another wealthy investment banker?:smile:
 

Praxius

Mass'Debater
Dec 18, 2007
10,677
161
63
Halifax, NS & Melbourne, VIC
Related News:



Markets retreat amid growing slowdown concerns
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2008/10/02/bailout-markets.html

Despite the passage of a $700-billion US financial bailout package in the Senate, many stock markets retreated on Thursday as concerns grew about a global slowdown.

Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 average fell 1.9 per cent to 11,154.76, and benchmarks in Australia, South Korea and Taiwan also dropped.

Hong Kong's market managed a late-day rally, lifted by gains by insurer Ping An and expectations that China will introduce supportive market measures, raising the Hang Seng index by 1.1 per cent to 18,211.11.

Meanwhile, European stocks opened higher on Thursday, with Britain's FTSE 100 up 1.1 per cent and Germany's DAX gained one per cent.

The U.S. Senate approved the controversial proposed legislation in a 74-25 vote on Wednesday night.

A similar piece of legislation was narrowly defeated in the House of Representatives on Monday.

House leaders are expected to be pressing members, especially the 133 Republicans who rejected the bill, on Thursday to vote in favour of the revised bill.

The revised bill includes a provision to raise the cap on federal deposit insurance to $250,000 and $110 billion in tax breaks for businesses and the middle class.

The House of Representatives is expected to vote by Friday.

California Republican David Dreier said he plans to vote for the rewritten financial industry bailout bill when it comes to the House, even though he "hated" the previous version.

If the plan is rejected again by the House, "it will be a big problem," said Tsuyoshi Nomaguchi, a strategist at Daiwa Securities in Tokyo. "But even if it passes, the focus will be on the economy."

Aim is to prevent recession

The rescue package would let the government spend billions of dollars to buy bad mortgage-related securities and other devalued assets held by troubled financial institutions. If successful, advocates say, that would allow frozen credit to begin flowing again and prevent a serious recession.

"We've sent a clear message to Americans all over that we will not let this economy fail," said Senate majority leader Harry Reid, a Democrat from Nevada.

But traders remain skeptical about the impact the bill will have on the faltering global economy, reported the Associated Press.

The financial crisis, which was created by bad bank debts, has spread to Europe where governments are also pumping money into troubled banks.

European leaders are preparing for a financial summit on Saturday in Paris.

The meeting will bring together officials from Germany, Britain and Italy as well as representatives from the European Commission and the European Central Bank.

"Investors are still concerned about the efficiency of this rescue plan and how it can help the global economy," said Aric Au, marketing manager for institutional sales at Phillip Securities in Hong Kong. "But at this moment, nobody is sure about this. They need to have more information about the finalized plan."

On Wednesday, the Dow Jones industrial average dipped 0.2 per cent to 10,831.07 while Europe's stock markets were mixed and Latin American shares edged higher.

Toronto's S&P/TSX composite index closed at 11,714.51, down 38.39 points or 0.3 per cent.

I still don't see this working in the long run.