Pennsylvania Student Loans Halted on Auction Failures 

By Adam L. Cataldo

Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) — The Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency, the second-largest seller of auction-rate debt for the past seven years, will stop making student loans next month after paying $24 million in extra interest.

The agency services and buys existing obligations and makes about $500 million in new loans annually, chief financial officer Tim Guenther said. Officials, who made 140,000 student loans in the 12 months through June 30, said they will halt making new ones on March 7.

Richard Cook’s tale of the national dividend is explored in this look into the future.

Finally: Economic Sanity Returns to America

by Richard C. Cook / February 28th, 2008

It started with the crash and depression of 2008-2009. Consumers had finally lost the ability to float global business with their credit cards and home equity loans.Finally even the politicians had to face the facts. Ever since the 1980s, when the economy was handed over for plundering to the banks and the Wall Street plutocrats, ordinary people had struggled just to survive.

Looking into the Abyss — Feb 24, 2008

The Three Trillion Dollar War
Feb 23, 2008                                                                

The endless borrowing at endless interest for a seemingly endless number of years works as long as there is an endless amount of available credit; but can it continue?   Here is an estimate by Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Blimes of the London Times as to the real extent of the financial cost. 
 

From the unhealthy brew of emergency funding, multiple sets of books, and chronic underestimates of the resources required to prosecute the war, we have attempted to identify how much we have been spending – and how much we will, in the end, likely have to spend. The figure we arrive at is more than $3 trillion. Our calculations are based on conservative assumptions. They are conceptually simple, even if occasionally technically complicated. A $3 trillion figure for the total cost strikes us as judicious, and probably errs on the low side….
The price in treasure has, in a sense, been financed entirely by borrowing. Taxes have not been raised to pay for it – in fact, taxes on the rich have actually fallen. Deficit spending gives the illusion that the laws of economics can be repealed, that we can have both guns and butter. But of course the laws are not repealed. The costs of the war are real even if they have been deferred, possibly to another generation.

http://tinyurl.com/2ygcgo

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German State-Owned Banks on Verge of Collapse
 Feb 20, 2008

Der Spiegal Online details how Germany is being sucked into the imploding derivatives bubble, as the Ponzi implodes internationally.   Note how the position and credit situation of this bank was made desperate at the insistence of authorities in Brussels (EU),  setting them on a high risk course.   There should be some interesting back story there.

The German government has had to bail out state-owned banks with taxpayers’ money after their managements recklessly gambled away billions on subprime investments. But if a state-owned bank were to go under, the consequences could be disastrous for the whole economy . . . . Hard up for funds, many of the public-sector banks began speculating with high-risk securities. According to a former bank executive, many “literally stocked up on these investments” shortly before the cut-off date. Others even continued to do so after the cut-off date. Lacking a functioning business model, they turned to what was essentially gambling — and lost.

http://tinyurl.com/2q7f9x

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U.S. to turn up heat on tax protesters
 Feb. 20, 2008

     The current crisis creates a tax hungry IRS,  and it looks like it is not the high rollers who will get the heat so much as the tax protestor or rather Tax Denier participants.  To understand the position of many of the targeted non-filers more fully than this article explains,  look up online Aaron Russo’s film of last year, “America: From Freedom to Fascism”;   there is a great airing of the situation there. 
      Although someone like Snipes is high profile and wealthy,   the target here is a lot of rather median-to-small earners.     That begs the question of whether the IRS and Justice Department are trying to head off an exodus by the suddenly-poor from the tax collecting system,  just as many are now walking away from their “upside down” mortgages.   Are they expecting to have to head off a growing sense of rebellion in our financial system,  as the air goes out of the Ponzi scheme?

   The Justice Department, on the heels of a split verdict in its tax evasion prosecution of actor Wesley Snipes, is planning a crackdown on the so-called tax protester movement . . . . Officials say the movement costs government many millions.

By Robert Schmidt, Bloomberg News
http://tinyurl.com/2lruhq

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Wall Street Bank Run
 Thursday, February 21, 2008

This commentary, by David Ignatius of the Washington Post,  describes the banks’ run upon themselves, as credit contracts and contracts; and further points out just WHO is bringing money back into the country to keep things pumped up, and  to whom America will owe an enormous debt.    
 It doesn’t look like an old-fashioned bank run because it involves the biggest financial institutions, trading paper assets so complicated that even top executives don’t fully understand the transactions. But that’s what it is — a spreading fear among financial institutions that their brethren can’t be trusted to honor their obligations.
 Frightened financiers are pulling back from credit markets — going on strike, if you will — to escape the unraveling daisy chain of securitized assets and promissory notes that binds the global financial system. As each financier tries to protect against the next one’s mistakes, the whole system begins to sag. That’s what we’re seeing now, as credit market troubles spread from bundles of subprime residential mortgages to bundles of other kinds of debt — from student loans to retailers’ receivables to municipal bonds.
The hubris in this system was Wall Street’s confidence that it could value paper securities that had been sliced and diced so many times that they no longer had solid connections to their underlying assets. The nation’s leading financier, Warren Buffett, had warned years before that “derivatives,” whose value was balanced loosely on the real assets underneath, were the equivalent of “financial weapons of mass destruction.” But in the rush for profits, nobody listened.
And who is bailing out America’s biggest banks and financial institutions from the consequences of their folly?  It’s the sovereign wealth funds, owned by such nations as China and the Persian Gulf oil producers. The new titans are coming to the rescue, if that’s the right word for their mortgage on America’s future.
http://tinyurl.com/2u37sl

More bad news – and how to fix it

AMERICA’S ECONOMY RISKS THE MOTHER OF ALL MELT DOWNS…
     The Financial Times delivers the lowdown on the actual potential magnitude of America’s financial decline, based upon the formerly controversial (now operational)  12 step path to recession and melt down, as forecast in 2006 by Nouriel Roubini of the New York School of Business.
“Recently, Professor Roubini’s scenarios have been dire enough to make the flesh creep. But his thinking deserves to be taken seriously. He first predicted a US recession in July 2006*. At that time, his view was extremely controversial. It is so no longer. Now he states that there is “a rising probability of a ‘catastrophic’ financial and economic outcome”**. The characteristics of this scenario are, he argues: “A vicious circle where a deep recession makes the financial losses more severe and where, in turn, large and growing financial losses and a financial meltdown make the recession even more severe.”
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TREATING DEATH AS A COMMODITY…
Not sure exactly how this works, but it shows how speculators will take virtually anything and try to convert it into a  quick investment profit.   It is a tendency that has come to haunt us in the subprime world. 
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THE SUBPRIME MESS GRAPHICALLY (AND COMICALLY) EXPLAINED….
     This PowerPoint link will save you reading whole chapters of “Web of Debt” . . . and give you some much needed laughs.
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U.S. CREDIT MARKETS COLLAPSING…
From Martin D. Weiss, Ph.D., in Money and Markets newsletter —
“The U.S. credit markets, the giant growth engine that powers the American economy, are collapsing … with few credit sectors spared from damage, few investors escaping losses, and little hope of federal action that’s quick or strong enough to make a major difference…….. Without the triple-A rating, their whole reason to exist falls by the wayside: They cannot enhance the credit of bond issuers. They cannot do more business. They may as well close their doors and go home.”
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U.S. COMPTROLLER GENERAL RESIGNS 
One of the last few officials working hard to get out the truth about budgets and astronomical looming entitlements has walked away from it all.   David M. Walker of the Government Accountability Office  resigned Feb. 15th.    
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BERNANKE: “YOU’RE ALL DEAD DUCKS”…     He did not really say that, but Mike Whitney’s characterization of Bernanke’s recent testimony says he might as well have:
“Even veteran Fed-watchers were caught off-guard by Chairman Bernanke’s performance before the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday. Bernanke was expected to make routine comments on the state of the economy but, instead, delivered a 45 minute sermon detailing the afflictions of the foundering financial system. The Senate chamber was stone-silent throughout. The gravity of the situation is finally beginning to sink in.”
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PAULSON’S WILD RIDE ON THE HINDENBURG: “THE WORST HAS JUST BEGUN”
 Mike Whitney again,  watching the spin unravel into more of a confessional, as the Treasury Secretary unveils “Project Lifeline”, a  rather thin safety net to buy the foreclosed some time,  and revealingly answers some hard questions from reporters.    For example: 
Reporter: “Sir, is the worst over, yet? Will 2008 have fewer foreclosures?”
Secretary  of the Treasury Paulson:  “In terms of sub-prime and the resets, the worst isn’t over. The worst is just beginning…. There’s close to 2 million adjustable rate mortgages where the rate is going to be reset over the next couple of years.”
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Fortunately, there is another alternative.  It’s all in the revised, updated “Web of Debt” — available now!  http://tinyurl.com/yqbjth

How to Start Your Own Bank

How to start your own bank:
 
http://www.financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/schoon/2007/0514.html
 
http://money.howstuffworks.com/bank5.htm
 
Idea: we get 6 investors with $100,000 each to become the directors.  Their $600,000 is the 10% needed to get started; we raise the other 90% by issuing stock.  That gives us capital of $6 million, enough to charter a bank.  Then we’re allowed to create and lend . . . $200 million!  (See first article above.)  Today you only need 3% reserves if you’re a small bank.  The BIS (Bank for International Settlements) capital requirements are a bit higher — 8% — but even at 8%, our $6 million lets us lend $50 million.  We lend interest-free to various worthy causes that will generate a profit if they don’t have the burden of interest, such as alternative energy projects, low-cost housing, Permaculture farming projects and the like.  Rather than charging interest, we take a modest share of the profits, on the model of Islamic banking or investment banking; but our real purpose is to set up a working model of what community-oriented banking could be.   We use the principles developed over 300 years by the private banking system and turn them to public ends. 

Northern Rock Nationalized

In England, the government does not bail out bankrupt banks without some quid pro quo; it takes their stock . . .

LONDON – Britain’s treasury chief Alistair Darling said today that struggling bank Northern Rock PLC will be nationalized.

That after the government rejected two takeover bids.

Northern Rock ran into trouble in September because it relied too heavily on short-term money markets instead of deposits for funding.
http://ca.news.finance.yahoo.com/s/17022008/2/biz-finance-britain-nationalize-troubled-mortgage-lender-northern-rock.html