Too Big To Fail
Pop Goes The Bubble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 18:00 -0500Many people see national finances as an impenetrable fog of numbers and acronyms, which they feel is best left up to financial specialists to interpret for them. But try to see national finances as a henhouse, yourself as a hen, and financial specialists as foxes. Perhaps you should pay a little bit of attention - perhaps a bit more than one would expect from a chicken?
Financial Predators And Parasites Want To Live, Regardless Of The Cost
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/17/2015 20:30 -0500Bilderberg 2015 – Where Criminals Mingle With Politicians
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 16:20 -0500"This is what happens when you let money run riot and you allow industries to police themselves. This is what happens when the rich and powerful are endlessly granted special privileges, celebrated and permitted or even encouraged to place themselves above the law. And this is what happens when ordinary people feel bored by and excluded from politics, largely because their voices matter so little..."
The Fed Is Funneling The Investing Herd Off A Cliff
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/12/2015 07:16 -0500Once you funnel everyone into risk assets and then mask the risk to generate complacency, you guarantee a bidless market when risk reappears.
Memo To The Fed And Jon Hilsenrath: We're Not Here To Enrich Your Corporate Cronies
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2015 18:01 -0500Memo to the Fed and its media tool Hilsenrath: we're not here to further enrich your already obscenely rich banker and corporate cronies by buying overpriced goods and services we don't need. Our job is not to spend every cent we earn on interest to banks and mostly-garbage corporate goods and services. Our job is to limit the amount we squander on interest and needless spending. Our job is to build the financial security of our families by saving capital and prudently investing it in assets we control (as opposed to letting Wall Street control our assets parked in equity and bond funds).
1812: The Inconsequential War That Changed America Forever
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/30/2015 19:45 -0500The “inconsequential” war certainly and drastically changed America, of that there is no doubt. Whether for the good, or bad, you’ll have to decide for yourself. On the positive side, the war did cement American independence. It proved that to defeat America on its home ground, a very, very large army, and a great commitment to prolonged and bloody war, was going to be needed. On the negative side; the war left the country with constitutional revisionism, centralized power, protectionism, mercantilism, expansionism, blind patriotism, and militarism. That decentralist small-government thingy conceived by the Founding Fathers didn’t last very long, did it? One must wonder “War, what is it good for? Was it all worth it?”
How The Saudis Wag The Washington Dog
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/25/2015 21:05 -0500In real democracies, governments would do what the citizens who put them in office want them to do. The United States and other Western democracies make a mockery of that ideal. But, even so, there are limits; governments cannot defy public opinion on matters of great moment indefinitely. Enabling the Saudi ruling class, and the rulers of the other Gulf states, to direct American foreign policy to the extent that they do, and to get away with whatever they please, is hardly the least of it; but neither is it the only cause for concern.
War Threat Rises As Economy Declines, Warns Paul Craig Roberts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2015 22:00 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Australia
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- India
- Iran
- Japan
- Joseph Stiglitz
- Middle East
- national security
- New Orleans
- Over The Counter Derivatives
- Quantitative Easing
- Real estate
- recovery
- Reserve Currency
- Too Big To Fail
- Trade Balance
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Yen
As the years have passed without Washington hearing, Russia and China have finally realized that their choice is vassalage or war. Had there been any intelligent, qualified people in the National Security Council, the State Department, or the Pentagon, Washington would have been warned away from the neocon policy of sowing distrust. But with only neocon hubris present in the government, Washington made the mistake that could be fateful for humanity.
When Obama Talks About His "Massive Fight" With Wall Street, What Exactly Does He Refer To?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/10/2015 15:14 -0500When Obama talks of a "massive fight" with Wall Street, is he referring to:
- the tens of billions in handouts handed to each and every bank, unleashing the age of socialized losses and privatized profits?
- the condification of the Too Big To Fail concept?
- presiding over a Department of "Justice" that openly admitted it would not prosecute certain bankers over fears of systemic collapse consequences, thus mathin up TBTF with Too Big To Prosecute?
- the implementation of Barney Frank which was supposed to rein in banks and instead had Citigroup lawyers and lobbysists write the language write the language in the Derivatives Swaps Out provision of the Omnibus bill as a result of $70.3 trillion in total Citigroup derivatives, which the bank knows will one day require another taxpayer bailout?
Repatriation Of Gold From Fed Suggests Historic Vote Of No Confidence
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/06/2015 18:00 -0500Since 2012, there’s been an unprecedented call from foreign nations to repatriate their gold from Federal Reserve vaults in the U.S. This is an incredible development given many countries’ 71-year reliance on the Fed as a custodian for their bullion. Something huge must of happened in the last few years to prompt such action. That something may be a break in foreign gold holders’ trust in the Fed as a custodian of their precious metals.
There Is No Solution To The Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2015 14:15 -0500The end result of Fed policy appears to be to keep us in perpetual economic malaise, to keep us all confused. They keep interest rates low masking the huge structural issues of huge federal budget deficits and whenever the economy appears to be picking up a bit, they threaten to take away the government props of QE and low interest rates faster thereby slapping down the economy. All this happening while the ticking time bomb of huge Federal Debt accumulates more potency. There is no solution to the crisis, merely a choice of which roads to choose, a deflationary debt collapse, or a hyperinflationary dollar collapse or World War III. Pick your poison...
"Too Big To Fail Is A License For Recklessness" America's Banking System Is A "Fragile House Of Cards"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/01/2015 16:45 -0500"Too Big to Fail is a license for recklessness. These institutions defy notions of fairness, accountability, and responsibility... They benefit from the upside and expose the rest of us to the downside of their decisions. These banks are too powerful politically as well... Effectively we're hostages because their failure would be so harmful. They're likely to be bailed out if their risks don't turn out well and the largest financial firms in America can hide an enormous amount of risk in derivatives which creates a house of cards — a very fragile system."
Baltimore As A Microcosm Of America
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2015 21:20 -0500Baltimore, Maryland is in many ways the perfect microcosm for these United States of America.
If you still don’t get that, you’ll be in for a rude awakening in the years ahead.
71% Of Wall Street Bankers Admit They Are Too Big To Fail (And Underpaid)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2015 12:45 -0500Wall Streeters are not happy. According to the latest Bloomberg poll, 48% believe they are paid less (or much less) than they had hoped for. With the biggest banks cutting costs as new regulations force derisking and deleveraging (in theory), pay is taking a hit (although not so much for the CEOs). As one headhunter noted, "they're still making decent money, but it’s nothing like 2007," but ironically, a massive 71% of Wall Street bankers admit that their banks are still Too Big To Fail.
The Financial Markets Now Control Everything
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/29/2015 19:40 -0500The financial markets don't just dominate the economy - they now control everything.


