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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: SG who wrote (67718)11/2/2010 10:44:23 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 220019
 
The complete thought is "Deflation of all of the stuff we have, inflation of all of the stuff we need, and on average, we should be fine"

;0)



To: SG who wrote (67718)11/2/2010 10:56:08 AM
From: Cogito Ergo Sum  Respond to of 220019
 
Sure.. and by me to for many years .. but I'm more curious at the QE anticipation.. considering money is not going anywhere .. Why will it this time.. why does BB think it will.. sounds like shooting in the dark.. longer rates lower maybe ? I dunno..

TBS



To: SG who wrote (67718)11/2/2010 11:43:23 AM
From: Hawkmoon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 220019
 
Deflation of all of the stuff we have, inflation of all of the stuff we need..it has been said.

Never heard it put that way before, but it sums it up nicely.

Of course, we need to add deflation to those things we find we can do without, but are nice to have when we can afford them.

That's where the majority of the economy lies.. the service sector and discretionary spending.

Hawk



To: SG who wrote (67718)11/2/2010 12:09:40 PM
From: Cogito Ergo Sum  Respond to of 220019
 
Guess I am in good company :O) Just heard this on BNN so googled it..

UPDATE 1-Volcker sees limited results from fresh Fed easing

of course maybe he is now just and old fart..

He signalled that this time round the Fed is limited in its choice of policy options, saying that he did not disagree with the suggestion that "monetary policy may be close to the limits of what it can do".

Imagine reporter spelling signaled wrong... progress eh ?

reuters.com

Blackie

Tue Nov 2, 2010 8:22am EDT

* Volcker doesn't expect "overpowering" results from Fed

* Second round of easing poses inflation challenge

* Doesn't see U.S. fiscal tightening anytime soon

By Rachel Armstrong

SINGAPORE, Nov 2 (Reuters) - Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker said on Tuesday he did not expect "overpowering results" from any policy easing the central bank adopts this week to try to boost U.S. economic recovery.

He warned though that further monetary easing could create inflation risk and fresh challenges for the U.S. central bank longer term.

The Fed is widely expected to resume purchases of longer-term Treasuries to inject cash into the economy following a two-day meeting that ends on Wednesday. Many analysts expect the Fed to announce a $500 billion buying programme over about six months.

"It's a further effort to ease, when you get interest rates as low as they are they can't go much lower, so I don't look for any overpowering results of this action," Volcker, currently chairman of the Obama administration's Economic Recovery Board, said in Singapore as part of a dialogue on financial reform.

He added that a fresh injection of Fed cash into the economy could create a risk of inflation longer term, leaving the central bank with more challenges further down the line.

"I don't think it's beyond the capacity of a central bank to deal with that problem ... but they're going to have to deal with it," he said during the discussion at the National University of Singapore.

Volcker made his name during the 1970s when as Fed governor he raised benchmark interest rates sky-high to pull the nation out of a period of stagflation - a combination of high inflation and stagnant economic growth.

He signalled that this time round the Fed is limited in its choice of policy options, saying that he did not disagree with the suggestion that "monetary policy may be close to the limits of what it can do".

Volcker struck a downbeat tone on the broader economic outlook saying that he thought the chances of the U.S. enjoying a strong recovery similar to the one it saw in the middle of the 1980s were "limited".

"We are economically tilted up but it's a very slight tilt compared to usual recoveries," he said.

He declined to comment on his expectations for the U.S. mid-term elections taking place on Tuesday, but added that he didn't expect any major reduction in the U.S. fiscal deficit, whoever takes control of Congress.

"I don't think any government in the U.S. is going to take the risk of tightening fiscal policy right now," he said.

(Reporting by Rachel Armstrong; Editing by Neil Fullick and Susan Fenton)
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To: SG who wrote (67718)11/3/2010 10:38:24 PM
From: Cogito Ergo Sum  Respond to of 220019
 
QE to infinity :O)

To: The Black Swan who wrote (57704) 11/3/2010 10:21:52 PM
From: Rocket Red of 57706

Bank of America Edges Closer to Tipping Point: Jonathan Weil
By Jonathan Weil - Nov 3, 2010 7:00 PM MT Bloomberg Opinion
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Jonathan Weil
It was only last April that Bank of America Corp. was making fools out of the doomsayers who had called for its nationalization a year earlier. Taxpayers had gotten their bailout cash back. Investors who bought its shares at the bottom were making a killing. Government leaders lauded the company’s rescues, both of them, as a great success.

Now the bank may be on the verge of trouble again. Its stock has fallen 41 percent since April 15. Mortgage-bond investors are demanding untold billions of dollars in refunds. The foreclosure fiasco is metastasizing. A member of the Troubled Asset Relief Program’s oversight panel, AFL-CIO attorney Damon Silvers, openly worried at a hearing last week about the risk that Bank of America might need another bailout.

A few more months like the last one, and we may be wishing Bank of America had never returned its $45 billion of TARP money.

You wouldn’t know there’s anything wrong with Bank of America by an initial look at its balance sheet. The company showed common shareholder equity, or book value, of $212.4 billion as of Sept. 30. And its regulatory capital ratios have risen steadily throughout the year.

Tipping Point

Judging by its shrinking stock price, though, investors are acting as if Bank of America is near a tipping point. Its market capitalization stands at $115.6 billion, or 54 percent of book value. That’s the second-lowest price-to-book ratio among the 24 companies in the KBW Bank Index, and well below the 76 percent ratio the company was at in October 2008 when it landed its first round of TARP dough. Put another way, the market is saying there’s a $96.8 billion hole in Bank of America’s balance sheet.

When I asked Jerry Dubrowski, a Bank of America spokesman, about the disparity, he said: “I’m not going to comment on the book value and the stock price.”

It may be the shares are a bargain at $11.52, if the company’s books are right. Another plausible scenario is that Bank of America’s management, led by Chief Executive Officer Brian Moynihan, has lost so much credibility with investors that the stock’s decline might start feeding on itself.

The problem for anyone trying to analyze Bank of America’s $2.3 trillion balance sheet is that it’s largely impenetrable. Some portions, though, are so delusional that they invite laughter. Consider, for instance, the way the company continues to account for its acquisition of Countrywide Financial, the disastrous subprime lender at the center of the housing bust, which it bought for $4.2 billion in July 2008.

Goodwill Purchase

Here’s how Bank of America allocated the purchase price for that deal. First, it determined that the fair value of the liabilities at Countrywide exceeded the mortgage lender’s assets by $200 million. Then it recorded $4.4 billion of goodwill, a ledger entry representing the difference between Countrywide’s net asset value and the purchase price.

That’s right. Countrywide’s goodwill supposedly was worth more than Countrywide itself. In other words, Bank of America paid $4.2 billion for the company, even though it thought the value there was less than zero.

Since completing that acquisition, Bank of America has dropped the Countrywide brand. The company’s home-loan division has reported $13.5 billion of pretax losses. Yet Bank of America still hasn’t written off any of its Countrywide goodwill.

Dubrowski, the company spokesman, declined to comment when I asked him why not. In its latest quarterly report with the SEC, Bank of America said it had determined the asset wasn’t impaired. It might as well be telling the public not to believe any of the numbers on its financial statements.

No Surprise

Combine that with Bank of America’s reaction to the robo- signer scandal. (Working on it! Wait, halt foreclosure sales! No, restart them! Whoops, still checking records!) Add in the $141.6 billion of home-equity loans on Bank of America’s books, the real value of which is unknown. And it should be no surprise that the company’s stock price has been plunging.

So, does Bank of America need to issue new common stock to raise capital? Its executives say no. They point to the usual regulatory benchmarks, as well as their own calculations of tangible common equity. This is a bare-bones capital gauge, showing a company’s ability to absorb future losses, which excludes preferred stock and most intangible assets.

Using Bank of America’s $129.5 billion figure for tangible common equity, though, that’s still about $14 billion more than the company’s market cap. So the market isn’t just discounting the intangibles, most of which don’t count in regulatory capital. Investors are wary of the company’s other numbers, too.

Artifice of Strength

The tough part for Bank of America executives is that the company’s future may be out of their hands. Writing off more worthless assets or boosting reserves for future losses might help their credibility. (The bank wrote off $10.4 billion of goodwill unrelated to Countrywide last quarter.) Or, the market might perceive such moves as a sign that the artifice of strength is broken. It’s hard to tell.

As for the government’s too-big-to-fail guarantee, it’s probably still there. But who knows? Republicans have won back the House. The answer is up in the air.

The only certainty is there is none, aside from the knowledge that Bank of America’s top executives have no idea what goes on inside the bowels of their company. For all we know the stock could double, or be a donut. The fate of the financial system hangs in the balance. Once again, we’re all on the hook.