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- Elizabeth MacDonald is the stocks editor for Fox Business Network. She is recognized as one of the top prize-winning business journalists in the country, and has received 14 awards, including the top prize in business journalism, the Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business Journalism, and the Newswomen's Club of New York Front Page Award for Excellence in Investigative Journalism.
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joseph
If you really look at what has happened as a fact look at yourself for example. We owe more to the banks then ever. In short the banks own everything.
Bob Meyer
I never cease to be amazed at the number of experts who are so much smarter than the market. Not one of them said "Drop Sarbanes-Oxley, stop guaranteeing mortgages, get rid of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and let business do what it does best - move assets into the most productive areas". If the experts were so smart they should be making money out of this mess right now without having to get Hank Paulson to rig the markets in their favor. The uncertainty produced by these ridiculously "porked" proposals is scaring everyone into not lending money. You never know what the government is going to do next. Last week they sent in the FBI to find criminal bankers, and you can be sure that they will find them. The subsequent witch trials will have the defendants charged with casting spells over borrowers to break their wills and make them buy houses they couldn't afford. I'm not saying there was no fraud involved with some loans, but often the victim is all too eager to co-operate. There's an old saying among con-men - "You can't cheat an honest man" that expresses this very well. The really crooked loan brokers have already fled, there's no more money to be made. All that will be left are the honest men trying to salvage their banks. The FBI won't care. There's been a crime and we need to publicly punish someone! If you doubt this then try to find out what crime Michael Milken actually committed. Imagine that you are going to see your banker and you find armed FBI agents seizing his records. Guilty or not, your banker's career and possibly the bank itself are finished. One or two arrests on TV and there will be bank runs just like your grandfather told you about. Then Henry Paulson will to on TV and decry the "lack of confidence" in American banks (of course arresting bankers on TV had nothing to do with this) and declare that with only a few trillion dollars more he can fix it!
Is the Panic Overblown? at Emac’s Stock Watch | Fox Business
[...] In an earlier blog, I noted an idea from R. Glenn Hubbard, former chairman of the President’s Council on Economic Advisers under President George W. Bush and Chris Mayer, an economics professor at Columbia Business School. Their plan aims to directly put a floor under housing-and in turn distressed mortgage securities at the white-hot core of the crisis–by bailing out borrowers (see “Forget the Bailout: Here’s a Better Way“). [...]