I'm not an expert on this. What would happen if the interest rates should become negative? Hopefully it won't, as obviously there is zero common sense in that. But how would that effect T-Bills for example? And yes, obviously there is a real danger of a bubble. Question though, where is the money coming from to purchase the T-Bills?The next big fear is that there is a bubble in T-Bills and gold that will bust soon. Everyone rushed to the "riskless" investments to try and find stability. It actually drove the prices to a somewhat unreasonable level for a bit.
Now this confuses me again. If the big banks are in trouble to the tune of 1-trillion US dollars, how can they have a lot of dollars to buy T-Bills with? Just does not make sense to me. Another proof of creative economics?The banks have a lot of US dollars sitting around. Their natural response is to buy T-Bills with them to earn a bit of a return.
More confusing. How can you have lots of cash available and have problems with solvency? And how does all of this tie in with the debt? So now these banks are buying up the 1.2-trillion in T-Bills with cash that they have, however for the purpose to get rid of the debt? If I have cash stashed under my bed, and I have serious debt, surely the way to go about sorting things out is to take the cash from under the bed and pay off the debt? I find some crookery in this. Looks as though the banks do not want to be responsible for the toxic debt through mortgage-backed securities, and are separating those from their main lines of business?The other thing to remember about the bailout was that they had a problem with solvency, not necessarily debt.
I'm still wondering about the investment banks and lack of evidence of their actual "toxic debts". Making the 1.2-trillion almost into a blank cheque for Obama. I thought we were going to go for greater transparency?That was the problem. They didn't have enough cash. The ones with US cash are usually foreign banks and foreign investors who want a safe place to put their money. Some US banks throw their hat into the ring too. These wouldn't be the ones who needed a bailout. T-bills are a terrible investment for any serious player. They are only good, because they are risk free and short term. It's better than keeping it as cash for a month.
The ones that really needed a bailout were the plethora of investment banks dealing in high finance. Unfortunately, that composed a large portion of the banking industry in the United States.
So why aren't tax payers getting regular feedback on what is actually happening. I.e. X Bank has only taken Y funds and subtract that from the 1.2-trillion dollars, or is Obama thinking of using that for all his fancy socialist programmes, AND then claim fame for funding those programmes. What I thought would have been fair would have been a public Website of how the 1.2-trillion is being employed and against which debts ... would appear as though the public is quite good at being approached for massive loans, but not good enough to be trusted with transparent facts ...They've only been getting as much as they need.
Parakeet, it regretfully came up with a message: "This file is damaged and could not be repaired". Do you perhaps have another link for it as am really curious to see it. Thanks.I found the article with CBO. I assume that they are doing it quarterly.
Here's the link. It's a PDF, so it might take a minute to load. It's the report of transactions in January. They still lump most of the banks together but it's a decent start for my digging. 214 supposedly part of the program.
http://cbo.gov/ftpdocs/99xx/doc9961/01-16-TARP.pdf
Managed to access the blog, which did not say that much really. Tried all kinds of ways from the Website to access the above report, but still got the same message. Not very big on specifics in the blog. Didn't see any of the Banks names nor specific accounts. Just general overview.Still works for me.
Try to do a search for "TARP" on CBO.gov. It's the 12th one down I believe. It's called "The Troubled Asset Relief Program: Report on Transactions Through December 31, 2008"
That should link to it too.
Here's their blog post on it
http://cboblog.cbo.gov/?p=197
It is. We have quite state of the art computers and computing here in the Middle East. Maybe there is a quirk in the US Website firewallNot sure why the PDF won't open for you. That's pretty odd.