Monday, February 23, 2009
More Debt Problems You Need to be Aware Of
Sunday, February 15, 2009
What You Can Do To Protect Yourself
Thursday, January 08, 2009
Bailout Update
Scott Snider, partner and chair of the government relations and public policy practice at Steptoe & Johnson, Washington, D.C., says $365 billion will be spent on the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). Not all of this money has been spent yet. $125 billion has been promised to "other banks" like those corporations that are becoming banks to qualify for bailout money. (i.e. GMAC). $15 billon of that money was claimed when the government released $7.58 billion to Pittsburgh-based PNC Services Financial Group, Inc., $3.41 billion to Fifth Third Bancorp and $1.3 billion to SunTrust Banks, Inc., including others. $20 billion of the TARP money is being used as seed money for the government’s Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) program, under which the Federal Reserve will extend up to $200 billion in non-recourse loans to holders of asset-backed securities (ABS) backed by consumer and small business loans in a bid to free up the ABS market.
After the Bear Stearns' $29 billion bailout in March, was the $200 billion government takeover of mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in early September, AIG for $152.5 billion (more than $127.5 billion has already been spent out of that) then Citigroup for $325 billion. $16.7 billion was spent in other FDIC takeovers of more than 20 banks Washington Mutual was the largetst. Now we are up to $1.1 trillion, not including the remaining $180 billion TARP not yet included in the calculation. There is $1.4 trillion in a commercial paper funding facility, $320 billion for the FHA, $659 billion in money market guarantees and $9 billion in student loan guarantees. The total is another $2.4 trillion.
We thought that the $700 billion number tossed around at the beginning of the crisis was a lot of money. Somehow our government has decided it has a bottomless checking account. So we need to get ready for some serious economic consequences not too far down the road. Stay out of debt, including your mortgage, become financially independent by saving aggressively and intelligently, lower your lifestyle as low as possible, and batten down the hatches.
Monday, January 05, 2009
Bad Bailouts, Good Americans
"I used to have my own construction company," a taxi driver named Bruce explained. "We built houses here locally in Birmingham."
"How big was the company," I asked, "How many houses did you typically build?"
"Anywhere from 10 to 15 or so per year."
"What happened?"
"We had a project going last year with 15 lots. We'd put in all the roads and sewers and had about 9 houses built when everything just stopped dead in its tracks…No buyers. And more than that. No phone calls, no inquiries, no agents calling, nothing. The market for new houses simply died."
"So what did you do?" I asked.
"I'm still not sure that I handled it all correctly," he began. "Ourproblem was the debt on the property. The interest cost was roughly $1,000 per day. So even though we stopped all of our other expenses, there was nothing we could do about that. But we had some other assets. So we started selling things to make the payments. Finally, we got so desperate, we sold my son's Corvette and, after that, the condo in which he was living while attending the University of Alabama.
"I never thought I would have to do something like that," hecontinued, "but the corvette was worth $25,000, which meant we could pay the bank for another month. But even after that, we ran out of money. So we went to the bank and started giving them the unsold houses in lieu of cash every time we got behind on the payments. When we finally ran out of houses to give them, we had no choice but to give them the remaining land and then file for bankruptcy."
"That didn't solve all the problems," Bruce explained, "since we still needed to put food on the table and had other bills to pay. So late last year I leased a cab and started driving. That has worked out pretty well; the cab has really been a blessing. So I decided to buy this cab just a couple of months ago."
Bruce, who looks to be about 50-something – with a daughter out of college and a Corvette-less son who's a sophomore in college – works all night Friday and Saturday, gets up in the afternoon Saturday to watch a little football and gets up Sunday morning to go to church, then starts making runs to the Birmingham airport around 4:30 Monday morning. I heard not one word of complaint about his new life, just the simple statement, "The cab has been a real blessing."
There were, of course, some good chuckles about that. With the move from business owner to cab driver, he admits that some of his friends and family haven't known what to say to him.
"What are you doing these days, Bruce?" my friends ask.
"I'm driving a cab."
"Oh. (Long pause.)…What kind of team do you think the Tide will have this year?"
But Bruce doesn't seem to care much about "what the neighbors say." He cares about what his family says. When it came to selling the Corvette, Bruce told me, "Taking my son for a drive and telling him that I needed to sell his car was probably the lowest and most difficult moment of my life."
"We had done everything that we could for our kids and I was worried that I might have raised some sort of runny nosed-kid who needed a Corvette and would never be able to support himself. In addition to selling his car, we sold the condo where he was living and couldn't even help him pay the rent on his apartment so he had to get a job while going to school."
Bruce then told me how his son had gotten a job and was still doing great in school and now calls him regularly just to ask, "How are things going, Dad?"
At which point I said to Bruce, "So was it worth going intobankruptcy, just to learn that you have a son who is actually astand-up man?"
After a moment's reflection, Bruce smiled, "Yes it was."
Bruce and his family and friends – people who get up every day and do what they need to do to provide for their families and to be good members of their communities – represent all that is still good in America. They are honorable people who spend all that they have to pay their debts, even if, like Bruce, it ultimately leads to bankruptcy. And when their businesses fail and life must go on, they take whatever job they can find to put food on the table.
How unlike the whiny, self-indulgent, profiteers who guided Wall Street's leading investment banks onto the shoals of insolvency. These people, who have nearly destroyed America's banking system, should be acknowledging their failures. Instead, they are demanding ever more of our resources, and of our children's resources, as the price for not making things even worse.
America would be better served if Hank Paulson were driving a cab in Manhattan, instead of trying to give billions of dollars of other peoples' money to his friends and colleagues on Wall Street. As a cab driver, there is some possibility that he would learn the value of a dollar, the importance of community and the inherent dignity of all good work. At the very least, we would all be $700 billion better off, less tips.
Fry is a writer for Agora Financial
Monday, December 29, 2008
Credit Card Reform Update
- Eliminating double-cycle billing.
- Eliminating confusing due dates.
- Eliminating Universal Default.
- Stopping the charging of over limit fees from temporary holding amounts (i.e. car rentals)
- Requiring higher interest rate amounts be paid down first.
- Simpler credit card terms.
- Clearer disclosure in advertising
- Banning "fee harvesting" from cardholders with lower credit scores.
- Disclosing foreign transaction fees in solicitations, before the account is opened.
Sounds great doesn't it? I bet your congressman wants you to know they are doing this for you, and are going to make sure you are taken care of in terms of consumer credit. Well, don't break out the bubbly stuff yet. In the meantime, responsible customers who never make a late payment are getting significant rate hikes. Also, your Senators and House Representatives are milking this for a couple years to garner favor with voters until legislation comes down the pike to either overturn this or make it unenforceable. Two years is a long time. If you bet against this actually becoming reality, the odds would be in your favor. Just taking a closer look at the list and asking what it would look like in reality makes you wonder how real it really is, some of these would require an entire new oversight agency just to monitor and enforce.
Thursday, December 18, 2008
New Rule Against "Unfair Practices"
The New Term "Rate Jacking"
Banks are hurting, and they need to raise money these days. Why are they hurting? Because they push loans on people who can't afford them, then when the loan goes into default they think they'll start collecting tons of fees and interest. However, it is backfiring on them now. People aren't able to pay anymore at all, and the banks are losing for a change. Many people are now in total meltdown, losing their jobs, their homes, and everything. So the creditcard doesn't get paid at all from the people who were the "sweet spot" for the industry. To make up for this, Citibank has decided to punish its good customers by making them pay for the defaults. So much for taking responsibility for their own actions. This is referred to as "rate jacking".
Good thing you don't use credit cards anymore, eh? Pretty soon they'll figure out how to get more money from those who pay their accounts off every month. Don't be so arrogant to think you can outsmart them.
Monday, December 01, 2008
It Seems It Will Never End
$29 billion for Bear Stearns
$143.8 billion for AIG (thus far, it keeps growing)
$100 billion for Fannie Mae
$100 billion for Freddie Mac
$700 billion for Wall Street, including Bank of America (Merrill Lynch), Citigroup, JP Morgan (WaMu), Wells Fargo (Wachovia), Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and a lot more . On top of $45 billion for Citibank, comes a guarantee of $306 billion in bad loans.$800 billion to buy mortgages issued or backed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Ginnie Mae and Federal Home Loan Banks.
$200 billion for the auto industry
$200 billion to buy securities tied to student loans, car-loans, credit card debt and small business loans.
$8 billion for IndyMac
$700 billion to $1 trillion stimulus package (from January)
$50 billion for money market funds
$138 billion for Lehman Bros. (post bankruptcy) through JP Morgan
$620 billion for general currency swaps from the Fed
“The numbers change so fast, it is hard to even add them up. Rough total: $3,651,800,000,000 .00 ($3.6 Trillion)
To put that into perspective, the Federal Debt was $5.7 Trillion when President Bush took office. In September 2008, it was up to $10 Trillion. Now in the space of a few months, we have increased it 36%. In September, it was 70% of the GDP, the highest percentage since 1955. The trend is on a steep incline. This is an indication that hyperinflation is not far away. This is a good time to be out of debt, and have as much savings as possible. Realize that Gold is a store of value. When hyperinflation hits, holding gold may be the best way to hedge against that inflation.
Sunday, October 12, 2008
Monday, September 29, 2008
Is Your Money Safe?
Friday, September 19, 2008
Everyone is faced with reducing debt now
have put a bandaid on this serious economic problem. We are refinancing, so to speak. But the debt problem is still there. As credit tightens, we will all need to learn to live with less debt. I have already done this myself, and I can help you. That is why I am coming out with a new audio book to give you the specific steps to making this easier for you.Buy an advance copy for a significant discount by sending me $25 (retail 39.95) to my paypal account at jim@jimandersononline.com and as soon as it comes off the presses, I'll mail it to you.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Debt is Really the Problem
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
CEO Bonus for a Credit Crisis?
When my business started going south in January 2001, I took a paycut and did everything I could to ease the cash crunch on the corporation. It was the right thing to do. Now, I am watching bank executives walk off with multi-million dollar severence packages while their banks are taken over by the FDIC. This is equivelent to me having fired myself as CEO instead, and have had the forethought to create a "golden parachute" for myself if I left my company as CEO. I could have walked away from my failing business and looted it with a severance package. Uncle Sam would have won because I would have paid income tax on that severance instead of writing off the corporate losses it would have been used to partially cover. I would have let it go into bankruptcy, and walked away with enough to fund my retirement. That is the game these guys are playing. It isn't their business, but they are basically looting a company they led to failure, in these cases, at the expense of our economy and taxpayers who ultimately have to pay for the bailout which means recovering the money for the severance pay as well. The IRS wins, because they get more tax revenue out of the situation.
Why does big business play by different rules than small business? Political corruption. Debt benefits our government officials in many different ways and costs us as individuals. Yet, if the next President allows the debt to keep growing, he will lead our country to a failed banking system and an economic crisis that could bring down our country's current form of government and likely leave us with a socialist or Marxist type system after the World Bank and International Monetary Fund bail us out.
The solution - get out of debt yourself NOW!
Friday, September 12, 2008
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Bailout
Here are some comments about what this bailout is going to cost us from people who are paying attention:
“1.6 Trillion sounds about right, but they will stir things up, and mix more in, until it will be hard to tell, because it is an ongoing train wreck, and it never will be paid off, because it will destroy the dollar, so the real cost is a free America.”
— John H.
“Every bailout I’ve ever seen was at least a factor of 10 higher that the initial estimate. I’m betting on the 2 trillion number myself.”
— Steve O
“We’ll never know because by the time the numbers are in, we’ll be on to the next financially engineered crisis. But for a number — at least $1.3T.”
— John M.
The best way to protect yourself personally is to be completely debt free, including your mortgage, otherwise the future of your home ownership and financial well being may be in jeopardy. The cost of this will affect all of us no matter what we do, but if we are personally debt free we have a better chance of financial survival. Watch closely what happens. After this next election, we may be in for a big surprise, depending on who wins. It may not be immediate, it may take a few years. That comment above about losing our freedom - don't discount it too much. There may be some truth in that prophecy.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Creditcard Industry News
Many people say that American Express cards are not credit cards, but "charge cards", like there is a difference. American Express reported today that second quarter profits are down 37% from the same quarter last year, due to unexpected consumer defaults. This puts American Express's profits down a shocking 96% from last year at this time. If this is happening to American Express, I wonder what is happening to VISA and MASTERCARD issuing banks. Those defaulting on mortgages are certainly defaulting on credit card debt. They are mounting up big losses as well from the combination. Citigroup down $2.5 billion for the quarter only. JP Morgan down 53% and Capital One down 40%. Merrill Lynch has a $4.5 billion dollar loss. Wachovia and Washington Mutual are expected to be down significantly as well. There has been unverified rumors of them both being on the edge of insolvency.
On the other side of this coin, bank cards in China (including debit cards) are up 30% this year. Officials in China are targeting to more than double credit card usage. Currently, Chinese consumers have racked up $10 billion in consumer debt. A small number compared to the U.S. However, it is growing fast.
Folks. Debt does NOT pay! Our government is so deep in debt, they'll never pay it off, and they appear to be taking the same path as previous countries with fiat currencies - where the currency becomes caught in hyperinflation and the system fails because the government creates new money to pay for everything until they spiral out of control. Banks are too big and too important to fail, as is Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. So the government will bail them out by creating more money. With inflation already ready to drop the shoe on us, we're going to make it worse. That is scary.
Sunday, July 13, 2008
Who is Next?
This is yet another reason to be doing business with credit unions. The banking industry has become a troubled industry that may no longer be a viable business. If it takes them issuing credit cards to people who are likely to default to stay in business, then something is seriously wrong. It is time to consider moving your accounts to your local credit union, it is less likely they are going to be in trouble unless they have been heavily marketing easy mortgage loans.
There are more bank failures on the horizon. Make sure you aren't a customer of one of them.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Universal Default Still Exists
Watch this video for a peek into the tricks and traps that still exist. The industry leaders still deny that they practice universal default, yet it continues.
Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Get Your Credit Card Exorcisms Here
There is a new movie out titled "What Would Jesus Buy". You've got to see it. Very funny. Very entertaining. And very convicting.
Thursday, April 24, 2008
Fight Arbitration Clauses
The Christian Science Monitor looked into this issue and found, "...the 10 most frequently used arbitrators - who decided almost 60 percent of the cases heard - decided in favor of the consumer only 1.6 percent of the time, while arbitrators who decided three or fewer cases decided for the consumer 38 percent of the time."
Do yourself a favor and take a look at the website givemebackmyrights.com and learn how to fight back, so that you don't find yourself being taken to the cleaners. If you are already in trouble with one of these contracts, find a consumer attorney.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Is The Federal Reserve Bank On Its Way Out?
Watch this interview on CNBC where he elaborates on the problem.
