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Politics : How Quickly Can Obama Totally Destroy the US? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Qualified Opinion who wrote (9926)4/26/2014 9:57:38 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Rich Obama Donor Kicks Girlfriend 117 Times; Wait Until You See His Sentence

Saturday, April 26, 2014 9:42:43 PM · by lowbridge · 21 replies
tpnn.com | april 24, 2014 | matthew burke





To: Qualified Opinion who wrote (9926)4/28/2014 1:00:57 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
McMorris Rodgers Met with Microsoft CEO on Day She Revealed August Amnesty Goal








by Tony Lee 28 Apr 2014
breitbart.com

On the day that Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA) told a local newspaper that she believed amnesty legislation could be brought to the floor by August, she met with Satya Nadella, the new CEO of Microsoft. “I believe there is a path that we get a bill on the floor by August,” House GOP Conference Chair McMorris Rodgers said last Friday. “We’re going to have to push that this is a legal status, not amnesty."

That same day, she tweeted a photo of herself with Nadella from her verified @cathymcmorris Twitter account.

Microsoft, along with other high-tech companies like Facebook and Google, has aggressively lobbied Congress and the Obama administration for more H1-B visas, even though numerous studies have debunked the notion that there is a shortage of American high-tech workers.



To: Qualified Opinion who wrote (9926)4/28/2014 1:47:44 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Obamacare deals death blow to one-doctor clinics...



To: Qualified Opinion who wrote (9926)4/28/2014 2:03:58 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Toyota bailing on California (Moves Sales and Marketing HQ to Texas)

....................................................................
Hotair ^ | 04/28/2014 | Ed Morrissey




To: Qualified Opinion who wrote (9926)4/28/2014 10:27:51 PM
From: joseffy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 16547
 
Re: Bank Of America. Remember The Lessons From Cyprus
..............................................................................................
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/28/2014 19:47 -0400

Submitted by Simon Black of Sovereign Man blog,

And another one bites the dust. Now it’s Bank of America, one of the largest banks in the Land of the Free, that is inadequately capitalized.

Last month, Bank of America made a lot of noise about how they were going to buy back up to $5 billion worth of common shares.

As CEO Brian Moynihan stated, “We have simplified our company and we have more than adequate capital to support our strategic plans. We are well positioned to return excess capital to our shareholders.”

Needless to say, investors cheered the announcement, and BofA’s stock price rose nicely as a result.

Fast forward 45 days… and boy what a difference reality makes.

This morning Bank of America rather embarrassingly said it would suspend the stock buyback, stating that they had been ordered to do so by the Federal Reserve.

Moreover, the company must suspend its planned quarterly dividend increase.

All of this because of a supposed arithmetic error in how the bank calculates its regulatory capital. Apparently Bank of America is nowhere near the level of capitalization they thought they had… or had been telling everyone.

And given that the mistake is attributed to the Merril Lynch acquisition from 2009, the errors likely go back for YEARS.

In the words of the once future US Presidential candidate Rick Perry, “Oops…”

This is a big deal; capital is a bank’s lifeblood and a measure of its safety.

A bank with strong levels of capital (which can be thought of as equity, or its total assets minus liabilities) has a vast margin of safety and can withstand major financial shocks like market crashes and bank runs.

Banks with weak levels of capital will perish. Quickly.

Remember the lessons from Cyprus: last March, people went to bed on a Friday night thinking everything was just fine. The next morning they woke up to find that their entire banking system was insolvent and that the government had frozen their accounts.

This was all rather curious given that, literally just days before, they could log on to their bank’s website and check their balances.

It turns out, though, that there’s a huge difference between a number printed on a screen, and the bank actually HAVING the money.

Bottom line, just because they tell you the money’s there doesn’t mean the money’s there. Just because they tell you they’re well capitalized doesn’t mean they’re well capitalized.

And Bank of America is not. Neither is Citigroup (and many others), which recently failed Fed-mandated stress tests.

So in the Land of the Free, you now have inadequately capitalized banks backed by the inadequately capitalized FDIC insurance fund, which is backed by the highly insolvent US federal government, all of which is supported by the nearly insolvent Federal Reserve.

This is hardly a consequence-free environment. Do you have your seatbelt on?

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