Let's Talk About How Goldman Makes Money; 1 in 6 in USA Unemployed or Underemployed

Discussion in 'Economics' started by ByLoSellHi, Jul 17, 2009.

  1. rbartell

    rbartell

    The amazing thing is that asiaprop doesn't even realize that most of the people he is accusing of knocking capitalism are the ones that are most upset about the socialist intrusion of capitalism. (there are some that are using this as an opportunity to attack capitalism for other agendas, but they are not here on ET)

    Capitalism involves reward AND risk. Most of the people here complaining about Goldman Sachs have a problem with citizens with little attachment to the problem paying to take the risk side out of the equation. Yeah, that's right, half of capitalism is about losing when you make bad bets.

    Freedom is great too. I suppose if they eliminated penalties against murder and there were murders happening left and right asiaprop could say to the people complaining; "So now you're against freedom too."

    Asiaprop either:
    A) doesn't know what capitalism is OR
    B) can't understand that the very people he is fighting against are more capitalistic than he (they want full capitalism, not just the reward side)

     
    #91     Jul 19, 2009
  2. rbartell

    rbartell

    You're completely missing the point. We could sit here and go through a thousand examples. My point was to illustrate a hypothetical example of a fraudulent activity that 99.5% of people would agree is unacceptable yet still legal. The two examples you listed don't meet both criteria. It was a demonstration that your adherence to strictly what was legal and illegal makes you reason like a robot instead of a person.


    I don't have a problem with the two examples you listed, but I do have a problem with corporations having their losses SOCIALIZED with tax money and obligations to China. I guess that makes me and the rest of the pissed people against capitalism by your twisted logic. Unreal.

     
    #92     Jul 19, 2009
    i960 likes this.
  3. I watch her on Fox News sometimes.

    http://www.nypost.com/seven/07192009/business/good_for_goldman__bad_for_america_180130.htm


    GOOD FOR GOLDMAN, BAD FOR AMERICA

    "Goldman gets the most attention for its deft handling of its own account, but a big chunk of its trading pie also involves the selling and trading of US government debt -- federal, state and local. Indeed, as one of the biggest primary dealers of US Treasuries, Goldman Sachs has a huge vested interest in the United States digging a deeper and deeper hole."

    "To put it bluntly, Goldman Sachs is a play on the bankrupting of America -- the more we borrow, the more they make. "
     
    #93     Jul 19, 2009
  4. a) you need the education, more than you realize

    b) It's really not that complicated as long as you have the capital to get the tankers. Money talks, bullshit walks. And the details are in the contract specs, not exactly rocket science. The industry has been doing this for a while, it's a standard operation, as long as you don't get screwed and left with barrels sitting on the dock.

    c) It takes a real idiot, a total GS fanboy or a wanna-be backoffice suckup (hmm, YOU?) to not realize that GS was done for if not for Henry Paulson quickly turning them into a bank holding company, throwing them 10 bil in TARP funds, having AIG payout 100 cents on the dollar in CDS agreements and having the Fed commit to GS to support them with extra liquidity. I mean really, just how much more capital could have been thrown at them? Oh, ever wonder who caused the sharp down moves in oil last fall? That was GS dumping their oil contracts because they needed cash ASAP.
     
    #94     Jul 19, 2009
  5. Dude, I do not know what which part of the sell side you're involved with. Obviously, there are areas where finance research is not relevant, but everyone in the world of macro trading/investing (esp rates and fixed income) listens to economists like Krugman. This relationship is not a one-way street, either. Look up the academic papers published by Jan Hatzius, Goldie's Chief US Economist, and you'll see what I mean.
    Here I actually agree with you. It IS, in fact, the fault of the government that they didn't make Goldman pay the right price for the various types of assistance that the bank received. That is exactly the failure of the system that Krugman and other economists talk about. My favorite pieces on the subject are by Simon Johnson (http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200905/imf-advice) and Andrew Haldane (http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/speeches/2009/speech397.pdf). You will note that none of these economists blame the banks, who acted exactly as expected given the constraints placed on them.

    The point is that the system has to change to prevent institutions like Goldies from abusing it lawfully, because the long-term costs of these abuses are far greater than any benefits financial innovation creates.
     
    #95     Jul 19, 2009


  6. You are what you read.
     
    #96     Jul 19, 2009
  7. ...correct...in the same way every other corporate acts. Do you think P&G, Pfizer, GE, Microsoft act any differently? If you dislike that as a corporate you can "pay" yourself out of wrongdoing then, AGAIN, take it up with the legal system in the U.S., not GS.

     
    #97     Jul 19, 2009
  8. did I not repeatedly quote that I wished banks were NOT bailed out? I am also in favor of companies accepting the full consequences of taking risk. Sure, financials screamed for help but it was the legislative and executive that sold out the tax payer. As a business owner would you not exhaust every possibility in order to survive? If someone is stupid enough to give you money you dont deserve would you reject it and rather close shop or would you take it?

    My point was that GS has manged their risk way better than almost any other financial firm and they have already repaid the money they received in direct bailout funds (I dont think any of us is in the position to argue back and forth what else GS owes to the world). If you want to take up your grievances with anyone take it up first with a) politicians, b) regulators, c) mortgage subprime borrowers, d) mortgage lenders, e) any other financial firm, f) GS, in this order.



     
    #98     Jul 19, 2009
  9. again, complain to the people in charge!!! Write a letter to your representative because they voted in the majority for this bailout. I dont remember having seen any GS reps when the vote was casted. Have you?

     
    #99     Jul 19, 2009
  10. ok, and where is the connection between GS being a primary dealer and GS's "vested interest in the United States digging a deeper and deeper hole"? I seem to miss your logic here.

     
    #100     Jul 19, 2009