Bonuses for bankers |
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fusionfreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: August 23 2007 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 1317 |
Posted: March 04 2013 at 16:48 | ||||
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I was born in the land of Mahavishnu,not so far from Kobaia.I'm looking for the world
of searchers with the help from crimson king |
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 21:46 | ||||
Yeah, prices of everything has gone up at least by 100% if not more in just the last 5-6 years here. It's ok for the middle class but I really wonder how the poor can possibly cope with such monstrous inflation.
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King of Loss
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 21 2005 Location: Boston, MA Status: Offline Points: 16442 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 21:21 | ||||
Now I bet everyone is noticing those much higher prices on everything. I think the most obvious stuff is food, oil and other daily necessities. It's just a bugger for us, but in poorer countries, it's terrible.
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JJLehto
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Tallahassee, FL Status: Offline Points: 34550 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 18:15 | ||||
Indeed, but that's there whacky ass world and really what can ya do besides fume over it?
Just don't make all of us pay for your f**k ups. Which of course keeps happening, and they are propped up constantly along the way |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 18:11 | ||||
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What?
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JJLehto
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 05 2006 Location: Tallahassee, FL Status: Offline Points: 34550 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 17:52 | ||||
EL is right, and indeed while this is not a popular answer...the work required to make it in banking is pretty brutal.
Most of us don't want this life, I certainly as hell don't, but you gotta be exemplary in school, get an MBA, then endure insane hours, cut throat competition and just bust your ass. Constant threat of being tossed out and probably get a lot of sh*t from bosses. So really kinda messed up to get angry over it, outside a general jealousy. Any of us could pursue such a life, if you wanna make big money. So why be mad? Like I said the issue is when it spills out of their world and starts impacting ours. Now to the point that many modern economies are built heavily on bankers madness. This is the problem! Edited by JJLehto - March 01 2013 at 17:55 |
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 14:03 | ||||
^^^ Yes, that's true re; Russia, and I would agree that 3 WS based agencies should probably not be in charge of rating the whole world.
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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King of Loss
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 21 2005 Location: Boston, MA Status: Offline Points: 16442 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 13:32 | ||||
There are countries that completely reduced and paid off their debt like Russia, but their rating is still nowhere as high as the UK, US, Germany, etc. I think it's not accurate to have 3 Wall Street agencies measure the credit ratings for the entire world, is it? There are some competing agencies coming around, I'm hoping their numbers will get coverage, but doesn't seem like the monopolistic media will grant them much exposure. |
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 13:21 | ||||
As I said I suspect the criteria for rating is almost certainly not just based on a nations debt. If the nation in question is experiencing an increasing level of GDP growth, then it's arguably in a favourable position to begin reducing that debt. The UK was downgraded because it's economy is at best stagnant, while it's borrowing is going through the roof. |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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King of Loss
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 21 2005 Location: Boston, MA Status: Offline Points: 16442 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 12:42 | ||||
Well, it's a thing called narco-terrorism. I think it has been around since some blokes in the City of London came up with a great way to make money. I mean, just think about how much drugs has flooded into Russia, Europe and the United States these last 20 or so years. Edited by King of Loss - March 01 2013 at 12:51 |
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King of Loss
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 21 2005 Location: Boston, MA Status: Offline Points: 16442 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 12:38 | ||||
The whole entire issuance of AAA is fraud itself. If the United States and the United Kingdom looked at its real debt, it should get a FFF debt rating, because both countries are 100% bankrupt. The reason why the government hasn't taken these banks to jail is because the lies that the banks perpetuate help to prop up the entire corrupt and greedy political establishment by issuing fake paper currency. Edited by King of Loss - March 01 2013 at 12:44 |
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King of Loss
Prog Reviewer Joined: April 21 2005 Location: Boston, MA Status: Offline Points: 16442 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 12:35 | ||||
I think banking does a great deal in allocating assets and resources by investing in commercial operations, but the problem comes in when they actively manipulate the money supply into their own pockets. Most of the general public is not really benefiting too much from the heedless mindless consumerism that is derived from all of this crazy banking debt ponzi scheme. I mean how much healthier are the public in these wealthier countries compared to before. I mean most of the United States is fat, overweight and tired after all of the stuff that is consumed, which they must in turn consume more of other things in order to feel better.
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 06:53 | ||||
Yeah, I agree. There seems an overall reluctance to reform the dynamics of investment banking at the global level. In fairness the G20 do discuss it and float ideas about how to reform it. No actual policy ever seems to emerge. Maybe individual nation states are too frightened to lose their own competitve edge in trying to save the overall system. That said, you could argue that a system that is fundamentally built around unlimited debt was never going to be sustainable forever.
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 05:30 | ||||
Which is fair as long as ratings agencies do their jobs. Issuing AAA ratings to instruments derived from underlying subprime mortgages does not strike me as very prudent.
Aye, we are quite familiar with their ways and keep them at arm's length. My point was, therefore, that even IMF had sounded out central bankers on the coming tsunami so it is not the case that it was unforeseen and caught them by surprise. They were and continue to be reluctant to acknowledge the problems of the financial system as it exists today. |
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 05:07 | ||||
^^^ The ratings agencies are a bit of a mennace really in my opinion. They can do more harm than good. Many countries have been downgraded over the last 18 months or so. I'm surprised we held on to tripe A for as long as we did although I'm not certain what the exact measures are. Probably combination of debt to GDP ratio, overall size of national debt and deficit (?) The conseqence of being downgraded is that it potentially costs more to borrow. Osbourne is currentluy borrowing at levels that would have made Darling blush, and yet our economy still fluctuates between stagnation and contraction, and the overall national debt continues to increase. The increased cost of borrowing at the national level inevitably is passed on to Joe public.
The issue of unlimted QE in the US will ultimately affect all of us. The problems in the Eurozone will also have a significant bearing on how the US economy performs as the EU is such an important export market. But this is the nature of the problem. It's interlinked and international. When any country with a significant import/export market has a deep recession it affects, at least to some degree the global economy. When the US and the EU go into nosedive that's big boys stuff, and potentially beyond the depths of the great depression. The only reason it hasn;t manifested itself as such in the US is because of a crippilingly expensive food stamp program masking the full scale of the calamity. Edit: A note of caution around the IMF and the World Bank. They may come out with all these common sense reccomendations for the global economy, but they are not the 'good guys' in all of this. They are the loan sharks of last resort and ultimately feed the global banks with their plunderings. They loan money to a struggling country, and in return the nation agrees to a set of conditions 'Special Drawing Rights' which usually commit that country to selling up its public assets at bargain basement prices to the IMF who then sell them on to the private sector. Edited by Blacksword - March 01 2013 at 05:13 |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 04:55 | ||||
However, bankers aren't the only culpable parties in this matter. Rating agencies also played a huge part and sorry to say that their defence that "a rating is just an opinion" is hogwash. A lawyer, doctor or accountant is accountable for the professional integrity of his opinion and can be made liable for gross negligence. So if it is just an opinion and not one that can be reasonably relied upon, then it's worth about as much as my or anybody else's opinion on an instrument or economy and no more. I believe the US Justice dept is now pursuing S&P but it might be too late. They have already 'ensured' that civil suits on S&P would be time-barred, I think.
Edited by rogerthat - March 01 2013 at 05:05 |
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rogerthat
Prog Reviewer Joined: September 03 2006 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 9869 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 04:51 | ||||
Nailed it. If they want their liberty to do as they please to be preserved, they cannot also seek refuge under "too big to fail". This discussion is not just about hypocritical rhetoric. An IMF paper from 2006 urged a re-look at the way incentives in investment banks were organised as they seemed to reward risk without corresponding penalties for failure. It warned of a huge crisis if the potential for these risks to materialize wasn't taken cognisance of and managed. It wasn't paid heed to then and I don't know that it is today either. As you say, Bernanke has basically written a blank cheque for the banks. I shouldn't have to worry about it as I don't live in America but unfortunately, their unwarranted risks affect everybody in the inter-linked world economy. Edited by rogerthat - March 01 2013 at 04:52 |
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Blacksword
Prog Reviewer Joined: June 22 2004 Location: England Status: Offline Points: 16130 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 04:42 | ||||
I think it is broadly understood what is meant when the media refers to 'bankers' I don't know anyone who thinks this term refers to a cashier at Bacrlays on the High Street. It's poppycock to suggest otherwise. What do you mean no one minds when footballers get awarded huge sums of money for for turning up on a Saturday?? I think I have only ever heard people complain about that. The issue is not so much the fact that some people earn vast amounts of money, it's that they STILL get paid vast amounts of money when they fail or their organisation is implicated in criminal activity. When they are sacked, they STILL get a vast payouts. The investment banks f***ed up beyond measure and they were STILL given billions in bailouts from the public purse, with which they were supposed to start lending out to businesses to stimulate the economy. They have broadly failed to do this, and yet STILL they are promised more. In the US they have been basically promised unlimited QE until the currency is rendered virtually worthless. There is absoluetly no hypocrisy at all in levelling criticism at this industry and how they reward their traders. The problem here is that despite the huge bonuses and payouts for generating huge profits for these banks, in the fullness of time these pension funds are all too likely to collapse due to the ultra high risk nature of the investments, and the risks are getting higher! If the pension market is fluttered in a derivative bubble, when that goes 'pop' you'll have f**k all for your retirement. But guess what, the mooks who pissed your money away will STILL be awarded sums of money that you and I cannot even comprehend. It's also not so much a case of you and I demanding vast returns from our pension funds, it being sold the prmoise of vast returns without having the full extent of the risk explained to us. If expectations were set accordingly then our collective demands for great wealth in retirement would be tempered by reality. Not that I actually know anyone who either expects or demands to be rich in retirement. Who are you referring to when you say we? |
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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 03:26 | ||||
I think most people are aware that the banking industry is divided between trading and retail and it is the trading half that is at the centre of the controversy. I would be surprised if people really thought Capt. Mainwaring was getting a thumping great bonus for looking after your current account. I'm pretty sure they also know that it was the trading half that buggered everything up. I also suspect that the public is aware that several of the banks that were bailed-out using several billion of public money are currently paying out several million in bonus payments - we (the public) have no quarrel with bonus payments coming from profit - but when that profit is either the result of a bail-out, or could have been used to pay-off some of that bail-out then public outrage is not only right, it is necessary.
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What?
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Jim Garten
Special Collaborator Retired Admin & Razor Guru Joined: February 02 2004 Location: South England Status: Offline Points: 14693 |
Posted: March 01 2013 at 03:12 | ||||
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012 |
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