mxnerd
Diamond Member
- Jul 6, 2007
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40K of those were from a year ago????
Oops, did not notice that. D:
40K of those were from a year ago????
lol - yeah, I don't understand the role. I understand it perfectly but disagree wholeheartedly. Smart firms do their own underwriting.
Are the agencies mostly right? Sure, they absolutely are. Are they always right? No, they aren't. However, when they are wrong, they are wrong big and they are usually far too slow to see it coming. Re-reviewing credits every 6-12mos doesn't help. They get paid for the work they do, same with Trustees. Which is why good firms have their own staff and aren't beholden to some doof's rating.
The probabilistic game played by investors, especially fixed income, doesn't leave a large margin for error when dealing with declining credit that doesn't get a review for 6-12 months, or a sector under duress. Only fundamental analysis shows that. Do you think PIMCO or Blackrock give a flying fuck through a rolling donut about the RAs? My firm is in the majority.
If they weren't equipped they should have recognized it. However, I know, in particular, that they were equipped. Some analysts knew and received pressure from committees to change ratings that were suitable to driving business. That correlative analysis was ignored, or that systemic RE declines could never happen is sheer lunacy.
Do I trust them to be able to accurately forecast Brexit 48hrs after the fact? Fuck no. This was a hedge, nothing more.
Yes, they do. In lieu of being able to underwrite deals on your own, you depend on them to do some of the work for you. What, exactly, do you call an NRSRO? Do they not do due diligence, run cashflow models, sensitivity analysis, monte carlo, correlations, regressions...etc.? What do you call that? And depending on that analysis, what do you call that? Hopscotch? Jumping rope? Tiddly winks with manhole covers?WTF are you talking about? The ratings agencies have nothing to do with underwriting.
And you get what you pay for.If you're a small insurance firm with a $30million operating fund, and you're required by regulation to keep that money in investment grade debt or treasuries, you don't hire a CFA for $100k+, you rely on the rating agencies.
See above. Hence why they are worthless. Your word "superficial" works well enough and gets my point across.Credit ratings do not represent a substantive fundamental analysis. They are a superficial rating. That's all they're meant to be.
Hence why I think they are worthless.Yeah, no shit FI shops don't use rating agencies, they're trying to outperform the markets.
I deal with new products all of the time. That doesn't mean you can't think the process through and understand key risks and how they should factor into your investment decision to come to a yay or nay.Again, the ratings agencies were dealing with a new kind of product and were under pressure to rate. This shit is not uncommon in finance. I'm not saying they did nothing wrong, but to suggest it was criminal, you need more than that.
Again, more evidence that you don't understand the agencies. The downgrades reflect the uncertainty resulting from the vote. They were not attempts to "accurately forecast" anything.
But NE England voted 58% to leave while NW England voted 53.7% to leave.Now north England wants to join Scotland.
Allow the north of England to secede from the UK & join Scotland petition: over 50,000 and counting.
https://www.change.org/p/the-uk-gov...gland-to-secede-from-the-uk-and-join-scotland
UK financial issues maybe an issue but I wonder if a UK Passport will be valid in Europe.
"Of the local species." More like their own fishery revenue.Sweden wants a blanket ban on the importation of live North American lobsters across the European Union in an effort to prevent a possible underwater invasion.
I disagree, in the short term it will be a big problem for Great Britain .
Investors don't like uncertainty and on Monday they are going to start running away from the London Stock Exchange.
This will be a benefit to others in the EU.
Eu Commissioner Lord Hill announces his resignation
Great Britain has no trade agreements with other nations.![]()
One of the most annoying things with the remain campaign was the FUD they attempted to spread. If you know anything about economics you know that people want to trade as cheaply as possible, no one wants to pay over the odds for something. So trade agreements are negotiated to our benefit and swiftly, more so in an environment where we export more than we import and offer more value and quality.
The only way we can lose out is if the other EU countries cut off their nose to spite their face and put huge tariffs on our exports, but they just punish their population with more expensive goods and the UK simply goes to the next most profitable nations to sell our exports to.
No one sticks their nose up at the worlds 5th biggest economy because to do so hurts themselves more than it hurts us.
LOL, you're too funny.
The number of calls I have seen them get wrong is far too many. Sure, I'll glance at a report, listen into a call, but I rarely take them seriously. Why? Because they aren't on the hook for anything and people have short memories.
Not only did they screw the pooch on the mortgage crisis (CDOs, wrappers, non-agency) , S&P getting taken out of CMBS for how long? 2 years? How many fuckups on the Corp side have they had? Putting $75bn of FFELP bonds on negative watch over legal final issues? LOL. They didn't even run models on a huge portion, the rest they could have easily remedied but failed to do so. Poor navient, caught in the middle.
Ohh, ZH is funny, but far more wrong than they are right. I do enjoy reading them, as does pretty much everybody.
I have never said that there won't be disruption and I have fully admitted that banks will have to leave. It's a negative for commercial RE, but how bad? Don't know yet.
We are 48hrs removed from Brexit, Moody's blew their load early, as they done before. We'll see how far it goes.
No, it needs to be reduced to manageable levels. In the short term enough to release the pressure on our public systems (NHS, housing, schooling, jobs etc)
Long term it needs to be much less comparable to national birth rates, right now the actual percentage of non Britons (who do not share our values and who provably do not integrate even after 2-3 generations of children)
I did answer this, I said that leaving the EU is a prerequisite for lowering immigration because being a member means we cannot control our border. The vote was to leave the EU it was NOT for a manifesto, which means all we're doing is deciding shall we stay or go.
I mean would you prefer to have say 20,000 net migrants a year instead of 300,000 but stay in the EU or would you rather keep it at 300,000,
It's simple - I recognize the long term outlook for fucking the proles. It ain't good. Call it pragmatic capitalism.
How did the West overtake its Eastern rivals? And has the zenith of Western power now passed? Acclaimed historian Niall Ferguson argues that beginning in the fifteenth century, the West developed six powerful new concepts, or killer applicationscompetition, science, the rule of law, modern medicine, consumerism, and the work ethicthat the Rest lacked, allowing it to surge past all other competitors.
No, it needs to be reduced to manageable levels. In the short term enough to release the pressure on our public systems (NHS, housing, schooling, jobs etc)
Let's make this very simple. You think Breitbart is a better source of accurate info than Moody's.
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To clarify that, nobody's saying Moody's is the most accurate, just that there's far worse analytical minds.
Lord Digby Jones said:Ordinary Brit beats global onslaught of Establishment Elite. Our grandchildren will thank us 4the day we took back control of our democracy
As of late, Breitbart gives very few fucks. They've become the mouthpiece of the alt-right and a few dissident lefties. And that's OK.
They're actually riding the wave.
For someone who loves to say business and money are so good, he sure seems to not follow that line when it comes to white populism. I would not be surprised if he loves Putin long time.
Same with Ducati696.
Now we're getting to the heart of the matter. It's all about you...For example, I am freelancer/self-employed who moved to Spain, I am working for several UK companies...one of them actually pays me in GBP. What will this mean? Will it be impossible or much more difficult in the future, unlike now, simply to work for an UK company? It can WELL happen this might affect such things. It is also *likely* that traveling for UK people *will* get more difficult and they will need Visas, even for so simple things like now where you can hop on Ryanair and fly to Spain, France, whatever for 40. It COULD happen when the EU gets cranky over the exit...
OMG LOL:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHPqIkmemPM#t=5m25s
Cameron in an act of brilliance following the previous folly is going to make the next guy decide on Article 50. Cue yakety sax.
What makes you think that the pressure on the NHS or anything else is due to immigrants? According to wikipedia, immigrants comprise 11.9% of the UK population. Even if you get rid of all of them, you've logically reduced the pressure by 11.9%, but as you said, you don't want to stop all immigrants, let alone shipping any home who are already here.
What makes you think that most immigrants do not share our values?
Yes, but you've voted for something completely non-specific in terms of what you've hoped for. Immigration (particularly involving people whom you describe as "not sharing UK values") may well go up after brexit.
Also, do you suppose that EU immigrants are more or less likely to have values that you believe are compatible with our society?
Because you just voted for less of them and more non-EU migrants. There's no reason to assume that immigration in general will go up or down simply because of brexit, the only reasonable assumption is the one revolving around the recession you've just voted for. Loads of UK businesses (mine possibly included, I barely scraped through the last recession) will die.I'm no making that assumption though, you've just assumed I am. As i keep saying, brexit is just one piece of a larger puzzle and we need it in order to get what we want. It wont all happen at once, it will take time.
A recession isn't a sure thing right now. Besides in some circumstances recessions are good things, the US should have gone through one after the 07/08 crisis to fix the economy but didn't so that's a disaster waiting to happen. Recessions are tough but they happen for a reason because economies are running not based on real value but government meddling and once the meddling stops the house of cards built on that structure comes down. I doubt we'll have a recession but if we do have one then I welcome it, if we need one it's better to have it now rather than inflate the issue with QE and then end up with a bigger one down the line.
I don't know about you, but I and probably most other people who voted remain, as well as probably 90% of MPs, see immigration as a completely healthy facet of a properly functioning economy; if you want a country worth living in, then you have to be able to accept immigration, people are going to go where the jobs are.
We need an economy that can function without continual growth, because the UK is basically full now we can't sustain many more people off our land in fact we already need to import food because we can't grow enough locally. Any economy whose success is predicated on unlimited future growth is fundamentally flawed and doomed to fail. We need an economy that sustains itself on the current population and resources.
You say you want more control over immigration, but there is no plan to control immigration in such a way to alleviate your concerns and keep the economy running. That's what you just voted for.
There are plans, they're just not being made by the government right now, and they need to be, so that's what people like me will focus on next, if the current government are too stubborn then I'll vote UKIP and they'll sort it, not really fussed either way to be honest, but enough people want it so it's probably going to happen sooner or later.
I don't know about you, but if I decide to make a massive change to my life, I plan it through first; I don't decide that I want to be a dancer tomorrow, move to another country and then realise that I don't know how to dance.
I have planned it through.
Step 1: Vote out of EU
Step 2: Vote UKIP in in 2020 GE's
All you're doing is moaning that one of the steps seen in isolation doesn't make sense, well that's true, why not look at all the steps together, oh looks now it makes sense.
You're saying you'll vote UKIP. So you'll be voting for the guy who waited a day after the referendum to debunk one of the brexit campaign's main argument points: Giving the £350m / week that was going to the EU to the NHS. The figure itself has even been widely debunked. Sounds like an honest candidate to me with a realistic plan!
He didn't wait to do anything, the brexit campaign wasn't run by Nigel or UKIP in fact they distanced themselves from it, he didn't make that claim and it's not up to him to debunk it, he was ASKED what he thought about it and he gave an honest answer, which is that claim is not what people were voting for.
BUT PEOPLE KNOW THAT, people know the referendum wasn't to vote to spend all the spare cash on the NHS, the vote was in or out. The vote wasn't "stay in or leave and spend 350M on the NHS" and everyone knows that. The only people making a fuss about that are the people who didn't even vote leave anyway that want to make a fuss about how the leave side must have been mislead, just like we all must be stupid or hateful or racist, same old same old, it couldn't just be that we have a different and legitimate point of view that differs from other peoples. That whole headline trying to make Farage look bad is one tiny drop of water in a torrential downpour of hate against Farage which is untrue and is a product of leftist media in our country continually trying to spin what he says and place blame on him for things he hasn't done or supported.
Doesn't work, it's not going to work so just knock it off. Argue honestly and you're going to get further.
HYPOTHETICAL question:
Let's assume this likely Brexit gives the EU a HUGE wake-up call, and they start to think over how things are run, and would also make *yet another* exception with the UK, and possibly make them an offer in regards to Immigration - ok, let's just speculate "the EU" would say that not a single further immigrant "is sent" to the UK, as a result of this wake-up call.
Do you think that the "common folks" in the UK then would revise their wish to exit the EU?
I wonder whether any politician wants to be the one who signed the UK's exit to the EU, and the subsequent fall-out (such as the almost certain recession). I doubt that even many brexit voters who lose their jobs will suddenly have a very short memory and blame that PM for their woes.
It's partly due to immigrants, yes they make up a large percentage of the population. I never said anything about kicking out current immigrants I think that would probably cause more problems than it would solve. However there's a net 300k per year being added and that's what really needs to be targeted
And more generally these people do not care they're putting strain on our NHS and other services, they have no empathy for the damage they're doing to the local people, they just care about themselves. Well these services are paid for by the British caring for one another and all chipping in.
Don't care, I want much less of both and leaving the EU is a pre-requisite for that.
I'm no making that assumption though, you've just assumed I am. As i keep saying, brexit is just one piece of a larger puzzle and we need it in order to get what we want. It wont all happen at once, it will take time.
We need an economy that can function without continual growth, because the UK is basically full now we can't sustain many more people off our land in fact we already need to import food because we can't grow enough locally. Any economy whose success is predicated on unlimited future growth is fundamentally flawed and doomed to fail. We need an economy that sustains itself on the current population and resources.
There are plans, they're just not being made by the government right now, and they need to be, so that's what people like me will focus on next, if the current government are too stubborn then I'll vote UKIP and they'll sort it, not really fussed either way to be honest, but enough people want it so it's probably going to happen sooner or later.
I have planned it through.
Step 1: Vote out of EU
Step 2: Vote UKIP in in 2020 GE's
All you're doing is moaning that one of the steps seen in isolation doesn't make sense, well that's true, why not look at all the steps together, oh looks now it makes sense.
He didn't wait to do anything, the brexit campaign wasn't run by Nigel or UKIP in fact they distanced themselves from it, he didn't make that claim and it's not up to him to debunk it, he was ASKED what he thought about it and he gave an honest answer, which is that claim is not what people were voting for.
Doesn't work, it's not going to work so just knock it off. Argue honestly and you're going to get further.
As i keep saying, brexit is just one piece of a larger puzzle and we need it in order to get what we want. It wont all happen at once, it will take time.
On the official UK government petitions website, there's a petition that has picked up 10 times the number of votes that any other UK official e-petition ever has, calling for a second referendum. I hope that efforts like this can save us from people who basically have no idea what they're voting for.
https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/131215