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| Longbranch Saloon This is a special area for hot topics, duels and heated discussions. WARNING- Enter at your own risk. This is a free-fire zone. |
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| My take on this is.....the guy without the SSN buys the house, but has no real legal rights in this country. So the mortgagee can do whatever he wants. If said guy without the SSN leaves the country and misses even one payment or it's late, guess who gets the house back....when the market's back up.
__________________ When the goin' gets tough, the tough go shopping! |
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| Fed rate 2%, Bank of England rate 5%. Who's got it right? I believe the Fed has, the BoE is too cautious and conservative in its approach and we, the people of Britain, will end up paying the price for this reluctance to take decisive action when required.
__________________ Binky Bainbridge You can't always get what you want - The Rolling Stones |
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__________________ A man's got to believe in something, I believe I am going fishing-Thoreau |
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What I was getting at was the more ambitious and adventurous approach the FED, (& the European Bank), takes to fiscal policy than the staid BoE. This slowly slowly policy has already lead, in my view, to our Northern Rock disaster and a wobbling of our banking system due to the BoE talking about moral risk at a time when the first priority should have been liquidity in the financial system. Bank of England warns against bailing out struggling banks ![]() By Carter Dougherty Published: September 12, 2007 ![]() FRANKFURT: In an unusual public display of discord, the Bank of England criticized other major central banks Wednesday for injecting cash into the financial system to help stabilize credit markets, saying such a policy amounted to a bailout of investors who had made bad decisions. Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England, also hinted that the current crisis could make further interest rate rises unnecessary, if the recent sharp increase in borrowing costs ended up hurting consumer demand. That, he said, would lower the inflation outlook, despite the current explosion in prices of commodities from oil to wheat. The main thrust of his written testimony to the British Parliament, however, was a sharp warning about "moral hazard," a term used to describe the downside of policies that effectively rescue investors when their bets turn out wrong. "The provision of such liquidity support undermines the efficient pricing of risk by providing ex-post insurance for risky behavior," King wrote. "That encourages excessive risk-taking and sows the seeds of a future crisis." Over the past month, as investors have refused to buy securities backed by potentially shaky U.S. mortgages, major central banks have stepped in to provide short-term lending to the financial system, easing the search for cash. The European Central Bank, which kicked off the effort Aug. 9, has added about €250 billion, or $347 billion, to the market, and on Wednesday it continued its effort by lending €75 billion for three months. The U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan have done the same, and on Aug. 17, the Federal Reserve also cut the rate at which it loans money directly to banks. But the Bank of England has barely taken part in this effort, injecting only £4.4 billion, or $8.9 billion, into the system since the crisis began a month ago. Bank of England warns against bailing out struggling banks - International Herald Tribune
__________________ Binky Bainbridge You can't always get what you want - The Rolling Stones |
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