Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby BigTex » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 17:21:27

Here is another way of thinking about the overshoot analogy applied to finance:

If we are in ecological overshoot as a result of depleting a one time store of fossil fuels that took millions of years to create, is that different from depleting future accumulations of wealth by using debt to finance consumption today?

By raiding future accumulations of wealth to finance current consumption, where will future investment capital come from?

Is there an analogy in finance to negative EROI? I am thinking that there reaches a point where money can't be borrowed under any terms because there is either too little liquidity or simply no way the borrower could ever pay it back. You might say that would be a loan with a negative EROI. If that loan is what is needed to either continue servicing other debt or to fund consumption (especially of necessities), and the loan is not made, what happens? I understand that governments can step in and remedy these situations short term, but long term the only effect of repeated government intervention will be worthless currency. Alternatively, what if it is the government itself that is the borrower to whom no one will lend?

How is a commodity priced when it has a negative EROI? Does it's production cease? Should negative externalities be included in the EROI calculation? If it's not included, isn't that dangerous?

Doesn't the ability to emerge from a financial depression presuppose the ready availability of affordable raw materials?

***

[Wandering a little now]

I am just trying to visualize the financial systems' response to the following scenario: assume a population that requires 2% economic growth in order to keep up with the populations' needs, and the inputs needed for production begin declining at an accelerating rate (post peak oil, for example). What happens? Do we rely on human ingenuity to wrestle ever more value added out of fewer and fewer units of input to make up the shortfall? Doesn't this presuppose that human ingenuity is more or less infinite? Is there any historical precedent for this (i.e., has human ingenuity ever provided durable solutions to a population's needs when sources of energy were in decline, OTHER than by replacing one source of energy with another--is that really ingenuity, or is that just a parasite looking for a new host)?

Isn't something like solar energy really either: (1) a negative EROI proposition or (2) a perpetual motion machine?

So many questions. Where's MrBill? Anybody else want to take a crack?
:)
User avatar
BigTex
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3858
Joined: Thu 03 Aug 2006, 03:00:00
Location: Graceland

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby patience » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 18:05:25

LoneSnark,
No, we cannot consume that which is not produced, That much is correct. Production can, however, increase, and has, producing a lot of houses and imported manufactured goods, among other things. The market has a way of supplying when demand is there. Now, that easy credit is contracting, and the housing market, and others, are contracting too.

The IT illiterate will try again here:
http://www.mercurynews.com/realestatenews/ci_8344134

This was posted in Current Energy News, Housing Collapse thread, by Schroedinger's Cat, page 238. California Jan. sales were19,145, and Jan. foreclosures were 19821. Sales were down from Dec and foreclosures were up. The link worked for me there.
User avatar
patience
Resting in Peace
 
Posts: 3180
Joined: Fri 04 Jan 2008, 04:00:00

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby cube » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 18:09:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', 'A')nd cube, I have told you before. China is not sitting on $1.6 trillion dollars in cash, it is sitting on only $1.6 trillion dollars worth of assets. The dollars they used to buy the assets are where you are saying they are not: in U.S. pockets chasing goods in the American economy.
a more detailed explanation:
When I said the Chinese are sitting on US cash I do not mean it in a literal sense. Cash does not pay interest so it makes no sense to have a giant room with wheel barrels of US dollars sitting around doing nothing. A more accurate term is to say the Chinese are sitting on $1.6 Trillion of US bonds. However bonds can be sold/redeemed for cash + interest, hence the phrase: "The Chinese are sitting on $1.6 Trillion dollars of US cash".

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', 'A')s such, China cannot dump the U.S. dollar, since it is not holding any.
yes they can:
1) China sells $1.6 Trillion US bonds for cash.
2) China uses the cash to purchase assets: companies, land, commodities, etc...
That would be called "dumping" the US dollar.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', 'T')hat is like me saying I am going to dump IBM stock when I don't own any to dump. China can try to liquidate its U.S. assets, but it will quickly find itself selling them for a fraction of what it paid for them.
China is not holding onto U.S. assets--> they are holding onto US "cash".
When a nation has a foreign currency reserve it is holding onto a foreign nation's currency.
currency aka "cash" :)
cube
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3909
Joined: Sat 12 Mar 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby LoneSnark » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 20:01:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'y')es they can:
1) China sells $1.6 Trillion US bonds for cash.
2) China uses the cash to purchase assets: companies, land, commodities, etc...
That would be called "dumping" the US dollar.

Cube, thank you. So many have not throught it through this far. Now, think it through to the next step. What happens when $1.6 trillion of US Bonds land on the market and it becomes clear the seller is desperate to sell. Their face value is $1.6 trillion, which is what they would pay if held through to maturity, which might be many years from now. But China is dumping them early onto secondary re-sell markets. Where are these markets going to get $1.6 trillion in cash on short notice? Not just that, but the surest way to lose your money is to proclaim to everyone that you are holding the bag and want out in a hurry. Inscrupulous bond traders will buy your bonds, but for a fraction of what they are really worth. And, whatever China decides to do with its dollars once it has them the price will shoot up. This is just how markets work: you cannot move anything around in a hurry without losing a lot of it, especially when it is $1.6 trillion and everyone is watching your every move trying to get their cut.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')By raiding future accumulations of wealth to finance current consumption, where will future investment capital come from?

Again: the future is the future, only the present is the present. You cannot raid future accumulations of wealth. All you can raid is what is currently being produced. In an economic sense, all you can do is stop directing production towards investments and instead direct it todays consumption goods. This will reduce future production, kind of like what you are talking about. But I see no hints that investment has stalled, so this tradeoff is not being made. Yes, U.S. household savings are just barely negative, but consumers savings is not a usual source of investment, almost all of which traditionally comes from corporate profits and savings (companies do our investment for us).
User avatar
LoneSnark
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 514
Joined: Thu 15 Nov 2007, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 21:18:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', '
')By raiding future accumulations of wealth to finance current consumption, where will future investment capital come from?

The printing press. Printing money has the same stimulating effect as investment capital entering the marketplace.

The shrinking of the financial market or the bust phace we are now witnessing has been traditionally jumpstarted by war. War is a substancial debt generator. You have to know that essentially every unit of currency is created by debt. If all the current debt was payed off the money supply would completely vanish.
User avatar
mmasters
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2272
Joined: Sun 16 Apr 2006, 03:00:00
Location: Mid-Atlantic
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 21:24:08

Great analysis Mr Bill!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '[')However, if they borrowed against future earnings to finance consumption today then likely over time they will have less net total income as they also have to pay interest on their debt, and what they chose to invest in did not appreciate in value to offset that cost of interest. Which by the way is a strong argument why lending money to poor countries is not always in their best long-term interest...

For sure, but on the other hand it doesn't cost the bank practically anything to lend a country money and keep lending it money as long as it keeps servicing the debt. It is pure usury on behalf of the IMF and World Bank. Shame so few understand the whole racket.
User avatar
mmasters
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2272
Joined: Sun 16 Apr 2006, 03:00:00
Location: Mid-Atlantic
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 21:30:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('patience', 'm')masters,
I've heard of what you say, but have no knowledge of it, so I'll take you at your word as to how the overall works. I was speaking to the situation of an individual, and maybe our govt, as possibly being outside of, or subject to the masters you cite. It looks to me like the individual is screwed, from first inflation, then a deflationary "reset" that I've read about. Critique on that idea?

Yes the individual that doesn't understand the system is screwed in the end. If he understands it he might be able to get out of harms way and/or possibly align himself to profit from it.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')'ve read some of the gist of Jekyll Island, but need to read the entire book. Kinda got the general idea. Is the Money Masters in print? I'll look.
Money masters is a video, you can search it on video.google and watch it or go to their website and buy a dvd for 20 bucks http://www.themoneymasters.com/ I highly recommend it!
User avatar
mmasters
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2272
Joined: Sun 16 Apr 2006, 03:00:00
Location: Mid-Atlantic
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby steam_cannon » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 21:43:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', 'I') have some posts about 6 months back where I made some diagrams breaking down the whole fractional reserve process. Those diagrams do not exist in any textbooks or publications.
Nice!

Money Creation Diagrammed - by mmasters
http://www.peakoil.com/fortopic30856.html
User avatar
steam_cannon
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 2859
Joined: Thu 28 Dec 2006, 04:00:00
Location: MA
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby BigTex » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 21:47:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', '
')By raiding future accumulations of wealth to finance current consumption, where will future investment capital come from?

The printing press. Printing money has the same stimulating effect as investment capital entering the marketplace.

The shrinking of the financial market or the bust phace we are now witnessing has been traditionally jumpstarted by war. War is a substancial debt generator. You have to know that essentially every unit of currency is created by debt. If all the current debt was payed off the money supply would completely vanish.


But wait a second, won't the printing press just devalue those future dollars? If I need to buy a bulldozer in three years but I spend my bulldozer money on a fantasy Disney World vacation today, all the printing press is going to do is make the bulldozer cost more in three years, it won't make me more able to afford it.

Regarding the jumpstart through war, I thought we already did that in 2001 in Afghanistan and 2003 in Iraq. Are you thinking a third front somewhere?

BTW, mmasters, if you would like to share, how do you make your living? I am interested so that I might understand your views on this topic a little better. Are you a pro or just armchair?
:)
User avatar
BigTex
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3858
Joined: Thu 03 Aug 2006, 03:00:00
Location: Graceland
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby BigTex » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 22:14:28

Let me re-phrase some of the questions above as follows:

What would be the ingredients of a global financial debacle that would be more or less apocalyptic? In other words, rather than a depression being triggered by a loss of confidence, what type of event(s) coupled with a loss of confidence could be "the big one" financially?

I am thinking that a financial debacle could be triggered by negative externalities causing one or more key industrial inputs to suddenly be re-priced so that the EROI became negative very suddenly.

For example, let's say that drilling for oil started causing terrible earthquakes and every time you drilled for oil offshore it caused tsunamis that destroyed coastal populations.
:)
User avatar
BigTex
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3858
Joined: Thu 03 Aug 2006, 03:00:00
Location: Graceland

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby cube » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 23:04:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'y')es they can:
1) China sells $1.6 Trillion US bonds for cash.
2) China uses the cash to purchase assets: companies, land, commodities, etc...
That would be called "dumping" the US dollar.

Cube, thank you. So many have not throught it through this far. Now, think it through to the next step. What happens when $1.6 trillion of US Bonds land on the market and it becomes clear the seller is desperate to sell.
I never said China could dump $1.6 Trillion like a hot potato. What I'm saying is they will eventually dump the US dollar. That is a guarantee. I lost count how many times I've read silly comments like: "China can't do that....they'll lose money." Nobody wants to lose money in an investment but if you're given a choice of losing a $1 now if you cut your losses or $10 in the future by continuing the game well the choice is obvious. Besides an argument can be said China has already lost a good chunk of the money and everybody knows it. Nobody seriously expects the USA to pay back it's debts in full, at least not without inflating the money supply first thereby making the dollar less valuable.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', 'N')ot just that, but the surest way to lose your money is to proclaim to everyone that you are holding the bag and want out in a hurry. Inscrupulous bond traders will buy your bonds, but for a fraction of what they are really worth. And, whatever China decides to do with its dollars once it has them the price will shoot up. This is just how markets work: you cannot move anything around in a hurry without losing a lot of it, especially when it is $1.6 trillion and everyone is watching your every move trying to get their cut.
China is in a difficult position. They tried to buy a US oil company back in 2005 and the idea was DOA (dead on arrival). There was also that sea port deal from a Dubai based company that created a whole bunch of drama. So much for *trying* to dump the dollar or at least a very small amount of it. America has made it very clear. US dollars cannot be used to buy "strategic" US assets, whatever that means. From what I read China is going on a mad shopping spree around the world to fullfill it's thrist for commodities: aluminum in Russia, copper in Africa, Oil in Canada, the list goes on and on. Naturally US businesses are getting outbid. If China cannot use it's US dollar reserves to buy US assets then I guess they'll have to go shopping elsewhere and there's nothing the USA can do about it.
-----------------------------------
it's happening as we speak although in slow motion for now...
China Reserves to Favor Strong Currencies, Cheng Says (Update5)
this quote says enough
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '`')`We will favor stronger currencies over weaker ones, and will readjust accordingly,'' Cheng said in a speech before a conference in Beijing today. The dollar is ``losing its status as the world currency,'' Xu Jian, a central bank vice director, said at the same meeting.
cube
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3909
Joined: Sat 12 Mar 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby mmasters » Tue 26 Feb 2008, 23:49:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', '
')By raiding future accumulations of wealth to finance current consumption, where will future investment capital come from?

The printing press. Printing money has the same stimulating effect as investment capital entering the marketplace.

The shrinking of the financial market or the bust phace we are now witnessing has been traditionally jumpstarted by war. War is a substancial debt generator. You have to know that essentially every unit of currency is created by debt. If all the current debt was payed off the money supply would completely vanish.


But wait a second, won't the printing press just devalue those future dollars? If I need to buy a bulldozer in three years but I spend my bulldozer money on a fantasy Disney World vacation today, all the printing press is going to do is make the bulldozer cost more in three years, it won't make me more able to afford it.

Sure there are extreme cases where currencies are abandoned and/or national debt gets out of hand. However more managed inflation basically takes the form of a bubble. Whether it be a tech bubble a housing bubble or a bubble resulting from a boom in military spending. There is an "in club" where the printed money is channeled and much stimulus, productivity and innovation as a result. When you really look at it though it is a redistribution of wealth. Now since things have gotten more global over the years the redistributions have gotten more complex but in any case it's the same old game just the stakes are higher. The end goal is the same.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')egarding the jumpstart through war, I thought we already did that in 2001 in Afghanistan and 2003 in Iraq. Are you thinking a third front somewhere?

Definitely and it will most likely envolve Iran.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')TW, mmasters, if you would like to share, how do you make your living? I am interested so that I might understand your views on this topic a little better. Are you a pro or just armchair?
Somewhere in the middle. I work in investment banking as a liason between business and technology.
User avatar
mmasters
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2272
Joined: Sun 16 Apr 2006, 03:00:00
Location: Mid-Atlantic
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby LoneSnark » Wed 27 Feb 2008, 00:50:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f China cannot use it's US dollar reserves to buy US assets then I guess they'll have to go shopping elsewhere and there's nothing the USA can do about it.

I'm sorry, I thought you were arguing something else. What you have said here I fully agree with. China needs to set up a soverign wealth fund and seek a higher rate of return outside government bonds. I don't see why we would want to do anything about this. Pushing down bond rates has a tendency to cause bubbles, much better to have them investing in productive capital through companies.

Or, even better, have them invest their money outside the US and thus reduce the US trade deficit. I'm sure US manufacturers will thank them. Again, why would the USA want to do anything about it? It sounds like a win-win for everyone.

Well, almost a win-win. They will need to be very careful as American businessmen tend to take foreigners with cash for a ride. From railroad barons milking British and French investors in the late 19th century to realestate and movie moguls milking Japanese investors in the late 20th century. It is not a coincidence why foreigners tend to buy safe government bonds. Their predecessors wish they had been so clever.
User avatar
LoneSnark
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 514
Joined: Thu 15 Nov 2007, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby CrudeAwakening » Wed 27 Feb 2008, 04:59:31

BigTex, this is an interesting topic you've raised. There are parallels between the dynamics of population growth/overshoot and debt growth and destruction.

Mr Bill defined financial overshoot very succinctly:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'F')inancial overshoot would occur anytime that debt - a call on future earnings - exceeds the ability of an individual, firm or country - to service that debt. In other words, those future earnings are lower than expected.


Unhindered population growth and unhindered debt growth both obey the law of exponential growth. Debt grows exponentially thanks to compounding of interest, with occasional write-offs due to loans going bad, banks going under, etc. Similarly, population tends to grow exponentially, with occasional die-offs due to adverse environmental influences.

I think the financial overshoot you are referring to is related to the increasing use of debt to maintain a standard of living that people believe they are entitled to. People's expectations have not adjusted to reality, as we have become increasingly dependent on first, two income earners, and then, two income earners plus borrowing from future income, in order to consume as we believe we are entitled to. People will do all they can to conserve their "standard of living", and if it means working longer hours, spending less time with kids, etc, then so be it, it seems. In the process, there seems to be an internal reevaluation of exactly what "standard of living" involves - keeping up with the Jones's taking precedence over simpler, less consumption-oriented approaches to life in many cases.

When we go into debt, we are artificially enhancing present income (which we believe to be deficient) at the expense of future income (which, if we are rational, we anticipate will be in excess). I believe that we have been doing this in order to maintain a trajectory of steadily increasing consumption, spurred on by the expectations instilled by the mantra of "progress", and the drive to maintain social parity with others. The only problem is, our expectations of future plenitude, with which we expect to be able to dissolve our debts, may not be realised.
"Who knows what the Second Law of Thermodynamics will be like in a hundred years?" - Economist speaking during planning for World Population Conference in early 1970s
User avatar
CrudeAwakening
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 834
Joined: Tue 28 Jun 2005, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 27 Feb 2008, 06:06:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', 'G')reat analysis Mr Bill!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '[')However, if they borrowed against future earnings to finance consumption today then likely over time they will have less net total income as they also have to pay interest on their debt, and what they chose to invest in did not appreciate in value to offset that cost of interest. Which by the way is a strong argument why lending money to poor countries is not always in their best long-term interest...

For sure, but on the other hand it doesn't cost the bank practically anything to lend a country money and keep lending it money as long as it keeps servicing the debt. It is pure usury on behalf of the IMF and World Bank. Shame so few understand the whole racket.


There are more than a few ways to get 'money' to emerging market countries. Off the top of my head here are some.

The USAID gives Virginia tobacco to Egypt that shows up as foreign aid, but it is actually not cash, but US product. A US farm subsidy. Egypt then sells that tobacco for cash - say to the former USSR for example - at a discount naturally, and then the state uses that recylced money to fund mosques that bad mouth US imperialism.

Another might be the AWB or CWB giving Iraq or Iran low interest loans to buy Australian or Canadian wheat. The AWB and CWB are crown corporations, so technically any profits accrue to the government, but any losses are underwritten by the taxpayer. Whereas a private grain company like Cargill or Bunge might insist on a cash transaction when dealing with such countries as Cuba with their patchy credit history the crown corporations can sell on credit knowing quite well that they will not likely see that money ever again. It shows up on the books as trade, while the bad loans are quietly written off years later when no one is looking. In the case of regime change most of these debts are uncollectible.

There are many ways to give lesser developed countries 'free money', but that is not to say that those soft-loans and aid do not have an economic cost. You are right that governments can simply print money, but usually that money is then leant out commercially through the banks, so the government, and ultimately the taxpayer (or future generations of taxpayers) end-up footing that bill in the form of higher taxes, elevated inflation, currency devaluation and lower living standards.

However, if we are talking primarily about banks lending to emerging markets then this is almost exclusively through the bond markets. Either by buying domestic bonds or by investing in foreign currency eurobonds. That lending also carries a real cost if those countries default on that debt. As any losses have to come out of the bank's retained earnings. That is the bank's shareholder equity. Much like the losses Citigroup and others have suffered due to the subprime meltdown and loan loss provisions that they have been forced to take against mortgage back securities and other financial securities on their books that are now worth considerably less than what they paid for them.

Sure the cost to make those loans or investments was low when there was lots of liquidity and the cost of interbank lending was low, but now those losses have to be covered through new debt issuance at higher spreads and/or by selling equity at less than favorable conditions to new investors. That means existing shareholders are worse off as their holdings are being diluted and those higher borrowing costs are going to hurt future earnings. Hence lower share prices.

I do not blame the IMF and the World Bank per se. I think they are very naive and that many of their lending decisions are poorly thought out and often politically motivated. However, as organs of the UN it is their job to lend to dodgy regimes that no one else would rightly lend to. Those type of lending decisions are no better than liar loans. And it is next to impossible to petition a sovereign country into bankruptcy to recover your money, so their recourse is limited.

Tragically, a lot of that aid and those soft loans do get misused, expropriated and stolen, so the recipient country is left poorer-off, while rich world governments and their taxpayers are left to write-off uncollectible loans, and therefore are less willing to lend to these countries in the future. Only the strongmen and corrupt politicians win. Everyone else loses. The poorer countries can afford to lose the least.

Crude Awakening wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think the financial overshoot you are referring to is related to the increasing use of debt to maintain a standard of living that people believe they are entitled to. People's expectations have not adjusted to reality, as we have become increasingly dependent on first, two income earners, and then, two income earners plus borrowing from future income, in order to consume as we believe we are entitled to.


Bravo. That is exactly what I think. People lose sight of the fact that wealth creation is driven by the

wealth creation = income - expenses

so you can either have two income families working harder and spend less time at home to grow income, or they can decrease expenses.

However, you can always spend as much or more than you make, by borrowing against future income, so the only way to increase personal wealth really is through saving and making sure expenses are less than income. Hence why so many personal financial planners were so shocked to see high income families barely able to make ends meet as their expenses grew faster than their already high incomes.

Wage slaves or just spending like a drunken sailor on shore leave?
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia
Top

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby shakespear1 » Wed 27 Feb 2008, 07:06:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_code('', 'Hence why so many personal financial planners were so shocked to see high income families barely able to make ends meet as their expenses grew faster than their already high incomes. ')

Takes more and more dollars to run those "castles" called homes in the American suburbs :-)
Men argue, nature acts !
Voltaire

"...In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation through inflation."

Alan Greenspan
shakespear1
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1532
Joined: Fri 13 May 2005, 03:00:00

Re: Is Debt a Sympton of Financial Overshoot?

Unread postby MrBill » Wed 27 Feb 2008, 10:06:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('shakespear1', '[')code]Hence why so many personal financial planners were so shocked to see high income families barely able to make ends meet as their expenses grew faster than their already high incomes. [/code]

Takes more and more dollars to run those "castles" called homes in the American suburbs :-)


From where I am sitting there is a whole 'other' world out there that are trying their best to ape American consumerism, and they are just as addicted to living in debt and trying to keep up with the Jones' as Jane Winecooler.

An article applicable to the topic at hand...
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'L')everage really is a great game, so long as it lasts. If what you are investing in goes up, be it a house or a stream of corporate earnings in the future, leverage improves returns.

But there are two snags; it hurts like heck if what you invest in goes down, and it leaves you more vulnerable to rainy days.



Source: As debt falls from fashion, stocks to suffer
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia
Top

Previous

Return to Economics & Finance

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron