Originally posted by: dahunan
So, we already gave them 80 billion approx... IF They go bankrupt.. how will that be repaid?
Originally posted by: MotF Bane
Let them fucking die.
Originally posted by: sapiens74
liquidation
taxpayers considered first in line
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: MotF Bane
Let them fucking die.
QFT, this company should NEVER have been bailed out.
Originally posted by: her209
$60 Trillion worth of CDS
Originally posted by: GTKeeper
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: MotF Bane
Let them fucking die.
QFT, this company should NEVER have been bailed out.
If that happend then all their CDSs would be triggered so that could mean GS going down, BoA going down, Citi going down all at once. If THAT happend, you would be in a payroll check line every day of the week because there would be no money to pay out.
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: GTKeeper
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: MotF Bane
Let them fucking die.
QFT, this company should NEVER have been bailed out.
If that happend then all their CDSs would be triggered so that could mean GS going down, BoA going down, Citi going down all at once. If THAT happend, you would be in a payroll check line every day of the week because there would be no money to pay out.
Aren't there any kind of limitations in place as to how much risk these banks and insurance companies can expose themselves to regarding CDS? I thought there are state laws in place that regulate how much money worth of policies an insurance company can write vs. its assets to ensure that it is able to make good on its claims.
Originally posted by: GTKeeper
Originally posted by: dullard
AIG had the trifecta:Originally posted by: GTKeeper
Sources close to the company said the loss will be near $60 billion due to writedowns on a variety of assets including commercial real estate.
...
This is about as scary as it gets. Oh and AIG still has 500 billion dollars worth of CDS which we have no clue what percentage are 'good' or 'bad'.
1) The first crash: residential mortgages. This started kicking in a year or two ago.
2) The second crash: commercial real estate. America has 6x the square footage per capita of commercial real estate compared to the next largest country (per capita). The commercial real estate market was propped up more than the residential market. It'll crash much harder, especially if the economy goes bad. This is kicking in right now.
3) The third crash: credit default swaps. I don't have a clue when this will kick in but it is a massive beast that is looming. Think multiples of the US GDP.
The CRE market hasn't fully popped yet. Plenty of meat left on SPG. But #3 eclipses ALL.
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: GTKeeper
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: MotF Bane
Let them fucking die.
QFT, this company should NEVER have been bailed out.
If that happend then all their CDSs would be triggered so that could mean GS going down, BoA going down, Citi going down all at once. If THAT happend, you would be in a payroll check line every day of the week because there would be no money to pay out.
Aren't there any kind of limitations in place as to how much risk these banks and insurance companies can expose themselves to regarding CDS? I thought there are state laws in place that regulate how much money worth of policies an insurance company can write vs. its assets to ensure that it is able to make good on its claims.
I take it CDS are apparently exempt from all these restrictions?
Also, I thought AIG was the primary writer of the CDS. Are GS, BoA, Citi, etc. in just as deep?
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: GTKeeper
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: MotF Bane
Let them fucking die.
QFT, this company should NEVER have been bailed out.
If that happend then all their CDSs would be triggered so that could mean GS going down, BoA going down, Citi going down all at once. If THAT happend, you would be in a payroll check line every day of the week because there would be no money to pay out.
Aren't there any kind of limitations in place as to how much risk these banks and insurance companies can expose themselves to regarding CDS? I thought there are state laws in place that regulate how much money worth of policies an insurance company can write vs. its assets to ensure that it is able to make good on its claims.
I take it CDS are apparently exempt from all these restrictions?
Also, I thought AIG was the primary writer of the CDS. Are GS, BoA, Citi, etc. in just as deep?
by my understanding, citi and others made the cds's with aig, and i believe made some of their own with other clients.
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: miketheidiot
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: GTKeeper
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: MotF Bane
Let them fucking die.
QFT, this company should NEVER have been bailed out.
If that happend then all their CDSs would be triggered so that could mean GS going down, BoA going down, Citi going down all at once. If THAT happend, you would be in a payroll check line every day of the week because there would be no money to pay out.
Aren't there any kind of limitations in place as to how much risk these banks and insurance companies can expose themselves to regarding CDS? I thought there are state laws in place that regulate how much money worth of policies an insurance company can write vs. its assets to ensure that it is able to make good on its claims.
I take it CDS are apparently exempt from all these restrictions?
Also, I thought AIG was the primary writer of the CDS. Are GS, BoA, Citi, etc. in just as deep?
by my understanding, citi and others made the cds's with aig, and i believe made some of their own with other clients.
You sound pretty unsure of yourself. "By my understanding?" "I believe?" Is that the best you can do? Aren't you the fucktard that calls other people stupid when it comes to their economic views? What a tool you are. Go back to gargling LegendKillers balls; at least that kept your mouth from spouting stupidity.
Originally posted by: BoberFett
You sound pretty unsure of yourself. "By my understanding?" "I believe?" Is that the best you can do? Aren't you the fucktard that calls other people stupid when it comes to their economic views? What a tool you are. Go back to gargling LegendKillers balls; at least that kept your mouth from spouting stupidity.
Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
This seems to be one of those issues where you have to decide, in the tune of old Kenny Rogers, know when to hold 'em and know when to fold 'em. We're already in 150 bil... what's another 60? It's kind of like how I screwed myself when I bought an Xbox 360 Arcade. Sure it was cheap but then I had to get the HDMI cable. Bah what's another $40 after paying $150. Then I needed to get a play and charge kit. Bah what's another $15-20 when I've already paid $190. Then I needed to get...
We're fucked.
Originally posted by: heyheybooboo
Originally posted by: BoberFett
You sound pretty unsure of yourself. "By my understanding?" "I believe?" Is that the best you can do? Aren't you the fucktard that calls other people stupid when it comes to their economic views? What a tool you are. Go back to gargling LegendKillers balls; at least that kept your mouth from spouting stupidity.
Vacation Time.
(waves buh-bye)
Originally posted by: Modelworks
What Warren said just seems to stick in my head, If you are going to put me at risk, then I deserve to put restrictions on what you do to minimize my risk.
Banks don't want regulation and the governments involvement, then pay your own damn bills and STFU.
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: GTKeeper
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Originally posted by: MotF Bane
Let them fucking die.
QFT, this company should NEVER have been bailed out.
If that happend then all their CDSs would be triggered so that could mean GS going down, BoA going down, Citi going down all at once. If THAT happend, you would be in a payroll check line every day of the week because there would be no money to pay out.
Aren't there any kind of limitations in place as to how much risk these banks and insurance companies can expose themselves to regarding CDS? I thought there are state laws in place that regulate how much money worth of policies an insurance company can write vs. its assets to ensure that it is able to make good on its claims.
I take it CDS are apparently exempt from all these restrictions?
Also, I thought AIG was the primary writer of the CDS. Are GS, BoA, Citi, etc. in just as deep?