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vigilant wrote:Quote:
If the people found out what it is we have done they would chase us down the street and hang us from the lamppost.
Did Greenspan say that in public, or write it in his book?
vigilant wrote:Quote:
If the people found out what it is we have done they would chase us down the street and hang us from the lamppost.
Did Greenspan say that in public, or write it in his book?
1/8/03 HYPERLINK "http://www.newsday.com/news/nationworld/nation/wire/sns-ap-obit-mcclendon0108jan08,0,6212268.story" \t "_blank"
White House Reporter Sarah McClendon Dies
"If the people were to ever find out what we have done, we would be chased down the streets and lynched."
-- George Bush, cited in the June, 1992 Sarah McClendon Newsletter
Brentos wrote:... the corroboration between the Fed and the Bank of England during that time.
On September 25 2002, Mr. Alan Greenspan went to court and had his remembrances - at the opening of the new HM Treasury Building in London he had this to remark on a key element of UK/US special relationship:
... I am daily reminded of the special relationship the Federal Reserve has had over the decades with decisionmakers from the British government. Literally twenty feet from my desk are plaques commemorating the numerous World War II meetings in our Board Room between the combined military chiefs of the United States and Great Britain that in the words on one plaque, „... set the pattern for allied collaboration and the successful prosecution of World War II.“
But the Federal Reserve‘s association with Britain‘s monetary authorities goes back even further. The tie between the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve was cemented during the 1920s in that extraordinary relationship between Benjamin Strong, the President of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, and Montague Norman, the Governor of the Bank of England. Their correspondence yields quite fascinating insight into the way they interpreted events that are now important history. The ties developed then between the Federal Reserve and British monetary authorities endure to this day.
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Byrne wrote:Brentos wrote:... the corroboration between the Fed and the Bank of England during that time.
I posted an article The Bank of England and the Federal Reserve System in the Data Dump a while ago.............
An excerpt:On September 25 2002, Mr. Alan Greenspan went to court and had his remembrances - at the opening of the new HM Treasury Building in London he had this to remark on a key element of UK/US special relationship:
... I am daily reminded of the special relationship the Federal Reserve has had over the decades with decisionmakers from the British government. Literally twenty feet from my desk are plaques commemorating the numerous World War II meetings in our Board Room between the combined military chiefs of the United States and Great Britain that in the words on one plaque, „... set the pattern for allied collaboration and the successful prosecution of World War II.“
But the Federal Reserve‘s association with Britain‘s monetary authorities goes back even further. The tie between the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve was cemented during the 1920s in that extraordinary relationship between Benjamin Strong, the President of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, and Montague Norman, the Governor of the Bank of England. Their correspondence yields quite fascinating insight into the way they interpreted events that are now important history. The ties developed then between the Federal Reserve and British monetary authorities endure to this day.
.....
11:11 wrote:
The sun never sets on the empire, does it? When does he get knighted for his loyalty? Or better yet, tried for his treason.
"If the people were to ever find out what we have done, we would be chased down the streets and lynched."
-- George Bush, cited in the June, 1992 Sarah McClendon Newsletter
June 6-8, 1992, Prime Minister John Major, United Kingdom, Met with President Bush during a private visit to Washington, and Camp David (Maryland).
In the U.S. the staff of the sec wanted to proceed with both of its inquiries. However, they were stopped abruptly in 1992 by the Commission itself, led by Chairman Richard Breeden, not long after British Prime Minister John Major spent a weekend with President George Bush at Camp David.
Had Major persuaded Bush to call off the investigation, as British press reports speculated at the time? Both Bush and Major, through spokesmen, say they don't recall discussing Lloyd's. Former Chairman Breeden, who had been a key White House aide under Bush, told Time that the sec decision against proceeding "was not because Mr. Major and Mr. Bush said anything to each other" but because the SEC decided that disputes between Names and Lloyd's should be resolved in English courts. "We didn't make a judgment that the way (Lloyd's) allocated risks among syndicates wasn't sleazy," Breeden told Time. "We didn't make a judgment that their practices were honest."
Clearly the next step to follow a meltdown in the credit risk derivative group’s pounding of the commercial paper market would be a meltdown in the credit default derivative wherein trillions of dollars are involved yet the dealership in this structured product is an incredibly small number.
Those people, according to a Wall Street Journal article a year ago, are Merrill, Citicorp, Lehman, Goldman and Bear. These products, when purchased ostensive, protect the buyer from credit rating reduction and defaults be they in the market place (slashing of value) or the bond issuing entity itself.
The world class oxymoron is the credit default derivative that the financial integrity, as defined as the special performance contract actually performing, depends on the balance sheet capability of the loser on the arrangement. I would suggest to you that the outstanding commitments on the credit default derivatives exceeds the total cash and near cash assets of all the dealers involved. There is another outstanding question which is how many credit default derivatives have been written by the few participants on each other?
Friends, this is all coming down much faster than anyone could have anticipated. It is still too complex for most of the public and professionals to understand. That is the only reason that there isn't a panic attitude roaring through markets. That is a positive for the best interest of the readers who have not acted. According to the assistance given to me by CIGAs emailing me this weekend, less than 15% of you have moved to certification of your investments and the removal of financial intermediaries between you and your finances.
The Ground Zero of Mortgage Foreclosures
Published by Jon Winslow October 29th, 2007 in Location intelligence.
Here’s an unpleasant thought: According the international news agency Agence France Press, Stockton, California, has become “the ground zero” of mortgage foreclosures.
Per an AFP article published in September, 2007, 1in 27 Stockton homes are in foreclosure. According to the article, which bases its information on data from an organization called RealtyTrac, the worst-hit neighborhood is the Weston Ranch subdivision, where hundreds of homes are in foreclosure already.
Because I am so interested in demography, any time such an important news story gets linked to an individual neighborhood, I can’t help but investigate. Because home foreclosure would seem to be so heavily driven by socio-economic data, I decided to look into the profile of Weston Ranch.
Here’s what I learned:
First off, back in 1990, according to the U.S. Census, there were only a total of 71 housing units in the Weston Ranch area. By 2000, according to the U.S. Census, that number had increased to 2,266. In 2006, according to MapInfo’s own estimates, the total number of housing units had increased to 4,159.
That is a growth rate of over 5,000%. In New York, where population is generally decreasing, that kind of growth sounds unbelievable. I can’t even picture it.
The median, family income for Weston Ranch is about $78,000, according to MapInfo estimates. That is not poor. It is also far from grossly rich. Also, home values, according to the Census, were only about $175,000 in 2000. For California, that strikes me as very modest. This is a neighborhood of normal people.
Taking that information, I used MapInfo demographic data that I have stored within a business intelligence data mart on my local server and did some queries. First I grabbed the universe of all U.S. Census Block Groups for the nation — about 200,000. Then I applied a filter so that I was looking at only Block Groups where the number of housing units changed by over 1,000% from 1990 to 2000. They allowed me to create a subset of about 330 Block Groups.
I applied another filter to check for Block Groups where, according to MapInfo, the projected population change from 2000 to 2011 was expected to be over 120%.
Finally, I looked at home value. I decided to search only for Block Groups where the home value in 2000 was, according to Census statistics, over $150,000, but under $220,000.
This got me a list of 19 Block Groups that I consider similar to Stockton’s ‘ground zero.’
Of the 19, 18 are in the Sunbelt – one in Florida and 17 in the western part of the country. The 19th is near Chicago.
According to data from MapInfo PSYTE Advantage, all of the neighborhoods are suburban, high growth areas, although they are evenly split in terms of density: one-third, high density; one-third, low density, etc. They also fall, for the most part, into 3 particular PSYTE Advantage clusters:
Western Sprawl
Sierra Snuggle
Suburban Mélange
Besides being high-growth, mostly Western suburbs, what do these groups have in common? Married couple households, age 25-49, kids under 18, income between $65,000 and $85,000.
Sounds like the American dream.
Now I wouldn’t hit the panic button just yet if your neighborhood comes up on this list. This is back-of-the-napkin analysis. But for reference, the neighborhoods I came up with are:
77382 Spring, Texas
60543 Oswego, Illinois
33913 Fort Myers, Florida
95206 Stockton, California
85308 Glendale, Arizona
85374 Surprise, Arizona
85382 Peoria, Arizona
85248 Chandler, Arizona
89134 Las Vegas, Nevada
89128 Las Vegas, Nevada
89131 Las Vegas, Nevada
89031 North Las Vegas, Nevada
89012 Henderson, Nevada
89124 Las Vegas, Nevada
89148 Las Vegas, Nevada
By the way, another good article on the subject, one from The Associated Press, can be found here:
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=3697957
http://blog.mapinfo.com/2007/10/29/the- ... eclosures/
I think this is the more accurate article
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