by davidlosh@davidlosh.com » Mon Jan 26, 2009 11:26 pm
Where to begin?
Many corporations lose money. It's a function of the corporate system. They are supposed to "lose" money.
The big problem I see with banks is that they can be larger than just providing banking functions. We allowed "banks" to function like financial instirutions and are now allowing financial institutions to function like banks.
In my opinion what has happened is that these huge corporate financial entities now move cash around exactly as a classic ponzi scheme. Some departments win and other "lose." Like a balloon you squeze at one end moves the air to the other end.
Inside of these huge, I mean enormous, I mean layer upon layer, of assets, and income, there's a guy in a basement office who knows where every penney is. Probably today it's a server with a financially engineered program.
Now track this. There is both paper profit and cash. Similar to leveraging you take larger and larger paper profits and convert those profits to cash. The cash position is only a fraction of the phantom, paper, profit, but the cash is king.
The people who are "losing' money are the stock holders who bet on the profitability of the corporations. The stock holders watched the stock market explode from 4000 in 1995 to 14000 two years ago. Even with the corrections of the Microsoft monoploy judgement in 2000 people still kept dumping in money.
So you think Real Estate was a balloon? What about a stock, like a dot.com, based on intellectual property. Financial engineering gave the illusion of a tangible asset where there was only paper.
As far as Real Estate; it's all dirt. Those office buildings in New York are dropping in value by the minute; about as fast as farm land is appreciating. You can't eat bricks, gold, or cash.
It makes sense that the mortgages would "launder" the paper profits, convert them to cash, through tangible assets. We all know what houses and commercial Real Estate are. We all see that, we invested in that, and have mortgages. If, and I mean if, banks are supposed to have cash reserves to cover the mortgages, if the mortgages are non performing where do the cash reserves go?
Once the cash reserves revert back to the "investors" the bank starts asking for more cash from our government.
Here's my point. In my opinion the "investors" in mortgage backed securities are actually other corporations that take stock holders money and "lose" it by taking pennies on the dollar by writing down the non performing mortgages. Another corporation forecloses on the property and another corporation manages the asset once all the cash is wrung out of it. Then the property is sold for more cash.