Re: More welfare for the rich.
by
PhilfromCalifornia
07/13/2008, 11:08 AM #
"For your information, corporations have so far written off, or "lost", over $400 billion in debt investment in these mortgage related instruments."
Well, that's why they call it "risk capital" - and that risk is the reason that there are capital gains tax rates which are much lower than the rates charged for ordinary income. Trading in equities is betting, every bit as much as if it was done at a casino - except, of course, that it is taxed at a lower rate. There is no reason to feel sorry for the investors when they make the mistake of buying something for more than it is worth (the equities), or for the underlying corporations for buying something for more than it is worth (the mortgage-backed instruments). Call them "bad luck", or "bad choices", whichever you prefer - they made their choices themselves. One should not, of course, leave the highest paid employees of the corporations - the CEOs. COOs, CFOs, and such - unblemished. They are the most responsible for making mistakes at the corporate level and whatever they have lost of the gifted equities they temporarily enjoyed is their recompense. So, we need not feel sorry for them either.
What we need to worry about is an interconnected economy which lets the fortunes, good or bad, of a few entities weigh so heavily on the perceived worth of all the others. There is something palpably unfair about the perceived value of some far off (in space and purpose) corporation falling in synchronization with one which truly has a problem. It is such mechanisms as short covering and margin covering that are responsible for this coupling, and there can be no argument that they are somehow essential to an economy. Doing away with margin loans and short sales would, in itself, create the kind of stable economy that the majority longs for.
"...you would understand that supporting Fannie and Freddie is the mechanisms through which the Government will help your 'lazy, good for nothing working people' stay in their homes."
No, that is not the case. Those existing mortages are not subject to cancellation or alteration unless that is an option specifically stated in the mortgage. Even variable rate loans are subject to some stated set of rules, and the rules are intrinsic to the contracts and would not be changed by the government "bailing out" Fannie and Freddy. Mortgages which run out and must be replaced are in a different category, but those who have taken them are gamblers, the same way as stockholders are gamblers - they have taken some chance in hopes that it will benefit them somehow - and they should also not be overly pitied. They will be out looking for new loans, but, as many "free market" adherents are fond of saying, if there is a need for some facility to be provided, somebody will come along and fill it - so no free-market supporter should ever worry about the demise of particular institutions.