Fannie Mae
How Jamie Dimon Became A Billionaire
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2015 09:19 -0500- CDO
- Christine Varney
- Citigroup
- Comptroller of the Currency
- Department of Justice
- Fannie Mae
- Foreclosures
- Freddie Mac
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Housing Market
- Institutional Investors
- Jamie Dimon
- LIBOR
- Mortgage Loans
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- Prison Time
- Private Equity
- Real estate
- Robert Khuzami
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Time Magazine
Two years ago, bank analyst Mike Mayo asked JPM chief Jamie Dimon a simple question: why should affluent customers not pick UBS over JPM due to a mismatch in capital ratios, to which Dimon's response was even simpler: "that's why I'm richer than you." To which we then added: "No logic, no rationale: all about the bottom line, which to Jamie at least is all that matters. The bottom line was indeed all, because as Bloomberg calculated overnight, over the past several years, Jamie Dimon quietly became not just "richer than you", but "much" richer: his net worth is now well over $1 billion!
Housing Recovery - Real Or Memorex
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/21/2015 12:11 -0500The rising risk to the housing recovery story lies in the Fed's ability to continue to keep interest rates suppressed. It is important to remember that individuals "buy payments" rather than houses. With each tick higher in mortgage rates so goes the monthly mortgage payment. With wages remaining suppressed, 1 out of 3 Americans no longer counted as part of the work force or drawing on a Federal subsidy, the pool of potential buyers remains tightly constrained. While there are many hopes pinned on the housing recovery as a "driver" of economic growth in 2015 and beyond - the lack of recovery in the home ownership data suggests otherwise.
Frontrunning: May 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/12/2015 06:48 -0500- Bonds Extend Global Rout as Europe Stocks Slide, Dollar Weakens (BBG)
- Verizon Communications to Buy AOL for $4.4 Billion (BBG)
- Fresh Nepal earthquake kills dozens, triggers panic (Reuters)
- Sen. Shelby to Unveil Legislation Heightening Fed Scrutiny (WSJ)
- Bill Gross: The Amount of Money I'll Give Away 'Is Staggering, Even to Me' (BBG)
- U.S. rejects notion that Gulf rulers snubbing Obama summit (Reuters)... what about AIIB?
- In Asia, Debt Market Gets Tougher (WSJ)
- Iran’s Mahan airline defies sanctions in shadowy aircraft deal (FT)
Government Using Subprime Mortgages To Pump Housing Recovery - Taxpayers Will Pay Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/05/2015 16:45 -0500- Bond
- default
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Foreclosures
- Freddie Mac
- Gambling
- Great Depression
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- Insurance Companies
- Janet Yellen
- Keynesian Stimulus
- Maxine Waters
- Medicare
- Mel Watt
- Mortgage Backed Securities
- Mortgage Loans
- Rating Agencies
- Real estate
- recovery
- Student Loans
- Subprime Mortgages
- TARP
To paraphrase H.L. Mencken, anyone who wants the government and Federal Reserve to create a housing recovery, deserves to get it good and hard, like a four by four to the side of their head. Subprime mortgages, subprime auto loans, and subprime student loans driven by preposterously low interest rates are the liquefying foundation of this fake economic recovery. Most rational people would agree that loaning money to people who will eventually default is not a good idea. But it is the underpinning of everything the Fed and government apparatchiks have done to keep this farce going a little while longer. It will not end well – Again.
Punk Q1 GDP Wasn't Surprising: It Extends A 60-Year Trend Of Exploding Money And Imploding Growth
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2015 12:25 -0500During the heyday of post-war prosperity between 1953 and 1971, real final sales - a better measure of economic growth than GDP because it filters out inventory fluctuations - grew at a 3.6% annual rate. That is exactly double the 1.8% CAGR recorded for 2000-2014. The long and short of it, therefore, is that there has been a dramatic downshift in the trend rate of economic growth during an era in which central bank intervention and stimulus has been immeasurably enlarged. How exactly is the Fed helping when the trend rate of real growth has withered dramatically?
The Third And Final Transformation Of Monetary Policy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/29/2015 18:30 -0500The law of unintended consequences is becoming ever more prominent in the economic sphere, as the world becomes exponentially more complex with every passing year. Just as a network grows in complexity and value as the number of connections in that network grows, the global economy becomes more complex, interesting, and hard to manage as the number of individuals, businesses, governmental bodies, and other institutions swells, all of them interconnected by contracts and security instruments, as well as by financial and information flows. It is hubris to presume, as current economic thinking does, that the entire economic world can be managed by manipulating one (albeit major) subset of that network without incurring unintended consequences for the other parts of the network.
Multibillion Hedge Fund Manager: "Ultimately QE Will Fail; US And China Might Enter Recession At The Same Time"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/20/2015 11:20 -0500"Ultimately, the current QE programs will fail. I think most likely through a large devaluation in the emerging market currencies. Having dodged and parried so many blows from Central Bank QE programs, the market is seemingly failing to break higher. Breadth is narrowing in the US stock market, and credit spreads widening. Economic data, with the exception of jobs, which is a lagging indicator, indicate the US economy is peaking. To me it looks like the US and China might go into recession at the same time."
SEC Reaches "Appropriate" Settlement With Freddie Mac Execs Who Will Pay Nothing And Receive No Punishment
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/15/2015 14:25 -0500Three former Freddie Mac executives who understated the amount of subprime exposure on the GSE's book by a factor of 28 came to terms with the SEC today on a settlement which imposes fees no one has to pay and "limitations on future behavior" that "will not limit [anyone] in any practical way."
One Last Look At The Real Economy Before It Implodes - Part 4
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/10/2015 21:49 -0500The implosion of America serves a very particular purpose. It is not a product of blind coincidence, fate, political stupidity or corporate greed. It is an engineered event meant to clear the way for an even more sinister economic environment designed to establish a final economic empire with the purpose of permanently enslaving us all.
Can't Wait To Read Bernanke's Memoirs? Here Are All The Timeless Statements By The Former Fed Chairman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2015 15:13 -0500- AIG
- Bear Stearns
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Commercial Paper
- Demographics
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Foreign Policy magazine
- Freddie Mac
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- GOOG
- HFT
- House Financial Services Committee
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- Housing Prices
- Joint Economic Committee
- Main Street
- Monetary Policy
- New York Times
- Recession
- Regional Banks
- Subprime Mortgages
- TARP
- Testimony
- Unemployment
- Washington D.C.
We know it will be next to impossible to wait until October when this book of toner repair and printer cartridge replacement wisdom comes out, here is a sampling of timeless soundbites by the former Fed Chairman and current blogger, that should be enough to hold readers over.
Frontrunning: April 8
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/08/2015 06:26 -0500- Bond
- Capital Markets
- China
- European Union
- Fannie Mae
- France
- Global Economy
- Insider Trading
- International Monetary Fund
- Iran
- Jed Rakoff
- Judge Jed Rakoff
- Markit
- National Debt
- Natural Gas
- Private Equity
- Rahm Emanuel
- RBC Capital Markets
- Recession
- Repo Market
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- South Carolina
- Switzerland
- Shell Will Buy BG Group for $70 Billion in Cash and Shares (BBG)
- IMF warns of long period of lower growth (FT)
- Wall Street sanguine as it heads into worst earnings season in six years (Reuters)
- Switzerland First With 10-Year Bond at Negative Yield (WSJ)
- U.S. Dot-Com Bubble Was Nothing Compared to Today’s China Prices (BBG)
- Rahm Emanuel Re-Elected as Mayor of Fiscally Ravaged Chicago (BBG)
- Oil falls on U.S. stock build, record Saudi output (Reuters)
- White South Carolina policeman charged with murdering black man (Reuters)
- German Factory Orders Drop for Second Month (BBG)
- A third of Republicans support Iran nuclear deal (Reuters)
Breaking the Definintion of Money and Inhibiting Seigniorage (Money Printing) with Asset Backed Bitcoin
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 04/03/2015 12:01 -0500Taking the gold-backed dollar into the next millenium and imbuing it with all of the attributes of the Bitcoin blockchain.
Ben Bernanke Pens First Blog Post, Defends Fed, Says He "Was Concerned About Seniors"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/30/2015 09:24 -0500- Bear Stearns
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Central Banks
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Freddie Mac
- Greece
- House Financial Services Committee
- Housing Market
- Joint Economic Committee
- Lehman
- Money Supply
- New York Times
- None
- Real Interest Rates
- Recession
- Regional Banks
- Subprime Mortgages
- Testimony
- Washington D.C.
"When I was chairman, more than one legislator accused me and my colleagues on the Fed’s policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee of “throwing seniors under the bus” (to use the words of one senator) by keeping interest rates low. The legislators were concerned about retirees living off their savings and able to obtain only very low rates of return on those savings. I was concerned about those seniors as well."
- Ben Bernanke first blog post
The American Dream Part 3 - Moonshine, Scam, & The Delusion Of Democracy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/29/2015 11:45 -0500When we left you yesterday, we were trying to connect the bloated, cankerous ankles of the US economy (Part 1) to the sugar rush of its post-1971 credit-based money system (Part 2). Today, we look at the face of our government. It is older... with more worry lines and wrinkles. But whence cometh that pale and stupid look? That is also the result of the same advanced diabetic epizootic that has infected American society.
The American Dream Part 2 - We Now Live In A "Pimpocracy"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/28/2015 15:15 -0500Americans still say they believe in free markets, democracy and financial rectitude. But only as platitudes and hypocrisies... the free market was one of the first casualties of the post-1971 fiat money period. In a free market, people earn money by working (income) or by saving and investing it (capital growth). But credit-based money needed neither work nor saving; you just had to know the right people.



