Haha..love that icon Sis.
It's sort of a lopsided smile come cheeky kiss...best kind
C x
WTF, we get the sense you don't like banks. Originally Posted by pjorourkeI love banks....especially ones that act responsible.
Looked pretty accurate to me. What facts did they screw up? Originally Posted by pjorourke
To me a bank that makes bad loans should pay for that on their balance sheet, shareholders should lose money, mangements heads should roll.... Originally Posted by WTFI agree. And guess what. They did.
Well its not 2030 for starters...Well duh!!! The commercial was set in the future.
I agree. And guess what. They did.Well, so much for the government "pissing away" $$ in Stimulus. Boo-hoo-hoo, poor little bankies - imagine having to pay back (and pay the lender a profit) money that saved their asses or going out of business due to incompentancies! Runs counter to all tenants of capitalism - as defined by those whose ass is in the crack they chisled. The gutting or outright repeal of Depression Era regulations came because the ones who eventually got burned (or eventually profited) spent a shitpot full of money on politicians who let them have their way. Since the only way we have left of making big money in this country is by moving money around, it's not hard to see how the premise of rules for an economy based on the manufacturing and distribution of goods are seen to no longer apply. The pressure of talking out of both sides of their mouths will eventually make those who defend and justify allowing, even encouraging, predatory practices head's explode. I guess actions having negative consequences should not apply to the monied class. Just another case of that crew demanding everyone else kneel down and kiss their ass - after all, they are rich and eveyone else is just fodder and pawns, so they need to act like it, quit thinking and questioning and continue to lay down and take it dry up da butt..
Citicorp. BTW, the US made about $8B on this deal.
Bank of America. They have paid back all of their TARP money with interest and the government made a nice profit of $1.5B on the warrants.
Washington Mutual. Gone also. Its now part of JP Morgan Chase. BTW, JPM didn't want to take TARP money, but was forced to do so by the Treasury so that it wouldn't make the other banks look weaker and perpetuate the run.
Among investment banks, Merrill, Bear Sterns, and Lehman are gone. I'm sure there are others, those are just the ones I immediately thought of.
So explain to me which fat cat bankers skated on this deal. Originally Posted by pjorourke
I agree. And guess what. They did.Nov. 9, 2007, 8:46 a.m. EST
Citicorp. They actually fired the CEO Chuck Prince in late 2007, before this mess surfaced. Vikram Pandit was brought in to try and clean up the mess. The consensus is he has done a reasonable job, that's why he is still there. Citi made 4B in 2007, lost 28B in 2008 and lost 2B in 2009. Thats a cumulative loss of $26B vs. a run rate of $22B so thats about $92B that was written off from this mess (after tax). They have $165B in capital left. BTW, the US made about $8B on this deal.
Originally Posted by pjorourke
Bank of America. CEO left office (was pushed?). Their earnings in 2008 & 2009 totaled about $10 -- down from a run rate of about $20B a year -- call that a $30+B loss. BTW, they still have 230B in capital. They have paid back all of their TARP money with interest and the government made a nice profit of $1.5B on the warrants.Former Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis, who retired at the end of last year, took a package of stock and benefits valued at $83 million with him when he left, the Wall Street Journal reports
. Originally Posted by pjorourke
Wachovia. Gone as a public company. Now owned by Wells Fargo and will soon be disappearing. Ken Thompson, the CEO was forced out by the Board in mid 2008. The replacement guy is now unemployed. Its hard to see how much they lost, the financias have been restated so many times, but the shareholders got zip for their shares. Wells took it over from the government.Before getting fired, Wachovia CEO Thompson got gobs of money
. Originally Posted by pjorourke
Washington Mutual. Gone also. Its now part of JP Morgan Chase. BTW, JPM didn't want to take TARP money, but was forced to do so by the Treasury so that it wouldn't make the other banks look weaker and perpetuate the run. The WaMu shareholder also got zip.Having milked WaMu for, reportedly, more than $100 million in compensation (including $24 million in 2006), Killinger had good reason to want to keep the bank independent. But with the possible exception of Angelo R. Mozilo of Countrywide Financial Corp., arguably no banking executive did more harm to the fabric of the U.S. mortgage industry.
Originally Posted by pjorourke
So explain to me which fat cat bankers skated on this deal.
. Originally Posted by pjorourke
Well duh!!! The commercial was set in the future. Originally Posted by pjorourke
I love banks....especially ones that act responsible.
Now if you are talking about Banks that gamble with my money as opposed to their own, then yes I do not care for that but then that really isn't a bank, ... Originally Posted by WTF
Again we agree, the walk away payments are obscene, but you also have to understand what they are getting.Look PJ we are talking about the tree's instead of the forest. While I realize all investments are a gamble and the market assigns risks and pays accordingly. By having this bail-out mentality that will not happen. Period. Nothing seems to have changed in this regard. That is my larger point. Not that CEO's are having to structure lower pay packages. The system seems rigged and that will bring down the system when that becomes a prevailing preception.
. Originally Posted by pjorourke
Nope. Its been around since the late 80's -- well before Rove hit the scene. Originally Posted by pjorourkeRove first worked on the national political scene during the Nixon administration. You are underestimating his political life span. He worked for Bush's daddy in his run for the Whitehouse in 1980, too.