Last
Bank Standing - The Wall Street Mega-Crash
Dateline
Washington, October 19th (get it?) 2010: the Peoples Bank & Trust of
America has now established itself as the only bank of any kind in the USA,
totally owned and managed by the US House of Representatives. A 2/3 majority
must now approve all investment banking transactions; your district
representative's staff reviews individual mortgage applications; and all
401(k), IRA, and remaining employer pension assets have been rolled into the
Social Security Slush Fund.
Only
federal and state elected officials are exempt from the 45% all purpose Income
Tax. The estimated time to bring new companies public is 4.5 years; all
individual account dividends and interest are paid directly into your IRS
"grabber" account; CEO's salaries are limited to 50% of the amount
paid to a first year congressman, and any government budget shortfalls are
withdrawn from corporate earnings before any corporate obligations can be dealt
with.
All
employees receive the federal mandated minimum wage, except senior executives
who are limited as mentioned above. Scary? This is a scenario that could play
out if Congress (or the SEC) does not come to the rescue of the credit markets.
You missed your opportunity to help stop it, but chances are a fix is on its
way.
How
many more businesses, jobs, and hopes will be killed by this irresponsible
Congress? When will the average blogger realize that when a corporation fails,
we all suffer? One would think that the informed and enlightened could take
time out from their texting for a little research and education. Instead, they
show their power by influencing public opinion numbers and the marshmallow
politicians who worship them. As economist Irwin Kellner and I have pointed
out, this is no bailout and we are not nearly approaching a recession.
Kellner's
September 28th Market Watch article points out ten major differences between
now and then: (1) In 1929, the DJIA plunged 40% in two months vs. around 30% in
about a year. (2) In 1933, the jobless rate was 33% vs. 6% today. (3) The GDP
shrank 25% then, but has increased 6% now. (4) Consumer prices actually fell
30% then but haven't ever since.
(5)
Home prices dropped 30% then, but only 16% from the recent bubbly highs. (6)
40% of all mortgages were in default then vs. only 4% now. (7) 9,000 banks
failed in the 1930s compared with just 25 or so (bigger and broader based ones)
recently. (8) The Federal Reserve reduced the money supply, (9) raised interest
rates, and (10) raised taxes on foreign imports.
Further,
Kellner points out, we now have automatic stabilizers, deposit insurances, and
market trading restrictions as protective elements. Today's Congress however,
has never been good at connecting dots, has accomplished nothing under an
unpopular president, and is ignoring its role as the primary creative force in
today's problems. This transfusion is needed because: bad laws have obscured
the values on financial institution balance sheets, and have created a clot in
the credit arteries that keep the economy alive.
Educate
yourselves on the Accounting Rule's that require institutions to book paying
assets at pennies on the dollar. Find out why institutions are afraid to loan
money to one another--- over night, at any rate of interest--- strangling the
credit markets.
Doing
nothing is killing jobs, killing companies, and deferring retirements for those
who were counting on 401(k) and IRA dollars to provide them with income.
Congress, of course has an old-fashioned pension plan, so it is unaffected by
such financial realities.
Investigate
the relaxation of lending standards that Congress orchestrated over the past
few administrations, before blaming the companies that then extended credit to
many speculators and other buyers who falsified application papers. Learn how
the SEC was prohibited from regulating the CDOs and other multiple-leveraged
credit market speculations. There are as many culprits outside the corporate
executive suite as in it.
Congress
is bursting with pride over bringing some of the Rich and Famous to their
knees, and capping some of their obscene compensation arrangements at still
shareholder pillaging levels. I've spoken often about how these salaries need
to be controlled. But the multi-level-mortgage-marketing schemes that Congress
encouraged must be unbundled somehow, and a buy out is the proper vehicle.
Congress
has punished the entire world with its attack on Wall Street, and both parties
are to blame. Representatives of the states listed below voted "no"
to the credit transfusion, causing death and destruction that, in many
instances, cannot be recouped. We have to replace them with better decision
makers, representatives who can think in economic terms when they have to.
The
number and letter code after the state designation indicates the number of
representatives and their party: AL-1R, AK-1R, AZ-4D4R, CA-15D9R, CO-2D2R,
CT-1D, FL-1D13R, GA-4D7R, HI-2D, ID-1R, IL-4D5R, IN-3D3R, IA-1D2R, KS-1D2R,
KY-2D2R, LA-2D3R, ME-1D, MD-2D1R, MA-3D, MI-3D6R, MN-2D2R, MS-3D, MO-2D3R,
MT-1R, NE-3R, NV-1D1R, NH-2D, NJ-3D4R, NM-1D1R, NY-3D1R, NC-3D5R, OH-3D7R,
OK-3R, OR-3D, PA-3D7R, SC-1R, SD-1D, TN-1D4R, TX-8D14R, UT-1D1R, VT-1D,
VA-1D5R, WA-1D3R, WV-1R, WI-1D2R (Names withheld, but available from the
author.)
On
Friday evening, candidates Obama and McCain gave their support to the Capital
infusion, but neither bothered to explain why--- a huge audience was ready to
soak up the information. Over the weekend, both attended meetings to support
the plan and to generate support from their respective parties.
Is
there enough time left to find a hero?
Steve
Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com/
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com
Author
of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy"
Wall
Street,Bailout,Congress,Sarbanes-Oxley,mortgage,CDO,AIG,Lehman,WaMu,market,banking,Wachovia,economy
Last
Bank Standing - The Wall Street Mega-Crash
Today's Congress is ignoring its role as the primary
creative force in today's problems. This transfusion is needed because: bad
laws have obscured the values on financial institution balance sheets, and have
created a clot in the credit arteries that keep the economy alive.