Archive for August, 2010

Financial Regulation and Bank Reform

There are new bank fees coming your way just like the higher credit card costs that came after Congress did a credit card fix two years ago.

Some benefits under the new regulations….Banks cannot automatically sign you up for something you may not use, like overdraft protection. To make up for these lost fees, big banks will push new charges at you.

Do not just accept them. Fight back. Look for better deals, like online banks, community banks, or credit unions. Also, look at online brokers that may provide free checking and online bill paying. Some of these alternatives even pay interest on checking accounts without minimum balances.

Here are a few sites you can try out to find some better deals:

http://www.findabetterbank.com/

https://www.checkingfinder.com/

http://www.bankrate.com/

Also, take a look at Everbank’s money market that pays interest on checking accounts of 1.00% to 2.25%.

Watch for changes at your present bank, like higher minimum balances or additional conditions and restrictions on all accounts. Don’t let them nickel and dime you to death with these other fees. Be proactive and save money.

One last point….check out http://www.lowcards.com/to find the best rates on credit cards.

The Real Cause of the Housing Crisis

For years I have written in this blog about the financial crisis being set off by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. (See previous blogs on how George Bush put a warning out in 2001, 2005, and 2007 to Chris Dodd and Barney Frank about the house of cards that had been built. Even in 2007 both Dodd and Frank denied there was a problem.)

The following articles were sent to me by a friend who is a former banker. Disregard the references to Democrats, Republicans, or Individuals and just read to get the ideas. Make sure you are sitting down as you get “the rest of the story.”

There’s an interesting article below and some background in the attachments. This all takes a few minutes to read through, which is exactly what the liberals don’t want anybody to take the time to do.

Clearly the biggest financial holes sucking in money have always been Fan and Fred, but they were never addressed as part of any of the banking regulations, due to the political risk. Prior to it just being political risk, there were millions and millions of dollars of compensation at risk for the folks who ran Fan and Fred. Mr. Rains was the single largest contributor to the Obama campaign and his compensation was directly tied to the volume of loans that took place at Fan. He walked away with tens of millions of dollars, for having taken his company into a fate far worse than bankruptcy. He was not prosecuted, nor even vilified, because he was doing what he was being enabled to, by the democrats in Congress.

The articles below provide an interesting overview of what really happened to this economy. It has all been blamed on greedy Wall Street bankers and none of the blame in the mainstream media has fallen back onto the liberals in government. The process was put in place by Jimmy Carter and then really kicked into high gear by Clinton and then into overdrive by a Democrat controlled Congress, with Bush not being able to do anything about it. He was unable, because the critical changes were not passed as new laws, which he could have vetoed.

Fan and Fred were begun in the 1930’s to ensure liquidity in the mortgage markets. They began to be bastardized by Carter and continued to be, up until their collapse. Even now, the Dems want to essentially pay off all low income mortgages with our tax dollars, in order to ensure a voter base for the future. It’s so absurd that it would be laughable if it weren’t so incredibly destructive to us all.

If you know of anyone who is still an Obama supporter and is also able to read, please pass this along to them!

And now, you know the rest of the story.

Mortgage Article (PDF)

Banking Article (PDF)

ACORN Housing (PDF)

Also, feel free to further educate yourself by copying and pasting this link into your browser:
http://www.hennessysview.com/2008/09/15/franklin-raines-criminal-enterprise-and-barack-obama-his-accomplice

Bonds…Look Out Below!!

I hear so many people bemoan that “if only they had known about the stock market drop from 2007 to 2009, they would have avoided losses and saved their retirement plans.”

Hmmm. Seems like all the signs were there, especially the weak financials from 2001 to 2007 on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Those two quasi-government agencies were the major reason for the housing crisis (isn’t it funny how in the new Financial Reform Law, Fannie and Freddie were not even mentioned, or anything done to reform them?!). And, yes, Fannie and Freddie are still up their old tricks.

Take a look at human nature – people in America rarely connect the dots or project into the future. In everyday life, they sadly state after a long dry spell….geez, it will never rain. Sure enough, soon after that statement flooding, rain comes. After a prolonged rainy season, people cry out “it will never be sunny again,” soon followed by a drought. All things in life move like a pendulum from one extreme to the other. Both extremes are only momentary, as also for the mid-point or average. The same is true in business, love, and economics.

In economics we go for long periods of robust growth and then into recession. During boom times, people think it will last forever; and during recession times, they think we will never get out of this…ever! Stock prices moves the same way. Getting the picture? Just like my days of playing baseball. My batting average was .302. Thus 30% of the time I got a hit. When I went into an “0 for 20” slump, I had confidence that I would probably get 10 straight hits (which I did) and got back to my average.

Note how the crowd invests at the top of the stock market. They take money from bonds and banks and pour it into the stock market (buying high). Soon after stocks drop, they pull money out of the market (sell low) and place it into cash or bonds (safe). As people bid up the price of bonds (buy high), naturally the yield (or interest rates) drop. At the same time, with the stock market and economy in distress, the Federal Reserve will try to stimulate the economy by lowering interest rates. The masses wanting safety continue to pour money into bonds. Soon the economy begins to revive and the Fed begins to raise interest rates. As interest rates rise, the price of bonds drop and the small investor dumps bonds (sells low), losing money. As the economy begins recovering, the stock market anticipates this and begins to rise.

Our heroes, after losing above in stocks and now bonds, see the market has gone up xx% and want to get on the train that has already left the station. Again, they buy in at the top and sell at the bottom. Do you have the picture?

Those people that have money in bonds and bond funds – BEWARE. Interest rates are the lowest in about two generations. Short rates, set by the Fed are at 0% to .25%. They cannot go lower. In fact, they cannot go negative! Duh! (Remember the pendulum.)

The economy will begin a slow recovery, rates will rise and bonds (safe) will get hammered. The experts are stating “this is a bond bubble.” The drop in bond prices in the future will make the stock market drop of 2007-2009 look like a cake walk. In a rising interest rate environment, those bonds with the longest maturity will suffer the most. Keep maturities short and/or do a laddering. My statement is not a prediction of impending doom tomorrow, but it is on the horizon. The signals for the 2007-2009 drop were showing up in 2005.

Get your advisor to help you. Another alternative, as stated many times, is to get into investments that rise when investments go up, but you do not participate in any drops in the market. Oh, they also grow tax-free, and you can withdraw the money tax-free – anytime, and when you die, the money transfers income tax-free at death.

Oh, one more thing…for ten years, tax rates have been real low and like a pendulum. Well, you know the story come 12/31/10.

Discipline or regret….