werepossum
Elite Member
- Jul 10, 2006
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Accepting a small loss or delayed payment is not at all "far better than nothing at all" in this case because it requires loaning them even more money. It's called throwing good money after bad. You can look it up. It's kind of a thing.No, that's not the case at all. I don't own any Greek debt currently. Other people do. Their goal is the return of their principal, which is a fundamentally different calculation. Accepting a small loss or delayed payment is far better than nothing at all, while jumping into an investment now is not something I would do. Furthermore, I wouldn't buy their debt now in large part because of the foolish austerity plan the troika is trying to implement, which I have no control over.
I'm not sure how this is hard to understand?
And I remain boggled that you would consider the prospect of yet another mark-down on debt already marked down 50% as "a small loss", especially when that is wrapped up in loaning them even more money. I remain unconvinced you would consider it a small loss if it were your money. But hey, you are correct that it's not at all hard to understand; other people exist to further the ideology. At least until you run out of other people's money anyway.