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Insider Trading?

GoJazz

Well-Known Member
Thursday the market drops 500 points. Friday S&P downgrades debt to AA+. Seems fishy to me. Actually it doesn't because I already know the whole game is rigged.
 
Thursday the market drops 500 points. Friday S&P downgrades debt to AA+. Seems fishy to me. Actually it doesn't because I already know the whole game is rigged.

Looks like the teaparty express got sidetracked. All those new congressmen went to Washington sayin' they'd put a stop to profligate Federal spending and bailouts. Just enough fell into line with Management to vote for a deal to keep the bubble pumped up for a while more, raised our "debt ceiling" past the ratio to GDP that is judged as something we can pay back. Debt now in exhange for back-loaded promises of budget cuts, and a stacked "Super Congress" headed by the most profligate of all Presidents.

Meanwhile, the rating agencies have been linked abroad with insider moves against other national debtors, with the insiders all betting on the downgrades in the credit ratings.

That's the way Bubble Machines work. You establish influence by buy off our politicians and getting favorable governance/deregulation whichever is called for at the moment, you push some economic issue to some extreme, and then you change the game. You know when to make the bet, and when to sell out. The public finds out too late.
 
Looks like the teaparty express got sidetracked. All those new congressmen went to Washington sayin' they'd put a stop to profligate Federal spending and bailouts. Just enough fell into line with Management to vote for a deal to keep the bubble pumped up for a while more, raised our "debt ceiling" past the ratio to GDP that is judged as something we can pay back. Debt now in exhange for back-loaded promises of budget cuts, and a stacked "Super Congress" headed by the most profligate of all Presidents.

Meanwhile, the rating agencies have been linked abroad with insider moves against other national debtors, with the insiders all betting on the downgrades in the credit ratings.

That's the way Bubble Machines work. You establish influence by buy off our politicians and getting favorable governance/deregulation whichever is called for at the moment, you push some economic issue to some extreme, and then you change the game. You know when to make the bet, and when to sell out. The public finds out too late.

?!?

I believe you have pulled this idea of a set GDP-debt ratio being exceeded out of your ***. S&P's explicit statement is about the ability of our political institutions to manage problems. In their words "The political brinksmanship of recent months highlights what we see as America's governance and policymaking becoming less stable, less effective, and less predictable than what we previously believed. The statutory debt ceiling and the threat of default have become political bargaining chips in the debate over fiscal policy." That sounds to me like the problem was NOT that the Tea Party caved too easily.

In fact, claiming that the downgrade is the result of a debt ceiling raise is the exact OPPOSITE of the warning Moody's gave the United States. They indicated the presence of the cap at all is what was causing them to review the US' credit rating. https://www.cnbc.com/id/43790768/Moody_s_Suggests_US_Eliminates_Debt_Ceiling
 
?!?

I believe you have pulled this idea of a set GDP-debt ratio being exceeded out of your ***.

In fact, claiming that the downgrade is the result of a debt ceiling raise is the exact OPPOSITE of the warning Moody's gave the United States. They indicated the presence of the cap at all is what was causing them to review the US' credit rating. https://www.cnbc.com/id/43790768/Moody_s_Suggests_US_Eliminates_Debt_Ceiling


In other words the ratings businesses including Moody's only are concerned about the US being able to service its debt in relative short term. They are not making an assessment that our current spending plans are wise.

In the short term there would be less uncertainity if we didn't have debt limits.
 
Here's a very in-depth and (given that it has what I believe are stata screenshots) probably too technical explanation of S&P's ratings calculus.

https://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/08/08/why-s-p-s-ratings-are-substandard-and-porous/

One pretty funny bottom line conclusion:

In fact, the evidence from the past five years suggests that it may be worthwhile to adopt a contrarian investing strategy that specifically bets against S.&P.’s ratings. If you were trying to predict a country’s default risk today, based on the market’s perception of its default risk two years ago as well as its S.&P. rating at that time, you would find that accounting for S.&P. ratings actually subtracted value from your model. That is, if the market had priced two countries as having a 20 percent default risk in 2009, but one of them had a AA rating from S.&P. and the other had a BB rating, the country with the worse S.&P. rating is likely to have proven to be the safer bet.
 
I read that S&P was also upset because they wanted to see at least 4 trillion in debt reduction. Basically they didnt care if it was tax increases or reduction in spending. Seems funny that everyone is blaming everyone else when its both parties fault. Until I see someone who wants to Raise taxes and Decrease spending I won't believe any party seriously wants to solve the debt problem.
 
I read that S&P was also upset because they wanted to see at least 4 trillion in debt reduction. Basically they didnt care if it was tax increases or reduction in spending. Seems funny that everyone is blaming everyone else when its both parties fault. Until I see someone who wants to Raise taxes and Decrease spending I won't believe any party seriously wants to solve the debt problem.

I completely agree. Cutting spending is great, imo, but it should be matched dollar for dollar in increased revenue. That's not related to my general belief that a libertarian system would be best, it's related to the current situation we're in that certainly wasn't created by libertarian practices.
 
What about a tax increase that completely goes to pay down debt. Then when out of debt it expires...My issue is you increase taxes and congress deciedes it has money to spend so they increase spending.

I completely agree. Cutting spending is great, imo, but it should be matched dollar for dollar in increased revenue. That's not related to my general belief that a libertarian system would be best, it's related to the current situation we're in that certainly wasn't created by libertarian practices.
 
Nothing but panic from the quick buck artists.

Bond Markets were solid yesterday - you'd think that's where the panic would be.
 
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