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#437974 - 10/01/08 08:57 PM
Re: Most Important Video Yet
[Re: Admin]
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Admiral
Registered: 12/17/02
Posts: 8399
Loc: Sammamish, Washington
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Interesting. Three responses requesting further definition and one response full of assumptions and bile. I'll answer the first three with an apology for not having been more clear. (I do still work for a living, and my morning posts are constrained by the research time I deem appropriate to the developing circumstances.)
dislocation event - an event that results in a displacement or discontinuity; disruption; break, interruption - some abrupt occurrence that interrupts an ongoing activity; "that detour is an annoying disruption"; "there was a break in the availability of fuel, causing gas lines."
Although the term does NOT connote impending disaster as it appears has been assumed by some, a 'dislocation event' can provide circumstances from a minor annoyance to a major disaster, depending on the nature of the event and the nature of your need.
If gas is unavailable at your local station for a few hours, you have experienced a 'dislocation event' if it is your habit to wait until you're empty to fill up and you need to drive further.
The severity of that event would be impacted by the length of the disruption and the nature of your need for your accustomed service. If you have to get to a hospital RIGHT NOW, your tank is empty, and the 'dislocation event' is merely hours long, you've got a big problem, personally.
If you have your ATM card swallowed by a troubled ATM machine, need cash and have none, you have experienced a 'dislocation event'. Not a big deal unless you NEED to make that payment to Guido RIGHT NOW, and it's gonna take until after the weekend to get a replacement card.
You get the gist.
The general tenor of things don't merit panic or anything like it. Re-read the post. Consider making (very) modest preparations for 'dislocation events' that very well might affect you. The advice is gratis, and worth what it cost you.
I'll remind the meager readership of these pages that over the past four months the landscape of banking and credit has been reshaped the world over---in ways so large that they would have been (and indeed WERE) laughed at had they been forecast (as, of course, they were).
Of the five major American investment banks, the august and revered names of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan, Lehman Brothers, and Bear Sterns have disappeared from that fraternity. Some failed, some nationalized, some purchased by depository banks, and the others petitioning to become depository banks; the entire category that was described by our leadership as "fundamentally sound" five months ago, exists no longer. And, incidentally, the fraternity that perfected the marketing of highly leveraged derivative investments that seem now not so enticing as they once were. Enticing enough to sell to YOU, however, at the point of a gun.
The night after the lower house of congress rejected Paulson's coronation, Bernanke engineered $630 Billion in currency swaps to prevent a dollar crash. (Remember that they've pretended that $700 Billion will fix this.)
In a separate development, a very poorly covered incidence of fuel scarcity across the southeast is popping up sporadically.
Less than two weeks ago, prior to the two biggest bank failures in US History (WaMu and Wachovia), six confirmed reports of well-capitalized firms flush with capital having direct deposit payroll FAIL brought to light the fragility of the systems we rely on without thought.
Re-read the original post. If memory serves, it was a gentle suggestion to bring your level of preparedness up slightly in two areas key for most people managing busy lives. Let me rephrase it in terms I find more appropriate to the current conditions: "If you're walking around without sufficient access to cash for your immediate needs, or driving with the assumption that gas will ALWAYS be available at some price whenever you need it, you've got rocks in your head."
But you're welcome to that point of view if it serves you.
_________________________
"Corporations have been enthroned, and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until the wealth is aggregated in the hands of a few, and the Republic is destroyed." -- Abraham Lincoln "America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves." - Abraham Lincoln -
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#438026 - 10/02/08 07:07 AM
Re: Most Important Video Yet
[Re: Finger Lakes Boater]
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Admiral
Registered: 12/17/02
Posts: 8399
Loc: Sammamish, Washington
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A little more flesh on the bone; from FT Alphaville:
Credit tappin’
The crisis in money markets has been a running theme here on FT Alphaville recently, particularly its potential impact on your average, run-of-the-mill corporate. Soon we may have more of a clue just what some of the effects might be. Ford Motor has $1.5bn in debt coming due today; whether it uses cash to pay that down or part of its $11.5bn revolving credit line will be an interesting datapoint for money markets as well as a gauge of corporate confidence in the banks.
The credit line, part of a larger restructuring plan negotiated in 2006 (along with $23.4bn of borrowings), is complicated by the collapse of Lehman Brothers. Bloomberg reports:
Ford said Sept. 16 that it was assessing the effect of Lehman Brothers’ bankruptcy on $1.13 billion in lending agreements with the automaker. Two Lehman subsidiaries made credit commitments starting in late 2006, Ford said in the U.S. regulatory earlier this month. Those units weren’t included when Lehman sought court protection Sept. 15, the automaker said.
Lehman Commercial Paper Inc. committed $890 million of the $11.5 billion revolving credit line and Lehman Brothers Bank provides $238 million of $16.3 billion in “liquidity facilities'’ for Ford Motor Credit, the automaker said.
Tapping credit lines, in normal times, was something of a major warning sign (along the lines of “bankruptcy imminent”) to investors.
Today, with the increasing importance of cash and the fear of counterparty collapse, it’s becoming more common. Companies including Carmike Cinemas and General Motors have used their facilities recently, accessing cash while it’s still available. US office supply store Staples has managed to shift its credit agreements (a $750m revolving line and a $400m term loan) with Lehman Commercial Paper to Barclays.
From the Wall Street Journal last week: As of June 30 last year, the latest period for which data are available, banks had pledged to finance about $2.3 trillion in big corporate loans - those more than $20 million and syndicated by multiple banks, according to the Federal Reserve’s Shared National Credit Exam. Of that, borrowers had drawn down about $835 billion - meaning that nearly $1.5 trillion remained untapped but available. A caveat: Banks reported that loan data before the credit crisis hit in August last year, and analysts say it’s likely that companies have drawn down many of their credit lines since then.
A rising tide of credit line taps would be worrying for banks, as Clusterstock notes:
Unlike bond issuances and syndicated term loans, banks cannot easily hand the credit risk and capital requirements onto other investors. In short, when borrowers draw down revolvers that money comes out of Wall Street’s coffers. With banks still highly levered and under tremendous balance sheet pressure these days, the threat of corporations drawing down their revolvers could exacerbate the situation. In a worst case scenario, banks could be forced to sell assets or raise money to cover the loans.
In fact, that might be a bit of an exaggeration. The loan commitments on revolving credit lines, once agreed, count against the banks’ capital ratios from the get-go.
It’s actually more of a liquidity problem — bank managers may not necessarily count on the facility being fully drawn out. If that happens, on a mass scale, it could impact banks abilities to make new loans to other borrowers. In short, excacerbating the current liquidity crisis.
_________________________
"Corporations have been enthroned, and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until the wealth is aggregated in the hands of a few, and the Republic is destroyed." -- Abraham Lincoln "America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves." - Abraham Lincoln -
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#438039 - 10/02/08 08:06 AM
Re: Most Important Video Yet
[Re: Finger Lakes Boater]
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Admiral
Registered: 07/27/04
Posts: 986
Loc: Athens, GA
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Interesting. Three responses requesting further definition and one response full of assumptions and bile. I'll answer the first three with an apology for not having been more clear. (I do still work for a living, and my morning posts are constrained by the research time I deem appropriate to the developing circumstances.)
Re-read the original post. If memory serves, it was a gentle suggestion to bring your level of preparedness up slightly in two areas key for most people managing busy lives. Let me rephrase it in terms I find more appropriate to the current conditions: "If you're walking around without sufficient access to cash for your immediate needs, or driving with the assumption that gas will ALWAYS be available at some price whenever you need it, you've got rocks in your head."
But you're welcome to that point of view if it serves you. FLB, I think Admin was responding to a part of my post that I subsequently deleted. I had asked a question, but in retrospect, it was poorly worded and implied something I did not intend nor did I initially foresee. Therefore, after reading it again, I decided to immediately delete the remainder of the post - possibly while Admin was responding to it. I could be wrong, but I don't think he was referring to your post specifically.
_________________________
05 FW 200 Horizon 03 F150 Supercrew FX4 2 dogs with own PFDs 7 cats who aren't impressed
Always remember Rule #6.
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