Archive for September, 2008
September 23, 2008 at 8:34 am
· Filed under Washington Mutual ·Tagged bank failure, buyout, customer service, dumbed down, FDIC, high-rated debt, high-risk debt, how banks work, patronizing attitude, predatory lending, stock value, WaMu, Washington Mutual
Source: The Stranger
Synopsis:
“Time to Panic” segment
- Washington Mutual faces buyout by J.P Morgan, Wells Fargo, or other larger financial corporation.
- Stock hovers around $2.99 which is a fraction of its 2007 value.
- According to article, banks tend to keep 1/10 the value of any given bank account in cash assets. The rest is loaned out. The operating assumption of any bank is that all customers will not draw upon their cash at once.
- Federal regulations only allow banks to invest in high-rated debt.
- Previously, getting a mortgage loan required giving a lot of information to a lender, so as to accurately and precisely calculate the risk of the debt. During the housing bubble, lenders became more lax in gathering information, and thus made loans to higher-risk borrowers that were, on paper, “highly rated”.
- Up to $100,000 per each account (and beneficiary thereof) is insured by the FDIC. The FDIC is backed, at heart, by the taxpayers themselves.
“Good-bye to You, WaMu” segment
- WaMu’s bank accounts have differing amounts of digits depending on state, creating problems.
- Company has dumbed down its marketing, which is insulting to many patrons.
- Bank manager virtually harassed customer who wanted to close out an account, given WaMu’s precarious position in the market, calling their decision an emotional one and downplaying news of WaMu’s troubles. Author assumes her gender prompted manager to take this patronizing approach.
- Author took money to Bank of America where the employee claimed to have gotten $1.4 million in new accounts in a single day as a result of WaMu stock “tanking”. Employee waived author’s fees “forever”.
Permalink
September 19, 2008 at 10:58 pm
· Filed under FindANewBank ·Tagged financial news, find a new bank, findanewbank.com, new blog, NewsBlog, synopsis
Now you can keep track on not only news from the markets and banks, but developments at FindANewBank.com as well. We will post all our updates to the NewsBlog, and synopses of news articles and blogs relating to the financial world. Be sure to give us your feedback on articles and their sources.
Permalink
September 19, 2008 at 10:49 pm
· Filed under Market News ·Tagged 1987 market crash, AIG, Bank of America, bankruptcy, DJIA, dmz, Dow Joes, Federal Reserve, Lehman Brothers, merger, Merrill Lynch, short selling, short selling ban, shotgun merger, takeover
Source: Wall Street Journal
Synopsis:
- American financial system has undergone a complete reshaping. More changes expected in the coming years.
- Current events “eclipsed” the events preceding the 1987 market crash, according to president of Alexander Trading.
- Week ending September 19, 2008 has seen a 1000-point swing in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
- In one 5-day period, Lehman Brothers (LEH) goes bankrupt, Merrill Lynch seeks $55 Billion merger with Bank of America Corp, and AIG taken over by Federal Reserve.
- American International Group (AIG) needs $15 Billion to $25 Billion to remain solvent.
- Short-selling prohibited for 799 different stocks until October 2.
- Markets called “financial demilitarized zone”.
Permalink
September 19, 2008 at 9:43 pm
· Filed under Market News ·Tagged breaking the buck, CD, certificate of deposit, high-yield, market panic, money market, money market mutual funds, NAV, net asset value, Reserve Primary Fund, secure investment, stock market, T-bills, treasury department
Source: Bankrate
Synopsis:
- The U.S. Treasury Department establishes Temporary Guaranty Program for elligible money market mutual funds.
- Money Market Mutual Funds are not normally guaranteed by FDIC.
- Panic in markets partly due to Reserve Primary Fund’s Net Asset Value being reduced to $0.97.
- T-bills being purchased at a loss because of their security.
- Money Market Accounts and High-Yield CDs recommended as safer alternatives.
Permalink