rcwhalen's blog
Creative Destruction: US Bancorp Buys Failed Institution in TN
Submitted by rcwhalen on 01/29/2012 17:08 -0500On Friday the FDIC reminded us that the banking crisis continues, closing and selling several institutions in arranged transactions. This may seem gloomy news, but please note that the shareholders of the acquiring institutions just made a lot of money.
Sol Sanders | Follow the money No. 102 America’s love affair with China
Submitted by rcwhalen on 01/22/2012 11:48 -0500But those Shanghai office towers across the river in Pudong were already standing empty a decade ago – not that you would know from any contemporary reporting. Former Prime Minister Rhu Rongji publicly pleaded with provincial bureaucrats to stop fabricating figures because it made it impossible for him to know what was going on.
A Tale of Two Banks: Citigroup and Wells Fargo
Submitted by rcwhalen on 01/16/2012 21:23 -0500I continue to believe that the large difference between the valuation of WFC and C is actually about right and is a function of the high-risk business model at C. Say what you want about the piles of cash, Dick Bove, C has a gross yield on lending assets that is more than 350bp above the industry average, a function of a subprime internal default target for the average customer. This is a deliberate business model choice and one that, frankly, makes it hard for me to justify buying C.
Sol Sanders | Follow the money No. 101 | I’ll see you -- and raise?
Submitted by rcwhalen on 01/14/2012 08:17 -0500Pres. Barack Obama has launched new international diplomatic poker with “a trailing hand”. It is impossible to exaggerate the forces at play, economic as well as political, foreign and domestic, and their interplay.
Large Bank Earnings or Why BAC Went to $4
Submitted by rcwhalen on 01/12/2012 22:41 -0500Analyst surveys have now risen to the level of fact, as we all know. Thus Bloomberg and other news outlets feature detailed reports about the opinions of the Sell Side community as though these musings were burned into stone tablets with the fire of the Holy Spirit.
Sol Sanders | Follow the money No. 100 | The limits of personal diplomacy
Submitted by rcwhalen on 01/07/2012 08:21 -0500Whatever their vitae, dreaming up a buddy relationship [built around Joe Biden] as solution to the troubled U.S.-China relations almost certainly ahead, is, indeed, preposterous. The little soap opera proves, were it not already self-evident, the “lessons” of the Cold War lie buried somewhere in the Library of Congress -- with no remnant at CIA, one surmises.
Follow the money No. 99 | In pursuit of the elusive soft-landing
Submitted by rcwhalen on 01/02/2012 08:27 -0500The new year’s worldwide economic downturn has an interlocking effect: every national economy is searching to accommodate itself politically as well as economically to what looks to be an extended period of low growth. After longer or shorter periods of historically unrivaled prosperity, they are feeling for a “bottom” – a level to wait out new growth. That is the proverbial “soft landing”.
Sol Sanders | Follow the money No. 98 | Moves speed up on a complicated Asian chessboard
Submitted by rcwhalen on 12/25/2011 12:08 -0500A new era of increasing instability is opening in East Asia.
Ed Pinto: Fannie and Freddie accept responsibility for misleading investors
Submitted by rcwhalen on 12/20/2011 06:40 -0500Latest from Ed Pinto, who piles on the blame the GSEs argument with some new data and analysis in The American, AEI's online magazine. This will not help the cognitive illusion being so skillfully maintained by our friends Ritholtz and Nocera, who still cannot bring themselves to admit that Wall Street runs the GSEs just like a private SIV. Lawyers and first loss exposure is the only difference.
Sol Sanders | Follow the money No. 97 | A pipeline to …well, almost …eternity
Submitted by rcwhalen on 12/18/2011 16:33 -0500Canadian threats to transfer their affections to the Chinese market might have some validity – although even Chavez is arranging swaps with Iran for his Chinese sales with Venezuelan crude supposedly sold to Beijing flowing into Texas.
Bob Eisenbeis | Be Careful What You Wish For
Submitted by rcwhalen on 12/11/2011 19:41 -0500The appropriateness of leaking details of material to be discussed at an upcoming FOMC meeting is itself an issue that deserves scrutiny, since the agenda is not available in advance and the substance is covered by confidentiality rules of the FOMC. The only purpose may be to launch trial balloons to see what additional reactions might be garnered to better inform the discussion that will actually take place. Assuming that is the objective, here goes.
Sol Sanders | Follow the money No. 96 -- Solutions in a time of crisis
Submitted by rcwhalen on 12/10/2011 22:28 -0500Moderation in all things”, said a pre-Christian North African Roman dramatist, Terence [Publius Terentius Afer]. But like so many artists, he latched on to a beautiful artifact but got the logic wrong.
Dylan Ratigan | Greedy Bastards Favorite Financial Innovation: The Swaps Market (Part 1)
Submitted by rcwhalen on 12/05/2011 22:25 -0500“As the U.S. economy and especially Wall Street and the banks were less and less focused on funding and financing real economic activity jobs, factories, commerce, the rise of the ersatz virtual world of credit faults swaps and over-the-counter derivatives, all of these gray markets—that are unregulated, that are not traded on exchanges, that have no transparency—were really a way for banks to generate income because they could no longer make their money on the real economy,”
David Kotok | USD-EUR currency exchange rate and the Ellsberg paradox
Submitted by rcwhalen on 12/05/2011 07:46 -0500What is certain? If you take 1350 US dollars today, you may exchange them for 1000 euros.
Sol Sanders | Follow the money No. 95 -- China may soon become the problem
Submitted by rcwhalen on 12/03/2011 20:54 -0500Creeping up on the outer edges of Wall Street and The City soothsayers’ economic crystal ball, until now dominated by American and Euro crises, is growing concern about China.


