The fellow has a point. It depends on your perspective. Look at this graph that covers the QE2 effect (Sept. to-date). Sure enough, after an agonizing eight-week meltdown, LT bonds have come into a trading range. Its been about a month now of “stability”.
Bullcrap. Look at a close-up of this "stability". Not stable at all. 16 moves greater than 1 big figure. Look at those highlighted in blue. That’s a lot of action. These are all gap moves. One after the other where there is a big step in a very short period. I think of bonds as less volatile on average than broad stock indexes. If there were twelve days in a month with 200 Dow point moves and another three/four of 400 pointers the smart guys on tv would not be using adjectives like “stable”. They might say, “nervous”, or even better “illiquid”.
Another recent example of a market “gap” that looked (to me) like a liquidity issue (not justified by the news flow):
-----------------------------------------------------
Student loans are bullet proof. Or so they say. There’s no way out. Bankruptcy does nothing for these loans. Think of it this way; Student Loans (“SL”) are debtors prison. The flip side is if bankruptcy were a ticket out of SLs, there would be no SLs. So the rules aren’t going to change. With that in mind, I found the following report of interest. (actually it is the most boring/endless read ever, don't go there) (PDF-Link)
‘Bankruptcy Tourism’ under the EC Regulation on Insolvency Proceedings: A View from England and Wales
What will they think of next? Tourism that promotes/facilitates bankruptcy. You gotta hand it to the sharpie lawyers and tour operators who thought this one through.
It’s really quite simple. A German citizen who has some creditors chasing after him can go BK in Berlin. But it will result in six years of garnished wages. The alternative? Move to Wales for a bit, spend a day or so in court, and come out pretty clean.
How good is the credit protection available in ‘debtor friendly’ Wales? Very good:
An automatic and generous discharge of bankruptcy debts. The scope of the discharge is generous, extends to tax debts and is subject to few exceptions.
Tax debts? If it covers tax liabilities it should cover student loans. How hard is it to do this? Easy.
The only substantive eligibility requirement that debtors must satisfy before petitioning for bankruptcy in England and Wales is that they are unable to pay their debts.
The only procedural requirements that have to be met are the filing of the petition and statement of affairs together with the payment of the court fee. It is common for debtors to make an appointment to attend court, complete and file the paperwork and obtain a bankruptcy order all on the same day.
Who is doing this? (link)
One German debt expert based in Kent said that he was helping management consultants, doctors, accountants, dentists and lawyers to discharge their bankruptcy.
“They come from all over the European Union. They like the tax laws here as they are better than the ones in their country.”
Sorry to tell you, but this will not work for SLs if you continue to live in America. The US courts will not recognize the English BK petition. But then again, staying in America is not such an obvious choice anymore.





Most degree programs have become exercises in multicultural brainwashing and political correction. What's amazing is how they've been able to force the consumers to pay for their own brainwashing.
ReplyDeleteObama seems to think that loading down youths with tens of thousands of dollars in non-recourse loans is the way to encourage America's competitive edge in the global market. How the Left fleeces their own. Is it any wonder that their constituents cry out the loudest for welfare?
Wouldn't worry.
ReplyDeleteAs the years, and perhaps a decade or two, go by more and more and more people will have ruined credit. They will have no savings. They will have trouble getting formal jobs. They will go through life effectively, though not 'officially', bankrupt. OUT of the credit loop.
In small towns such as the one in Canada I grew up in, it was bar talk - TWENTY years ago. So-and-so had his car repossessed. Such-and-such can't afford his child maintenance payments. Cha-cha is having his wages garnisheed... "Joe" is collecting pogey (EI)... And lots of people working seasonally and collecting the rest of the year...
Eventually, the critical mass of people who owe some creditor something will be reached and then the net result can only be YET LOWER STANDARDS FOR BORROWING.
Result: more debt, more people dependent on government, a greater divide between those with capital and those without, more money-printing.
My bet is that if T Bonds break up out of the trading range, it will be a "false" break before a sustained move down into mid 2011.
ReplyDeleteUnder the new Direct Student Loan program:
ReplyDelete"Your loan may be cancelled if it is discharged in bankruptcy. This is not an automatic process—you must prove to the bankruptcy court that repaying the loan would cause undue hardship."
http://www2.ed.gov/offices/OSFAP/DirectLoan/cancellation.html
Private sector is out of the student loan business:
https://studentloans.gov/myDirectLoan/index.action
The government charges higher than normal interest rates. Do you know why? Because it is mandated under Obama Care! The extra interest goes directly to pay for the 100 or so agencies being set up under Obama Care.
http://studentaid.ed.gov/PORTALSWebApp/students/english/repaying.jsp
http://www.riehlworldview.com/carnivorous_conservative/2010/03/student-loan-fees-to-fund-obamacare.html
There are all sorts of government b.s. involved in the repayments of theses loans:
http://studentaid.ed.gov/PORTALSWebApp/students/english/OtherFormsOfRepay.jsp
Income based:
http://studentaid.ed.gov/PORTALSWebApp/students/english/IBRPlan.jsp
Public Service Forgiveness:
http://studentaid.ed.gov/PORTALSWebApp/students/english/PSF.jsp
Teacher Loan Forgiveness:
http://studentaid.ed.gov/PORTALSWebApp/students/english/cancelstaff.jsp?tab=repaying/
Loan Discharge and BANKRUPTCY!
http://studentaid.ed.gov/PORTALSWebApp/students/english/discharges.jsp?tab=repaying/
Starting in 2014:
Under the new legislation, borrowers who take out new federal student loans after July 1, 2014, will pay 10 percent of their discretionary income to student loan payments, with any remaining debt forgiven after 20 years.
"discretionary income"- Only income that is above the poverty level---WHAT A DEAL!
http://www2.highlandstoday.com/content/2010/apr/04/lc-overhaul-to-the-federal-student-loan-program/
Obama, UGH!! Raping the public to fill the corporate trough with slops. I'm disgusted to think I voted for this guy and even donated $$ to the campaign.
ReplyDeleteNot a second time, that's for certain.