Тёмный

The real truth about the 2008 financial crisis | Brian S. Wesbury | TEDxCountyLineRoad 

TEDx Talks
Подписаться 41 млн
Просмотров 3,7 млн
50% 1

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences. The Great Economic Myth of 2008, challenging the accounting to accounting principal.
Brian Wesbury is Chief Economist at First Trust Advisors L.P., a financial services firm based in Wheaton, Illinois.
Mr. Wesbury has been a member of the Academic Advisory Council of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago since 1999. In 2012, he was named a Fellow of the George W. Bush Presidential Center in Dallas, TX where he works closely with its 4%-Growth Project. His writing appears in various magazines, newspapers and blogs, and he appears regularly on Fox, Bloomberg, CNBCand BNN Canada TV. In 1995 and 1996, he served as Chief Economist for the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress. The Wall Street Journal ranked Mr. Wesbury the nation’s #1 U.S. economic forecaster in 2001, and USA Today ranked him as one of the nation’s top 10
forecasters in 2004. Mr. Wesbury began his career in 1982 at the Harris Bank in Chicago. Former positions include Vice President and Economist for the Chicago Corporation and Senior Vice President and Chief Economist for Griffin, Kubik, Stephens, & Thompson. Mr. Wesbury received an M.B.A. from Northwestern University’s
Kellogg Graduate School of Management, and a B.A. in Economics from the University of Montana. McGraw-Hill published his first book, The New Era of Wealth, in October 1999. His most recent book, It’s Not As Bad As You Think, was published in November 2009 by John Wiley & Sons. In 2011, Mr. Wesbury received the University of Montana’s Distinguished Alumni Award. This award honors outstanding alumni who have “brought honor to the University, the state or the nation.” There have been 267 recipients of this award out of a potential pool of 91,000 graduates.
About TEDx, x = independently organized event In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

Опубликовано:

 

4 май 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 4,9 тыс.   
@darnellcapriccioso
@darnellcapriccioso 10 месяцев назад
The economic crisis and downturn are all the signs of 2008 market crash 2.0, so my question is do I still save in the US dollar or is it okay to move all emergency and savings to precious metals?
@maiadazz
@maiadazz 10 месяцев назад
Keeping some gold is usually a wise decision. You would be better off keeping away from equities for a bit or, even better, seeking advice from an expert given the current market conditions and everything that is at risk with the current economy.
@tatianastarcic
@tatianastarcic 10 месяцев назад
I consider gold investment to be dependable and intend to increase my holdings to recoup losses. While silver is also a promising investment, it differs from my collectibles. Having clear investment goals and acquiring knowledge in the field are essential. I collaborate with Laurel Dell Sroufe, a financial consultant regulated by the SEC. Through modest initial investments, I have gradually accumulated nearly $799k over time.
@darnellcapriccioso
@darnellcapriccioso 10 месяцев назад
@@tatianastarcic How can i reach her, because I’m seeking for a more effective investment approach on my saving.
@tatianastarcic
@tatianastarcic 10 месяцев назад
@@darnellcapriccioso Laurel Dell Sroufe maintains an online presence that can be easily found through a simple search of her name on the internet.
@richardhudson1243
@richardhudson1243 10 месяцев назад
@@darnellcapriccioso After locating her, I composed an email and arranged a phone conversation. I'm optimistic that she will reply, and my goal is to conclude 2023 on a financially successful note.
@BrainKeener
@BrainKeener 10 месяцев назад
I wonder if people that experienced the 2008 crash had it easier because this market conditions are driving me to insanity, my portfolio has lost over $27000 this nov. alone my profits are tanking and I'm don't see my retirement turning out well when I can't even grow my stagnant reserve
@EllenAbrex
@EllenAbrex 10 месяцев назад
Even in this whirlwind, there are chances to be had, thus an increase in volatility is not always a bad thing. You have an opportunity to rebalance thanks to volatility. In order to help you diversify your portfolio, you must hire a financial counselor or broker.
@duane_29
@duane_29 10 месяцев назад
I'll suggest you create a diversification strategy because building a good financial-portfolio has been more complex since covid. Recently my colleague advised me to hire an advisor, surprisingly I have accrued over $120K under the guidance of my coach during this crash. She figured out Defensive strategies to protect my portfolio and make profit from this roller coaster market.
@berkrix4312
@berkrix4312 10 месяцев назад
@@duane_29 I’m new to all this, heard it's a good time to buy and basically I've just got cash sitting duck in the bank and I’d really love to put it to good use seeing how inflation is at an all time-high, who is this coach that guides you, mind I look them up
@duane_29
@duane_29 10 месяцев назад
@@berkrix4312 All of this happened in less than a year after ‘Christine Jane Mclean’ told me what to do. I started with less than $100,000, and now I'm about 17,000 short of having a quarter million dollars.
@berkrix4312
@berkrix4312 10 месяцев назад
@@duane_29 She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I just ran a Google search for her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
@Redwood4040
@Redwood4040 8 месяцев назад
I wonder if people that experienced the 2008 crash had it easier because. my portfolio has lost over $27000 and I don't see my retirement turning out well when I can't even grow my stagnant reserve
@AddilynTuffin
@AddilynTuffin 8 месяцев назад
You have an opportunity to rebalance thanks to volatility. In order to help you diversify your portfolio, you must hire a financial counselor or broker.ur portfolio, you must hire a financial counselor or broker.
@Emmanuel90970
@Emmanuel90970 8 месяцев назад
I'll suggest you create a diversification strategy because building a good financial-portfolio has been more complex since covid. I have accrued over $120K under the guidance of my coach during this crash. She figured out Defensive strategies to protect my portfolio and make profit from this roller coaster market.
@louis71350
@louis71350 8 месяцев назад
Who is this coach that guides you, mind I look them up
@Emmanuel90970
@Emmanuel90970 8 месяцев назад
My advisor is *Sharon Louise Count* she’s highly qualified and experienced in the financial market. She has extensive knowledge of portfolio diversity and is considered an expert in the field.
@louis71350
@louis71350 8 месяцев назад
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
@bobbymainz1160
@bobbymainz1160 7 месяцев назад
Things are strange right now. The US dollar is becoming less valuable because of inflation, but it's getting stronger compared to other currencies and things like gold and property. People are turning to the dollar because they think it's safer. I'm worried about my retirement savings of about $420,000 losing value because of high inflation. Where else can we keep our money?
@alexyoung3126
@alexyoung3126 7 месяцев назад
Personally, I would say have a mentor. Not sure where you will get an experience one, but if your knowledge of the market is limited, it seems like a good bet.
@oneiljerry9460
@oneiljerry9460 7 месяцев назад
Well I recommend you make a diversification plan because it's been harder to build a good financial portfolio since COVID. My colleague suggested I hire an advisor, and I've actually made over $120K with their help during this market crash. They used defensive strategies to protect my portfolio and make profits despite the ups and downs.
@simonfes3770
@simonfes3770 7 месяцев назад
That's fascinating. How can I contact your Asset-coach as my portfolio is dwindling?
@oneiljerry9460
@oneiljerry9460 7 месяцев назад
My Financial adviser is ‘’Helene Claire Johnson’’ she’s highly qualified and experienced in the financial market. She has extensive knowledge of portfolio diversity and is considered an expert in the field. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market
@simonfes3770
@simonfes3770 7 месяцев назад
Thanks for sharing, I just looked her up on the web and I would say she really has an impressive background in investing. I will write her an e-mail shortly.
@Raymondjohn2
@Raymondjohn2 Год назад
We read news in the media that doom and gloom is coming and we just accept it, doom and gloom doesn’t always have to be coming, I’ve read numerous success stories of people that are pulling off tremendous gains of up to $250K within weeks in this crazy market and I just want to learn how to achieve such figures.
@martingiavarini
@martingiavarini Год назад
Since the crash, I've been in the red. I’m playing the long term game, so I'm not too worried but Jim Cramer mentioned there are still a lot of great opportunities, though stocks has been down a lot. I also heard news of a guy that made $250k from about $110k since the crash and I would really look to know how to go about this.
@lipglosskitten2610
@lipglosskitten2610 Год назад
There are actually a lot of ways to make high yields in a crisis, but such trades are best done under the supervision of Financial advisor.
@martingiavarini
@martingiavarini Год назад
@Dan Brooks Impressive can you share more info?
@martingiavarini
@martingiavarini Год назад
@Dan Brooks She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
@luke3045
@luke3045 Год назад
This is a scam, dont bother looking into this person
@jenniferkyle6036
@jenniferkyle6036 Год назад
There was a time when we " made it here", we had jobs for everyone and the products were of high quality, then the 1% wanted everything. Now Inflation drives prices up and if Inflation is high and jobs disappear by the millions we are in a recession and maybe headed for a Depression…So be careful with your money. It may take decades to get back on pay again. Luck to all.. I've seen folks make huge 7figure profit in a crashing market and pull it off much easily in a bull market Unequivocally the crash/recession is getting somebody somewhere rich...
@gracesdonny1532
@gracesdonny1532 Год назад
On occasion you can beat the market with blind luck, but I wouldn't depend on it. Having a science background there is a saying, 'Luck favors the informed', I've found it to be true, allowed me in great part to retire early...
@tradekings5433
@tradekings5433 Год назад
@@gracesdonny1532 Well politicians for certain are gaining off the crash, and true the average individual could profit off a crash but such high-grade investing come with equal risk which can only be managed by a proper pro or expert…
@emilybrown2719
@emilybrown2719 Год назад
@@tradekings5433 Yes, the idea of a portfolio-coach used to sound generic, but new study by investopedia actually found that demand for portfolio-coaches sky-rocketed by over 41.8% since the pandemic and based on firsthand encounter, I can say for certain their skillets are topnotch…I’ve raised over $1.3m from an initially stagnant reserve of $180K in less than Two Years
@FeliciaJudge
@FeliciaJudge Год назад
@@emilybrown2719 I've actually been thinking of reaching a portfolio-adviser, my 401k and stocks been losing everything it's gained since 2019, mind if I looked-up this one coach you use?
@emilybrown2719
@emilybrown2719 Год назад
@@FeliciaJudge Sure, the Invëstmënt-Advisër that guides me is "SUSAN AGNES HANCOCK" and she's renowned and has quite a following. So it shouldn't be a hassle finding her. Just look her up.
@Iamsergiopagani
@Iamsergiopagani 4 года назад
After 19min of waiting, he gave a very short sighted answer to the banking crisis of 2008. The accounting rule "Mark-to-Market", which he blames for the crisis, is in fact highly useful and necessary to keep banking loans responsible. It forces banks and consumers to keep their feet on the ground as opposed to living in the clouds. By removing the rule in 2009, we re-introduce the dangers of over-stimulating an economic bubble that could kill our world economy. Money was only created to help the ebb and flow of goods and services. That is why regulation is necessary to prevent our economy being built on the sands of speculation and derivatives. Do not watch this video as it will waste your time.
@Sheblah1
@Sheblah1 Год назад
Agreed and no mention of credit raters slapping misleading low default probabilities on subprime loans (for their own monetary gain) when they got sliced up and injected into CDOs which proceeded to invisibly infect the whole financial sector. Irreversibly entangled cash crashes set off by the first defaulters.
@ryanericksen1223
@ryanericksen1223 Год назад
Thanks
@JoeDog65
@JoeDog65 Год назад
Agree 100%. See my posting as well. I think Wesbury's kind of over simplification is a huge disservice and in some ways dangerous since I'm sure a number of people will think he is correct. He is not.
@christophercantwell8867
@christophercantwell8867 Год назад
Thanks I could see his bias in the first few minutes as he set up a classic straw dog
@gerhard7323
@gerhard7323 Год назад
Thanks for saving me 20 minutes of my life.
@ProdigySim
@ProdigySim 3 года назад
Yes, I've stopped at a green light before. When the road ahead is full and I would block the intersection if I went forward. Just because the light is green doesn't mean you're justified to ignore all circumstance.
@missinformed4269
@missinformed4269 3 года назад
Great analogy. Everyone should appreciate people like you who don’t block the intersections.
@andrewropp2525
@andrewropp2525 Год назад
@@missinformed4269 why would he block the intersection? If he is saying the big semi banks are blocking the intersection, then that makes him a turtle stuck in traffic. That's why turles get squashed, and trucks get where they need to go. Be a truck or be a turtle. A wise person told it to me in a different way of saying it. Turkeys flock, Bald Eagles don't. Don't be a Turkey.
@lucasgroves137
@lucasgroves137 Год назад
@@andrewropp2525 But he could easily have been talking about driving a truck. A typical truck driver would be more concerned than a car driver, not to block the intersection.
@lucasgroves137
@lucasgroves137 Год назад
Interestingly, people are getting stupider; where I live, they've taken to painting a yellow grid across the middle of major intersections to "remind" all morons not to stop there. With an urgent sign ahead of time to explain the yellow grid. 🤔
@lunarmodule6419
@lunarmodule6419 Год назад
Touché!
@tonynelamichael
@tonynelamichael 6 лет назад
I knew the end was near when I went into a bank in 2005 in anticipation of a purchase. We pre-qualified for an amount that was 3x more than I could ever conceivably be able to pay. I looked at my wife, then the loan officer and told him he is out of his mind to qualify us for that amount. He just looked at me dumbfounded and didn't understand why we wouldn't borrow that much.
@kevinburk1670
@kevinburk1670 2 года назад
yup was there also .....got a million dollar loan with 4 peices of paper and n o income varification
@dfjpr
@dfjpr 2 года назад
And yet today you'd be borrowing twice as much, or else spending 4x as much on renting.
@tonynelamichael
@tonynelamichael 2 года назад
@@dfjpr no, you just buy less house.
@aurimasdzezulskis3180
@aurimasdzezulskis3180 2 года назад
@@tonynelamichael That's right my man. Some houses are way too big anyway.
@TeaParty1776
@TeaParty1776 2 года назад
@@aurimasdzezulskis3180 Proper size is contextual ,not a fact independent of knowledge and choice.
@timpps
@timpps 7 лет назад
Brian Wesbury, July 26, 2007 “The current financial environment does not reflect conditions normally associated with a credit crunch. The bottom line is that fears about the underlying health of the economy and financial markets are more about hypochondria than reality.”
@waimar5457
@waimar5457 2 года назад
It's a mistery the fact anyone can possibly believe this bag full of lies.
@robertdemeo
@robertdemeo 2 года назад
Doesn’t mean he’s wrong; just means that, at the end of the day, the market can stay irrational longer than anyone can stay solvent.
@PeterSquitieri
@PeterSquitieri 2 года назад
This is incredibly simplistic, I can't believe TED allowed this guy to speak
@paultyson4389
@paultyson4389 Год назад
I think you are being very generous. This guy is a sickening apologist for the bankers of Wall Street who scammed billions of billions of dollars in bonuses in the leadup to the 2008 Financial Crisis. And when the whole system was on the verge of total collapse when the Government allowed an insolvent Lehman to fail, the Government had to rescue the bankers of Wall Street with a massive bailout, using public money, Very few even of the most egregious people responsible even had to give back a part of their ill gotten gains and I think just one went to jail. That's America where the big end of town is always allowed to privatize their gains and socialise their losses. Nothing has changed. The stock market recently reached heights of overvaluation never seen before, fueled by massive money printing and interest rates pretty well at zero. All that has now changed with inflation raging. A plethora of obscenely overvalued loss making companies are crashing to earth now the tap of free money has been turned off. Yet again, the insiders and execs at these companies have walked away with vast fortunes while countless thousands of bag holders are left to pick up the tab.
@SuperKillroy1
@SuperKillroy1 Год назад
What is your criticism?
@mollasima3251
@mollasima3251 Год назад
Agreed
@Fabi-es1xy
@Fabi-es1xy Год назад
@@SuperKillroy1 n his story about the house in front of the hurricane, what he fails to mention is that 20 years earlier the place was worth a LOT less, but with the loose lending rules and rampant speculation to catch the high returns the value went up to $500k. Assets that are never written down can't be considered true assets which creates its own set of problems While I find this perspective interesting, and I hate more government control, I am not convinced that free market capitalism can work without a little bit of control from a higher power.
@snieves4
@snieves4 Год назад
@@SuperKillroy1 its an oversimplification of the problem. The lower interest rates encouraged lending. It didnt encourage criminality.
@Jabranalibabry
@Jabranalibabry 4 года назад
The comment section here deserves a prize for economics prowess. Awesome, guys! Faith in humanity restored!
@Camulus777
@Camulus777 4 года назад
The comment section in here seems uneducated and bias to anti capitalist rhetoric.
@Jabranalibabry
@Jabranalibabry 4 года назад
@@Camulus777 why don't you respond to them, brother? I'd love to see how. I'm just happy people are putting forward their thoughts in such a manner.
@chrisprilloisebola
@chrisprilloisebola 3 года назад
@@Camulus777 facts
@victordonavon292
@victordonavon292 2 года назад
@@Jabranalibabry Thoughts without a sound foundation or sound logic are not thoughts at all. They are ramblings of word salads. Please refer to the so-called "Community Reinvestment Act"
@Jabranalibabry
@Jabranalibabry 2 года назад
@@victordonavon292 brother, I just like that people are putting forth their thoughts in that manner. I don't expect the comment section to be as rigorous as maybe you do but I see people trying. I'm hopeful some of these ramblings represent true passion in someone who may lead us to some good and that includes you. I'd definitely look into the act you've referred, I like to learn, and peace brother. May we look forward to better days.
@friendlyone2706
@friendlyone2706 4 года назад
Skip the talk; read the comments. Lots of very smart, well-educated people watched, and then shared their insights and experiences.
@heidimelcarek3677
@heidimelcarek3677 4 года назад
YUP!
@tysonjames2723
@tysonjames2723 4 года назад
Yep this is some of the best Replys I've ever read o RU-vid. This guys BS would almost be funny if so many people didn't get hurt form the Banks washing of their hands of the whole sisituation. The govenment needs to be held to account as no one in the financial circles copped the peolpes roth.
@carlos.5290
@carlos.5290 3 года назад
The inmorality of 2008 crisis is... I CAN'T even come up with words to describe it.
@chrisprilloisebola
@chrisprilloisebola 3 года назад
Not really lol
@madmanszalinski
@madmanszalinski 2 года назад
No thanks I can think for myself
@francisgeck8590
@francisgeck8590 6 лет назад
So the argument is... because interest rates were low, people took out loans they couldn't afford, because that's what you do. Well, the banks are supposed to perform a risk assessment on that individual to determine if the loan should be given in the first place. The bank employees involved in mortgages used to have Masters degrees in finance and statistics and accounting. The bank is the "check" on that. So if the loans defaulted, it's the banks fault. It's that simple. The reality is the banks were writing as many loans as possible. I applied for a mortgage during this period and the mortgage officer didn't want/need/ask for any W2's, income statements, anything to prove my income - even an attitude of "just put anything down". Never mind the repackaging and derivatives which amplified the solution. It's as if the bank has given up any moral/ethical/financial responsibility to do it's job. Your talk seems to prove that the banks are at fault.
@Victor-zw8tb
@Victor-zw8tb 5 лет назад
Francis Geck I disagree mostly. The individual is the one who is ultimately taking the loan. The banks aren’t forcing them. More importantly, the Clinton administration guaranteed that Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac would pay the bad loans to the banks if the individual failed. Face it, everyone got greedy and got what they deserved.
@wildmaninmt
@wildmaninmt 5 лет назад
Senator Frank and Senator Dodd, the two watch dogs in the senate over the mortgage industry along will Bill Clinton,wanted every American to own a home. They passed laws to force Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to create the liar loans you talked about and the government was all in on the purchase of those closed mortgage loans. The banks were following government policy and yes, it was easy money for the banks but the government created the rules and forced the banks to follow.
@SandhillCrane42
@SandhillCrane42 5 лет назад
Yeah sure, always blame the bankers. When will the people of this world's financial institutions finally catch a break! Poor, poor Allen Greenspan, that modern day Robin hood... Of course, loans are supposed to be backed by collateral, the bank's investors rely on that, but because they weren't everything went down the crapper and the gov't wrote them a huge check out of our taxes, so I guess we were both wrong.
@thomassherer5962
@thomassherer5962 5 лет назад
@@Victor-zw8tb much more involved.
@Hyperpandas
@Hyperpandas 5 лет назад
@@Victor-zw8tb The banks should have a self interest in not making bad loans, and the technical experise to do so. Yet, they engaged in predatory practices to convince people with low sophistication that they could indeed afford the loans. That in and of itself undermines the "moral failings of the borrower" argument, at least to some extent. But it got worse. Those same banks created derivative products, ballooning the magnitude of the problem far beyond the risk of the underlying loans, and sold those products to their customers while misrepresenting the risk of those products. To put most of the blame on people who took out loans they couldn't afford is to miss that the crash was about so much more. In fact, many of the people who did default could have afforded their loans by conventional measures, were it not for the time bomb created by the banks that led to those people losing their jobs as companies went under, or their houses going underwater as massive foreclosure pushed their house values down.
@rogerscott529
@rogerscott529 Год назад
Comparing the banking crisis in the early '80s to 2008 is apples-to-oranges. In the '80s banks and investment firms were completely separate entities, whereas by 2008 they were in many cases indistinguishable. 2008 wasn't a "banking" crisis -- it was a "financial" crisis. The movie (and book) The Big Short gives a pretty good picture of how things got so messed up. Wall St. investment practices basically evolved to the point where Federal Reserve and SEC rules (mainly crafted decades earlier) no longer protected against huge risks.
@brandongranados5569
@brandongranados5569 Год назад
What was the name of the movie ? I can’t find it
@rogerscott529
@rogerscott529 Год назад
@@brandongranados5569 Ummm... as I said, "The Big Short"
@brandongranados5569
@brandongranados5569 Год назад
@@rogerscott529 I know I just wanted it on my comment notice for tomorrow to search the movie😂 I didn’t know how to save it sorry 😂
@watching99134
@watching99134 Год назад
Yes he makes it seem as if commercial banks and investment banks are the same thing (I know Glass-Steagall was repealed, but it was the investment banks that bundled that bad loans and made it a systemic crisis).
@privatename3621
@privatename3621 Год назад
Thank you! This is the truth! Not the nonsense spin that Brian is trying to weave to deflect from who the culprits really were. This is a perfect example of how someone can cherry-pick disconnected facts and weave a completely false narrative.
@glenmellor331
@glenmellor331 2 года назад
The problem with blaming low interest rates as a major contributor to loan defaults is that the argument can easily be tested by comparing the US default rates to those of other Countries (eg Canada, UK, Australia) all of whom were operating under comparable interest rates at the time. Australia and Canada had essentially zero spike in defaults in the period leading up to the crisis in 2008 despite low interest rates.
@TeaParty1776
@TeaParty1776 2 года назад
Cause is not coincidence. Arbitrarily selected statistics are not science but the pre-scientific mentality of primitive man. Science is a theoretical organization of concrete knowledge, not concrete knowledge or theoretical knowledge alone. Statistics, to be scientific, rather than arbitrary or dishonest, must be selected by pre-statistical knowledge from common human experience. Economies are complex and, historically, combinations of freedom and govt control. A govt controls destructive effect may be contradicted by freedoms productive effect. Australia and Canada msy have had freedom in parts of the economy that the US controlleed. Further, "low" is contextual w/contextual effects. The same "low" rate may be caused by productive freedom in one economy and destructive govt controls in another economy. In 2008, finance and nuclear power were the most govt-controlled industries. Some banks had hundreds of govt regulators working INSIDE the bank. Blaming the recession on capitalism is scientific fraud, not an honest error. Mans independent mind, protected by individual rights, is the basic method of production. Sticking a gun in the faces of productive people does not increase production. Govt looting from producers and then giving to non-producers or lesser producers does not increase production. Your hidden moral context is altruist sacrifice of some people to allegedly benefit others. Altruism rationalizes scientific fraud which rationalizes govt controls. Water falls. Fire burns. Altruists lie. The first altruist sacrifice is of mans independent mind. After that, all other sacrifices are easy. Altruism is the pseudo-morality of the enslaved mind ,of the moral coward afraid to focus his mind onto an indifferent reality that will not provide fishes and loaves or a Garden Of Eden. Look out at reality, not inward. Focus your mind.
@JeremySteamsack
@JeremySteamsack 2 года назад
Tea Party drank the kool-aid
@TeaParty1776
@TeaParty1776 2 года назад
@@JeremySteamsack Thanks for sharing your emotions.
@TeaParty1776
@TeaParty1776 2 года назад
@@JeremySteamsack Look out at reality, not inward. Focus your mind.
@ty_vorhies
@ty_vorhies 2 года назад
You’re forgetting that those countries didn’t not engage heavily in the derivatives pushed *by* gov’t to ensure home ownership continued to increase in the US. This is multivariate; rather than univariate.
@wulf67
@wulf67 7 лет назад
Did low interest rates cause mortgage companies to write loans for 125% of the selling price of a home and not ask for any collateral, or in some cases even a verified source of income? Did low interest rates cause Wall Street investment bankers to take 70 to one leveraged positions in mortgage-backed securities? Did low interest rates force S&P and Moody's to rate junk securities as AAA rated?
@skateman96
@skateman96 7 лет назад
Along with the low interest rates, greenspan had a weird system where he deregulated the derivatives on wall street and guaranteed a bailout if a respective bank or institution went belly up. That's why everything was so unfettered at least from my knowledge.
@the-selfish-meme7585
@the-selfish-meme7585 7 лет назад
Further - did extracting money via speculation without creating ANY value not contribute? Coincidence that Glass~Steagall was repealed enabling savings and loans institutions/banks to do all this in a highly leveraged fashion? This guy has some interesting points but his fundamentals are all over the place.... he should look at risk and what it means.....
@wulf67
@wulf67 7 лет назад
WinningThisOne For the green light metaphor to be complete you have to acknowledge the two most critical points: That Moody's Body Shop and Standard & Poor's Towing secretly replaced all the yellow and red light bulbs with green ones and Gramm(R), Leach(R), and Bliley(R) had just pushed the law through that put ambulance companies, body shops, and tow truck drivers in charge of maintaining and monitoring the traffic lights.
@zabzec1500
@zabzec1500 7 лет назад
yeah, this guy is an apologist. using obfuscation, hell the entire bit about the 1000 pages of transcripts is a giant confusion tactic. side stepping the reality of it all. the class at the top of the economy knew what was happening, they knew they could win the debate for the bail outs, they knew the golden parachutes were ready
@sgordon8123
@sgordon8123 7 лет назад
TED talks used to be good. They obviously worried those in power so now we are flooded with useless TED talks. Oh dear. Put anyone involved in fraud in jail. The Big Short identifies a group of suspects. The "regulators" are totally corrupt. Has this guy not heard? I also recommend Requiem for an American Dream.
@thexalon
@thexalon 6 лет назад
I worked for a company involved in the subprime mortgage business back in 2006, because I needed the money to pay my rent. What I saw when I did so were thousands of loans given out with no possibility of them being paid back. And at least some subprime companies were collapsing as early as then, because I was among those laid off in the wake of Ameriquest Mortgage going belly-up. The only way those home loans made the slightest bit of sense is if the middlemen were lying to the people on both sides of the transaction. The available evidence is that borrowers and investors alike were both being defrauded by the only people who knew what was really going on, namely the middlemen. They should have gone to jail, but didn't because regulators in both the Bush and Obama administrations looked the other way. It had approximately f-all to do with the Federal Reserve.
@capel7662
@capel7662 2 года назад
Soo nothing's really changed, we could see another 2008 crash in the future??
@MUSTASCH1O
@MUSTASCH1O 2 года назад
@@capel7662 I'm guessing a big difference today is the financial markets no longer underestimate the risk associated with subprime mortgages, so they are no longer likely to overinvest even with fraud.
@0118uhauha
@0118uhauha 2 года назад
I heard a different not-so-nice story about the 2008-crisis: Banks , for instance Goldman-Sachs offered too-good-to-be-true loans to lower middle-class families who would like to live in a house with a garden for the children. If the house cost 100-thousand then the mortgage-secured loan this family was offered was 125-thousand i.e. 125 % so there was even money left for a new car. The installments on the loan were ridiculous easy. But only for the first two years. The fine "gotcha" print at the end of the loan-contract said that after two years, the installments would become REALISTIC. So Goldman-Sachs knew they had two years to get rid of these ticking-bomb subprime mortgages. Financial firms packaged these mortgages into bundles the so called CDO's ironically called Criminal-Debt-Obligation's. Somehow Goldman-Sachs managed to convince some back yard rating companies to give these bundles phony-baloney ratings AA or AAA , the same as for German or Norwegian state bonds. This fraudulent rating made it easy for Goldman-Sachs to sell these CDO's to unsuspecting pension plans and banks all over the world. German Hypo Real bank spent billions of euro on this and after two years these billion-euro bundles suddenly became worthless ( because millions of American houses were sold in execution for very low prices ) and the bank had to be rescued by German taxpayers. More than nine million American families lost their homes. No wonder that Donald Trump says that he wants to repeal banking regulation, he had top people from Goldman-Sachs in his government.
@thexalon
@thexalon 2 года назад
@@0118uhauha The point I want to emphasize is that *anybody* who actually saw the terms of the loans and understood anything about finance knew that they were absolute nonsense. So those who were trading these loans around to investors knew full well that they were polishing junk to try to sell it off before it collapsed, as you describe. But that was the second part of the scam. The first part of the scam was to convince a borrower that these loans were sane. One of the common strategies for doing this was to say "Sure, the payments will go up in 2 years, but we can refinance again before then so you won't actually have to pay it". Also relevant here is that the loans were structured so that the originator collected a bunch of fees up front, the borrower paid interest only during most of those 2 years, so they weren't going to be paying down their actual principle at all. As I said in my original comment, the middlemen were ripping people off in both directions.
@trizmorgan1319
@trizmorgan1319 2 года назад
The federal reserve is important in this. Where do you think the “middle men” aka the lenders get the money to lend on loans that go bad. From the secondary market they sell the loans into. The fed buys those bonds from the secondary market. Trillions of dollars worth. A bad loan doesn’t get funded without that.
@donluna2000
@donluna2000 3 года назад
SUMMARY: When investment bankers explain to you an investment product that doesn.t make sense, it's a scam.
@peteromocki5971
@peteromocki5971 2 года назад
In 2007-2008 I was laid off I could not find a job for the first time in my life even though I was employed steadily as a mechanical engineer since graduating in 1980 Finally in 2008 I finally got a job....selling vacuums at Sears for $11 hour.....part time. Long story short, 3 years after being laid off I lost my house to foreclosure and was technically homeless until I could secure an apartment. The bank physically put my belonging on the street and kicked me out of my house with a foreclosure that was eventually ruled as illegal. At Sears I was working with architects, mortgage brokers, and computer programmers. Now forward 10 years and since 2020 I have been working at Amazon as a repair contractor now at $32.50 hr. and the company I am working for can not find enough people to work and request I work overtime every week. Lesson learned....certainly don’t trust the government to care for working class except to take taxes every year.
@philliptorres4894
@philliptorres4894 2 года назад
You got your degree in mechanical engineering and only make $32.50?
@macka534
@macka534 2 года назад
The government does "take care" of the working class, but in another sense of the words... ;)
@saeljhonnes7688
@saeljhonnes7688 2 года назад
I didn't understand how your personal story lead up to not trusting the government. Can you please elaborate on the wisdom you obtained from such experiences
@NelsonGuedes
@NelsonGuedes Год назад
@@saeljhonnes7688 it's very simple - "goberment bad".
@michaelsmith1382
@michaelsmith1382 Год назад
bank kick out, but blame govt...
@wolfrayet2082
@wolfrayet2082 7 лет назад
In 2008 I was in my mid twenties and focused on finding a career opportunity. A skilled craft seemed like a good idea for a long while. My parents at the time both got laid off from they're professions. I worked as hard as I could to try and keep the home for us. The adjustable rate mortgage payments had gone from $1300 to over $4000 a month. Then the job industry I was recruited for had more mass lay offs. Even though there were so many campaign promises at the time for jobs. So many started living in cars, and trucks. To some, Getting to work wherever it was, was more important then if you had the comfort of a home. Almost a year later when work picked up a little. I met travelers that insisted living in a tent was the best way to afford living. My grandparents who survived the great depression said many family's lived out of cars when they had to. It's an economical hardship. Just don't give up trying to find a way.
@tomaricotube
@tomaricotube 2 года назад
I think you had a negative amortization loan where the payments would change after a number of years. These are very bad loans to take out. They're designed for young doctors and lawyers whose income would jump substantially after a few years.
@glennalford8634
@glennalford8634 Год назад
I had an adjustable mortgage loan, it could only go up 1 percent per year. I watched as my mortgage started to go up, so I refinanced to a15 year mortgage. Took responsibility.
@D45VR
@D45VR Год назад
@@glennalford8634 Same here. ARMs have a place but can be used incorrectly.
@TheRobdarling
@TheRobdarling 7 лет назад
This guy reminds me of every one of my Econ professors ... they loved to hear themselves talk. That's about all they were good for.
@jpkaneshida1977
@jpkaneshida1977 7 лет назад
BINGO
@Coldend
@Coldend 7 лет назад
You are correct.
@RhythmWithn
@RhythmWithn 6 лет назад
yeah this is just common knowledge and the guy sounds like he thinks he is exhaling gold
@chupposity
@chupposity 4 года назад
In his story about the house in front of the hurricane, what he fails to mention is that 20 years earlier the place was worth a LOT less, but with the loose lending rules and rampant speculation to catch the high returns the value went up to $500k. Assets that are never written down can't be considered true assets which creates its own set of problems While I find this perspective interesting, and I hate more government control, I am not convinced that free market capitalism can work without a little bit of control from a higher power.
@Showmetheevidence-
@Showmetheevidence- Год назад
Me too… sadly we do need *some* level of regulation.
@andrewropp2525
@andrewropp2525 Год назад
I agree with you! But guess what? No one cares, so we play the game or hate the game.
@yydd4954
@yydd4954 Год назад
First is step to start freeing the system more So it's a process! Gradually free everything and it will be good
@weipingshi77845
@weipingshi77845 Год назад
The insurance company is going to rebuild the house. So what’s the problem?
@blazecal
@blazecal Год назад
You've got that right, brother.
@Bendersnatchling
@Bendersnatchling 4 года назад
I think if you want to get close to "what really happened" it's best to have a discussion of an expert panel, instead of just one person sharing his opinion. Simply because it's statistically unlikely that one single person makes no mistake in his/her analysis. Some errors may not be obvious to him/her, but to other people who focused on other sources. This is a good video and I like his contribution, but I am not convinced.
@worldofgaming4301
@worldofgaming4301 2 года назад
Same
@jimlyon7276
@jimlyon7276 2 года назад
@ Guido - "it's best to have a discussion of an expert panel' - Given the poor quality of most conventional education systems in most countries, where the population is deliberately "dumbed down" to be more easily controlled, I have VERY little faith in 'experts" as most are little better than "superior idiots". By which I mean that while they may have 'higher" education, they have a poor grasp of reality !
@tunomi36
@tunomi36 Год назад
Sounds like common sense to me. How many people do you need on a panel to tell it?
@andrewropp2525
@andrewropp2525 Год назад
So 1 person being bias with no financial benefits dosnt convince you, but a group of oveusly bias people who are paid to vote based upon their success in the past would convince you. That's OK, but it dosnt me. This Ted talk isn't supposed to convince you. Most people fell asleep in the first 15 minutes. His goal is to first, open people's eyes to go research this idea. And second for those of whom will listen fully to him, he will have somone to talk to. The reason he wants to be heared, is because he loves to hear himself talk. I feel like we all can agree on that haha.
@weipingshi77845
@weipingshi77845 Год назад
His point was made in one sentence near the end of the talk starting with “in my opinion”. This does not need an entire lecture.
@pussydestroyer87
@pussydestroyer87 4 года назад
I bought my house in September 2008. I heard the things people were being told at that time by lenders...and I still can't believe it.
@markthompson9754
@markthompson9754 Год назад
Like showing up on the DAY OF CLOSING and all of the sudden getting your terms changed?
@jromeo6748
@jromeo6748 4 года назад
Did low interest rates cause Goldman Sachs to hoodwink AIG into selling credit default swaps aka insurance policies that paid off if the bonds failed with no reserves to pay and then buy those credit default swaps themselves to bet against the very bonds they were marketing as triple A ?
@Bolthrower91
@Bolthrower91 4 года назад
It did they were using easy credit to speculative buy and sell housing bonds for enormous fees that fed the gluttony in the CDS market because remember the holders of CDS had to pay premiums. The FED is the catalyst for greed.
@jasonwilliams9485
@jasonwilliams9485 4 года назад
J Romeo - First of all, I'm no fan of Goldman Sacks, but no one hoodwinked AIG. If AIG (or anybody in such influential position in our financial system) is "hoodwinkable" they shouldn't survive one more day. On the subject of interest rates you're totally ignoring how the entire financial infrastructure works if you try to claim that keeping interest rates low for too long doesn't have and adverse effect on the economy. That is, in an of itself, probably a subject for a full hour video.
@jromeo6748
@jromeo6748 4 года назад
Jason Williams you are right AIG should not have survived one more day and they would not have without the massive government bailout. Banks underwrote these loans knowing there was no viability because they could instantly sell them as bond fodder because Goldman Sacs would buy them as backing for their bonds. Have you heard of NINJA loans? No income no assets.
@jasonwilliams9485
@jasonwilliams9485 4 года назад
@@jromeo6748 Government bailout? ...you mean the taxpayers bailout.
@jromeo6748
@jromeo6748 4 года назад
Jason Williams yes, taxpayer bailout.
@joerobert1801
@joerobert1801 Год назад
The only people who are going to have a significant impact on their investment portfolio are those who view the recession of 2022 as the greatest chance to become wealthy. It is crucial to distribute money out among channels that are prepared to do well in recession.
@seanroger6954
@seanroger6954 Год назад
I’ve learned that investing in trends with long-term, double-digit growth potential is the smartest way to become wealthy.. I've been investing for a long time and I know this recession is a gift. I’ve already taken positions both in stocks and crypto market, there’s no doubt we’ll be heading into a bullish market soon, this investment strategy is one of the reasons I could fund my retirement and build a 7 figure portfolio that yields about $350k annual earnings. keep dollar cost averaging and you will notice magic.
@rahultoggi4672
@rahultoggi4672 Год назад
Inflation and recession are not permanent and can easily be absorbed, being an SIP investor, I’m least afraid of any fall in the market.
@kelvinjohnson3906
@kelvinjohnson3906 Год назад
@@seanroger6954 How long have you been invested in stocks? After 16 months as an investor, I feel like I don't know anything about market.😅
@seanroger6954
@seanroger6954 Год назад
@@kelvinjohnson3906 Many people feel like you even after 16 years of experience in investing that's how market runs. Personally, despite how long I’ve been investing, I started making the most profit with the aid of my investment coach Frost Hilda, whose expertise helped build a portfolio that has helped cleared all my debt, improved my credit scores and established a sustainable flow of income. Frost helped allocate my capital in a safe and sustainable way. It’s been 3 years of consistent profits and retirement came early with no regrets.
@noelstout3056
@noelstout3056 Год назад
@Kellen Patton saw my favorite stocks at 10%-20% discount and wasted no time in grabbing the opportunity.
@irateyourvideo2
@irateyourvideo2 4 года назад
"It is hard to imagine any time in history when such rampant pessimism about the economy has existed with so little evidence of serious trouble." - brian s. westbury, 2008
@Make_Ukraine_Russia_Again
@Make_Ukraine_Russia_Again Год назад
Pretty insane argument alright. His argument is that the truth killed the stock market and lies brought it back. Maybe, but if so, it was obviously a market (or system) that needed to die.
@charleshuddle8225
@charleshuddle8225 Год назад
@@Make_Ukraine_Russia_Again uhh what exactly do you think happened? Also what you said is pretty antisemitic, chill out with that.
@Make_Ukraine_Russia_Again
@Make_Ukraine_Russia_Again Год назад
@@charleshuddle8225 Wouldn't you like to know. Probably your mama.
@bobooh5804
@bobooh5804 Год назад
Where is that quote from? Thanks
@lucasgroves137
@lucasgroves137 Год назад
@@charleshuddle8225 Wtf? Where's the anti-Semitism? 🤔
@tokesalotta1521
@tokesalotta1521 4 года назад
Barney Franks also stood in front of the American people before the collapse and said the home loan market was strong, and that there was nothing to worry about. This was after Bush warned us that banks were engaged in too risky loans.
@markthompson9754
@markthompson9754 Год назад
Then Obama blamed Bush for 8 years
@markhoffman2309
@markhoffman2309 5 лет назад
He presents as if he is speaking to a group of high school dropouts. Wesbury is pulling a fast one here. He presents the stock market as a proxy for the health of the business community. The stock markets are a reflection of INVESTOR CONFIDENCE. Investor confidence often lags business health coming out of a significant downturn. His story about mark-to-market is accurate but drops short of the reality of all of the terrible loans that lax regulations allowed to be funded and were about to be defaulted on and the enormous number of derivatives that had been pushed throughout the world's financial systems using those loans as the revenue source.
@Jacked2theTs
@Jacked2theTs Год назад
Oh good… I’m glad others already called out this gas lighting shister. Lol.
@churchmouse144
@churchmouse144 Год назад
W can thank President Clinton for this
@rogergeyer9851
@rogergeyer9851 Год назад
@@Jacked2theTs: Of course. Because whining solves all problems. /s
@britishpopfreak
@britishpopfreak Год назад
@@Jacked2theTs First rule of "popular Economics": the stock market is not the economy.
@umpatas5468
@umpatas5468 Год назад
I think he missed a key factor. Frank a few years before pushed through a federal program to encourage home loans to people regardless of ability to pay. That's what loaded up the sub prime market for problems.
@watching99134
@watching99134 Год назад
Yes but supposedly that only applied to community-based banks which weren't the ones that created the bad mortgages that got turned into toxic assets by Wall Street (commercial banks claim that they had to lower their standards in order to compete with the community-based banks, although I'm not sure I believe that).
@umpatas5468
@umpatas5468 Год назад
@@watching99134 oh no. The community banks were selling the loans as soon as they closed the deals. Outfits like American equity mortgage did too if I recall.
@pierrevillemaire-brooks4247
@pierrevillemaire-brooks4247 4 года назад
I'm not sure why but every time i lean over this topic , i leave with more questions than i got answers :-l
@bigbud4sure
@bigbud4sure 3 года назад
It's actually really simple. FED prints money out of thin air and lends it to government. Then the taxpayer has to pay back the loan. Some people have literally umlimited funds while the poor get poorer. It's made to look very compliated, because it really is nothing but a scam, but in fact it's just that simple.
@pierrevillemaire-brooks4247
@pierrevillemaire-brooks4247 3 года назад
@@bigbud4sure Feels bad and the current corona quarantine is putting some governments in a huge debt spiral from what i can figure :-/
@bigbud4sure
@bigbud4sure 3 года назад
​@@pierrevillemaire-brooks4247 Yeah, they all printing money and taking loans like crazy :D It's obviously time for change so that's what happening. Not the first time empires have fallen. Since this one is worldwide, it's fall is gonna be epic to witness :D
@seansturrock2046
@seansturrock2046 3 года назад
If you want to understand economics watch peter schiff on yt. Hes a very contraversial figure because he tells it how he sees it and is very intelligent.
@Buttsac
@Buttsac 3 года назад
Same
@chensun6156
@chensun6156 9 лет назад
Very interesting. The problem is that when he says government lost control, it's also true that businesses lobbied government such that it lost control. His support of the free market misses an important point. The free market is associated with freely self-interested individuals. And democractic societies also serves freely self-interested voting individuals. These are highly intertwined. So, when he says the free market is not to blame, but government is-- this is probably true-- but, the free market is intricately tied to democratic societies (both consist of freely acting individuals). As a result, his placing total blame on government is actually also a same blame on free market. Also, he doesn't talk about the psychology of the investment marketplace. Stock market prices are psychological, and he approaches this from an inherent value, rational marketplace.
@TeaParty1776
@TeaParty1776 7 лет назад
Govt has guns. Bankers are unarmed. Guess who wins. Market prices are man's independent mind in action. That frightens most people, who retreat to govt force. Psychology is trivial.
@kinky_Z
@kinky_Z 4 года назад
Well, his credibility kind of tanked when he lauded the "free" market because as we all know, what he's referring to is certainly not free and equally accessible to all players in a market since well-financed megacorps can underprice their goods, eventually driving competitors out of the market, and once they attain monopoly status, slowly start increasing prices to make up for their initial losses - a strategy that worked quite well for Amazon and a situation where consumers have little choice and innovation and quality deteriorate.
@bcshu2
@bcshu2 4 года назад
The banking industry is one if not the most regulated industry in America. Freddie and Fannie are government entities. It is hardly a free market ... say like smartphones or coffee shops. To consider banking as a free market is a complete misrepresentation of the reality.
@iasion341
@iasion341 4 года назад
Unfreely acting individuals are better. 🙄
@alexkalish8288
@alexkalish8288 3 года назад
I enjoyed reading your excellent analysis. Our largest corporations control government as they own the media and the politicians through control files which they can collect thanks to the patriot act. Even an armed government is apt to be controlled via blackmail from it's intelligence agencies. To fix things we need to get rid of 98% of federal government, takes the beast's taxes and fines except for tariffs. We have to go back to the old days, we have no credible threats to the US and government is waste. The FED are looters, are ineffective and need to be locked up for corruption with their cronies.
@aliesneo
@aliesneo 7 лет назад
i find it fascinating that the leveraging of mortgage lending was not discussed. all he talked about was the mortgage loans, but the crash was not due to the default of the loans, it was due to the cascading, collateralized securities based on those loans that like dominoes fell. if the interest rates had been high as he claimed at 5:10 indeed lending would have been lower, and likely secured only by those absolutely capable of affording such high interest rates. but as a consequence, home ownership would be lower, and yes mortgage lending would not have been as risky, and thus likely not attractive for collateralized securities, but the market would have found a way! just as he is willing to apply 'free market' principles to mortgage lending and how it would have not been attractive for secularization due to its very low risk (because affordability would have been tested more robustly), and thus most of the loans made would be very stable, because we have evidence that affordability tests were compromised, there is no reason to believe that they would not have been compromised had the lending not been as robust. yes, instead of 50 million new home purchases, there would have been 10-15 million home purchases, but there is no reason to believe that suddenly the lending officers would be practicing more vigilance, especially if they had an incentive to approve loans. the market collapsed due to a cascade of errors, which included cascading securities. it was not just one weak link, it was multiple levels of incompetence or convenience. people should not be too attached to finding simple solutions. that is a fallacy in itself.
@kissmyoradora83
@kissmyoradora83 5 лет назад
aliesneo lower home ownership would have been a good thing. If interest rates were not kept artificially low the way they were, the housing market would have corrected earlier and banks would not have had the opportunity to abuse the fed' s "free money".
@kissmyoradora83
@kissmyoradora83 5 лет назад
The incentive to provide sub-prime loans was a combination of the low interest rates themselves and CRA threatening banks if they didnt lend to low income or minority groups.
@felisd
@felisd 4 года назад
He's right about one thing: the government system needs to be fixed.... but he's wrong about why. The government system needs to be fixed to increase oversight on banking practices to prevent banks from practicing the predatory loan schemes and allowing investment on loans that brought about the 2008 crash in the first place. Capitalists are gonna capitalist unless there are regulations, and ethics and standards in place to control their worst impulses and protect the people most affected by an economic crash - which are the banking consumers - not the banks themselves.
@darcybhaiwala7057
@darcybhaiwala7057 2 года назад
And it is necessary to bring back Glass-Steagal
@kyeprice1301
@kyeprice1301 2 года назад
it was the gov banks freddie mac and annie mae that started this whole mess. Barney Frank wanted low income families to be able to get loans.
@teresajohnson9615
@teresajohnson9615 11 месяцев назад
My mum and I consistently earn massively on our investment. Curtsy to Mrs Judith Ramsey, her set skills are amazing.
@AlexisKruger171
@AlexisKruger171 11 месяцев назад
Wow.. amazing to see others who trade with Mrs. Judith Ramsey, i'm currently on my 5th trade with her and my portfolio has grown tremendously.
@martinwilson380
@martinwilson380 11 месяцев назад
I invest with Mrs. Judith Ramsey too, she charges a 10%commission on profit made after every trading session which is fair compare to the effort she put in to make huge profits.
@JuanManuelFrangi
@JuanManuelFrangi 11 месяцев назад
This is not the first time i am hearing of Mrs. Judith Ramsey and her exploits in the trading world but i have no idea how to reach her.
@wilsonthomas9613
@wilsonthomas9613 11 месяцев назад
As a first time investor I started trading with Mrs. Judith Ramsey with just a thousand bucks. my portfolio is worth much more that now within 15 days of trading with her.
@SebastianQuintana68
@SebastianQuintana68 11 месяцев назад
With the consistent weekly profits I'm getting investing with Mrs. Judith there's no doubt, she is the most reliable in the market, such a genius.
@rickbruner
@rickbruner 6 лет назад
Barney Frank's committee might have changed the mark-to-market accounting rule that helped ameliorate the financial crisis, but Barney Frank was instrumental in causing the financial crisis. He was the congressman who arrogantly said he was perfectly comfortable "rolling the dice" - i.e. maintaining relaxed lending standards and capital requirements in the early 2000s so high risk borrowers could purchase homes. Then, after the crisis hit, he did a 180 and began castigating banks for the "predatory lending" that he encouraged all along (and Fannie and Freddie implicitly mandated). He was never held to account for this (as politicians rarely are) and is now comfortably retired. Ironically, the man who was always talking about "fairness" helped create a plethora of financial injustice for the millions of innocent victims who lost their shirts in the 2008 financial crisis. Life certainly ain't fair.
@57skies
@57skies Год назад
It will _never_ be fair either. My dad always said, if you cant afford this with the next 6 paychecks, this is not for you. Americans are just weird, period. We dont buy a car unless we have 70% of the money for it and at least 50% of a house. I lived 3 years in usa, making 220k a year, and I was still poor compared to a 1/5 of that paycheck back home.
@watching99134
@watching99134 Год назад
In all fairness I heard Bill Clinton say in an interview that the lowered standards for home loans only applied to community-based banks and those weren't the ones that sold the mortgages that got bundled up by Wall Street and passed along. I've heard commercial banks say they did the same thing in order to compete, but I'm not sure I believe their story (they have many other major sources of revenue and wouldn't have necessarily gone out of business).
@lucarossi8442
@lucarossi8442 7 лет назад
So basically this already happened in 1970, in 1980, in 2000 and in 2008...and every single time that the bankers saw the "green light" they pushed the pedal to the metal and crashed the market against a brick wall...but it's not their fault! No, no, no...poor bankers...
@MrCher2
@MrCher2 6 лет назад
The green light is not followed by the bankers, but by all the people making decisions about geting a loan, which is most of the people, and all the companies. The process is something as follow: The FED sets the size of the loans that a person or company can get and will get. With 0 interest rate, you can pay bigger loans. Perhaps, with 0 interest rate, it would be reasonable to buy a new expensive machine for your company, that would improve the productivity of your employees. Millions of these types of decisions will make prices of resouces, land, salaries and shares change. If that 0 interest rate was too low, it would imply that some of the prices that are increasing, are doing it in a non sutainable way. They are increasing only because interest rates are too low. After the bubble has bursted, you may discover that perhaps, you have too many employees in your company for the new demand of your product, or that your product has now a lower price. Depending on the size of the bubble, this situation will provoque the bankruptcy of some banks, after the bankruptcy of the companies to which they lent money. During the period of too low interest rates, the banks that don't give low interest loans go out of business or shrink, and the banks that lend more money to growing businesses get more profits and can grow. So, too low interest rates can destroy the economy, and they do it
@sixsix7minus1
@sixsix7minus1 6 лет назад
It takes a complicit public who think they can get something for nothing. Being responsible leaves you left out.
@ANigerianPrince
@ANigerianPrince 6 лет назад
I was trying to think of a better way of saying this but "they pushed the pedal to the metal and crashed the market against a brick wall" is just too beautiful. Well said.
@stevenlaurencegho194
@stevenlaurencegho194 5 лет назад
The bankers got greedy, we too got greedy and believed in them are what caused the economy to fail.
@payamism
@payamism 5 лет назад
who controls the green light?
@pelham707
@pelham707 Год назад
there are plenty of indicator believed to explain how the economy will pan out, yet only the most certain indicator is long-short yield spread. either 10yr-2yr or 10yr-3m predicted it bubble, financial crisis and even the pandemic. the fact that the yield curve has been inverted and stayed that way gives a glimpse of where the economy's heading once the curve circles back to the normal stage. brace for the impact, cause it creeps in bit by bit and the fallout eventually will burst out crippling the mkt. a crisis repeats, but in a different form.
@nthperson
@nthperson 4 года назад
It is worth observing that a reduction in the rate of interest on a mortgage loan will not necessarily lead to the ability to purchase a larger, more amenity rich residential property. The reason for this is simple. The initial increase in borrowing capacity will be capitalized into higher land prices and, therefore, higher prices for all residential properties.
@davek5839
@davek5839 5 лет назад
Notice he never mentions the levels of private debt which is the real reason why the economy collapsed, private debt had reached 170% of gdp where as in the 1980's it was much lower.
@christophsteck531
@christophsteck531 2 года назад
How do you get to private debt? You give people the means to lend money without thinking about it
@dcwander7092
@dcwander7092 Год назад
Dave: Consumer personal debt is now $16 trillion. USA national debt is $1 trillion.
@new-knowledge8040
@new-knowledge8040 6 лет назад
Times change. In the early 70's my father bought a house, which included a huge lot size, for $10,000. Today, it is replaced with two houses that each are of a value that is above 2 million dollars. So that's over a 4 million dollar total value. So after 47 years it went from a one house lot which has a $10,000 value, to two one house lots which have a total of over a 4 million dollar value. WOW !
@joergkalisch7749
@joergkalisch7749 Год назад
This is called inflation
@thetawaves48
@thetawaves48 3 года назад
If there is no job security, there is no way to afford a mortgage. No matter how long you pay a mortgage, if you lose your job and can't pay it off, and the equity is not enough to buy another house, you lose everything. Been there, and so have many others in 2008.
@whipivy
@whipivy 2 года назад
We saw this in the Hoover administration as well and at that time everyone was looking at the "Own You Own Home" program, a government program similar to what Clinton pushed for, deregulating lending for mortgages. It wasn't the actually cause as Wesbury explains, but it compounds when integrated into an existing accounting practice. He should have explained that QE isn't simply increasing the supply of money as many think that's where inflation starts, it's scaling the balance sheet to increase assets as well as liabilities, so yes it increases the "supply" of money, but it does it through debt. And it gets worse, the root cause of inflation is inefficiency on the supply side to meet demand. This inefficiency is bad enough on its own, but when its financed through debt it brings along an interest rate. Since ultimately this debt is our national debt there is most certainly an interest rate on that, otherwise nobody would consider buying it. This is why the federal reserve really doesn't want raise the interest rate, it would consume even more of our deficit each year. Congress has indeed raised the ceiling on spending, but they know they're running out of time. The only way to reverse this is to lower taxes, rely on the velocity of money to scale tax revenue up which it always has, use that to pay down the national debt as quickly as possible so that eventually someday we can raise interest rates again and everyone can grow wealth in saving not just investing. Given how long it will take to do this, and that a term for a president is only 4 years, 8 at most but not reliably we can safely assume this will never happen. We were doomed as a nation in the 1970's and didn't even know it. It would take an incredible effort on the part of our leaders to set aside their political ambitions and unite on an economic understanding we once had to solve this. I don't think it's possible. But creating money, i.e. growing the economy purely off debt that exposes every single citizen to such a liability is the antithesis of how this nation was intended to function, the idea was to minimize the effect of government decisions on the people. Should we be surprised that centralizing decision making does this? That is what the Federal Reserve is.
@shobull8695
@shobull8695 2 года назад
It's ,Brandon's world.. You're just funding it.
@skipsassy1
@skipsassy1 8 лет назад
As a bankruptcy lawyer: his story about the Texas house is false, the mortgage is a contract and cannot be changed unless either party agrees. So his analogy is FALSE.
@riderpaul
@riderpaul 5 лет назад
I guess anyone can do a TED Talk. This guy is proof.
@salmansengul
@salmansengul Год назад
Why tho? Was it that bad? I think it was OK.
@jerrysullivan9659
@jerrysullivan9659 4 года назад
Real Estate interest rates are tied to the bond market not the discount rate.
@nathanboss8857
@nathanboss8857 Год назад
Watching this in 2023 with the new market/banking issues is interesting
@raisingprivatemoneyrealestate
@raisingprivatemoneyrealestate 5 лет назад
Interest rates and loose approval rules brought huge numbers of buyers into the market who should not have been purchasing homes. The banks, the government and the Federal Reserve all had a hand in this catastrophe.
@garretttedeman
@garretttedeman 7 лет назад
There are a couple of mis-leading oversimplifications in this talk. As a CPA myself, and at least a reasonable stickler for accounting rule changes, I'd question whether pointing the blame at the change to re-implement Mark-to-Market, which he cites in 2007, is completely correct. For one thing, Mark-to-Market was used at least since de-regulation in the 1990's, and of course, perhaps figured most prominently with Enron, which went belly-up in 2001. So, there's that. But also, trying to blame either just Barney Frank or Tim Geithner, is a misdirection. Putting aside disputes between Mr. Frank and other regulators on the right & left, the rule was changed on 04/02/2009 by the FASB (Financial Accounting Standards Board). ...One could argue that the House Subcommittee headed by Mr. Frank held lots of hearings to try and persuade the FASB, but that's about as much as you could say. ...We could also perhaps argue about Geithner, or Hank Paulson, or whomever, but there's only so much you can blame the bureaucrats for, especially after the fact. There's plenty of blame to share for the 2008 crisis, but after all these years of discussion & analysis, to try and pin the whole "real truth" on accounting rule changes is uninformed & disingenuous at best. ----> en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark-to-market_accounting
@angelsintahoe
@angelsintahoe 6 лет назад
Agree. Several factors here, and boiling it down to an accounting change is misleading at best.
@henkholdingastate
@henkholdingastate 4 года назад
This man likes the free market: The result of a "compleet free market" is a drama for the common man and a blessing for the super rich. In particular, what each one depends on should not be in the hands of a company. (hospitals, electricity supply, schools, etc.)
@walterbigsby6380
@walterbigsby6380 2 года назад
For real, anyone that has read Sinclair's The Jungle knows that.
@davidfleuchaus
@davidfleuchaus 2 года назад
The cause: Every person and institution in this sequence was complicit: Borrowers who lied or knew better but let greed win, mortgage brokers who lied and encouraged lying while they profited, lenders who knew there were lies in the system yet profited, institutional lenders who knew there were lies yet passed the buck while profiting, the final investors who knew there were lies yet profited but only for a time. Every person/institution involved could have told the truth and stopped it.
@t23001
@t23001 Год назад
Exactly!
@peterlustig8778
@peterlustig8778 Год назад
It is true till the point: "the final investors who knes there were lies..." No i don't think so. They believed the lies. They paid a hefty price for this.
@davidfleuchaus
@davidfleuchaus Год назад
@@peterlustig8778 I agree, mostly, since some investors DID know. I guess I was too focused on the investors that did know, or should have known, but in truth probably only 20% knew. In my zeal, after noticing the overarching worldwide blind spot of greed, I neglected to focus on massive losses experienced by super responsible investors like a German retirement fund I read about. Frontline interviewed Fidelity. While Fidelity promotes their funds as good investments, Fidelity employees typically avoid those funds and choose spiders and other low/no-fee, broad-market funds. Greed. It’s timeless. So always watch for it before it blinds you too.
@RobertMJohnson
@RobertMJohnson Год назад
simplistic view. glib, vapid. sophomoric. this is like saying "war is caused by the pride of all those involved in starting and fighting it! if all men were fair and just, there would be no war" and leaving it at that
@davidfleuchaus
@davidfleuchaus Год назад
@@RobertMJohnson Dems fightin’ words but, putting aside your style of communication, what is your opinion?
@alistairthomson8710
@alistairthomson8710 4 года назад
You decide. Brian Westbury wrote an editorial for The Wall Street Journal on January 28, 2008 titled “The Economy Is Fine (Really)”.
@MovieRiotHD
@MovieRiotHD 4 года назад
You can see things from a different perspective over time. It is years later, we all change our minds every couple of years right?
@johndough23
@johndough23 4 года назад
The Economy is fine because it is ALWAYS over-leveraged and f&cked up. Over time if the Government (FED) doesn't screw it up based on other agenda from Gov, the markets regulate themselves. Bankruptcies are normal. People who can't pay their bills and have their chit repossessed are normal. NONE of the factors the Media cites has anything to do with anything really.
@captainamericaxxx3874
@captainamericaxxx3874 4 года назад
This is only a part of the story. One tiny aspect of the event. Told from a traditional economist point of view. The low interest rate was just part of the cause. Most people in this comments section seem to know more about happened. Maybe they should be on Ted Talks.
@olessalvesen
@olessalvesen 3 года назад
Everyone thinks they know the best. Even if they're disqualified :P
@freedomwarriorsunited9712
@freedomwarriorsunited9712 2 года назад
Blaming the consumers for the fraudulent acts committed by the banks and government officials is lunacy!
@Denny_963
@Denny_963 4 года назад
You mean the “real truth” doesn’t include the derivative market. I’d say the this real truth is a limited hangout.
@jonniefive79
@jonniefive79 4 года назад
This guy is a spin artist and a shill for the banksters. If anyone even remotely understood math and how the 14% increase in value has no relation to the 1% COMPOUND INTEREST that these fancy math tricksters use to keep their game going
@danhall6922
@danhall6922 4 года назад
He's basicly turned a half truth into a lie and missed out a thousand other details
@Matt-cr4vv
@Matt-cr4vv 4 года назад
Major insurance companies use Mark to market when it comes to tracking the book value of their derivative transactions through hedging, and they've introduced regulations to lessen the impact on capital from the fluctuation in markets.
@mikerice5298
@mikerice5298 3 года назад
@@danhall6922 16 trillion to Banks and QE for years
@petergambier
@petergambier 6 лет назад
I always thought that it was when the banks were de-regulated in the 1970's that the troubles started along with the selling and trading of worthless credit swaps and the big finance companies knowing that they were selling worthless stock. Films like 'The Big Short' and 'The Wolf of Wall Street' taught people like myself what really happened and what is even more shocking is that very few people have even been jailed for what they did.
@tomaricotube
@tomaricotube 2 года назад
Learning economics from Hollywood isn't a good idea.
@petergambier
@petergambier 2 года назад
@@tomaricotube, that's true Tom but Hollywood didn't finance the Big Short (did it?) which is where I got most of my info.
@0118uhauha
@0118uhauha 2 года назад
You could read the book "A Fighting Chance" from 2014 where senator Elizabeth Warren tells about her life and corruption in banks and politics. About the financial crisis in 2007 there is a chapter page 120 titled "Who Goes to Jail" I quote: ". . . Where were the full-scale public investigations ? Where were the armies of auditors seizing hard drives and poring over the financial statements ?"
@gst32
@gst32 Год назад
@@tomaricotube Are you saying that CDO's didn't exist in the mid 2000's? Or that they were such a small part of the whole real estate market that their collapse didn't exacerbate the problems of the housing crisis because people were betting on the housing market with significantly larger amounts of money than the actual value of all of the home loans?
@iridescentsquids
@iridescentsquids 4 года назад
11:00- extremely suspect correlative argument-and it’s really his first big one that TARP made things worse. He’s 11 minutes in and just starting....and it’s a super rocky, unconvincing start.
@nigellarge8924
@nigellarge8924 3 года назад
Exactly where I paused it - he doesn't even acknowledge, let alone address, the obvious question of what would have happened without TARP - and as for "the free market doesn't have a press spokesman" - erm, it's called Fox News among other things
@gebrian
@gebrian 2 года назад
@@nigellarge8924 Second that! And then goes on to blame M2M accounting....I mean how are you supposed to account for derivatives..??!
@Zippity181
@Zippity181 4 года назад
Regardless of how much you agree/disagree it as to be said we (the public) were at least complicit. The bankers may (were) have been greedy and pushed too far, the government could have done more to hold them back and regulate but we aren't just innocent bystanders. Over-reliance on debt for unaffordable purchases, living beyond our means and short term thinking were rampant prior to the collapse and we certainly played our part.
@ivandomozetskl1703
@ivandomozetskl1703 4 года назад
The title of this presentation should be : How far from the real truth... In my opinion it is the Greed what causes it and it will again at some point. There is no government or any good will that can control it. There is no broker no bank no feds and no insurance to regulate Greed. And all of them share the same denominator. It is a simple overvaluation and high payments for the consumers to pay and afcource took the toll. The market always will find the right price. In this situation the right price was highly multiplied by the Greed factor and uncontrolled played by the banks.
@gogomulti
@gogomulti 3 года назад
Just think about it: How does a bank survives at least medium term by giving credit to people that cannot pay it? It doesnt, it ONLY survives if the government says it is going to pay when the credits are not paid, and thats WHAT HAPPENED So, bear with me: Without manipulated interests rates and this free bail out by the government, the banks that would survive long term would not be able to do such irresponsible credit lending
@willmpet
@willmpet 4 года назад
I think that our problem began when Congress repealed Glass-Steagall signed into law by BillClinton and allowed the banks to gamble with their funds. That there was both carelessness and malfeasance in the financial industry because of it and we were ruined because of it. No, I wouldn't place all the blame on the Board of Governors, but I would place a great deal of blame on Congress and our President for not realizing the effects of their actions.
@bjbell52
@bjbell52 2 года назад
Glass-Steagall was the repeal of a law that kept the investment side of a bank separate from the commercial side. In the long run it had very very little to do with the crash of 2008.
@darcybhaiwala7057
@darcybhaiwala7057 2 года назад
I was looking for this comment!
@jonswanson7766
@jonswanson7766 Год назад
Sir, you're correct, but allow me to add another point. Glass Steagall did separate commercial banking from investment banking, and it is the fact that commercial banks create money out of thin air by means of the ledger method. What is that? When you go to a commercial bank to get a loan, you sign a debt contract. You have created a security, a debt instrument. By law, banks do not make loans and do not take deposits. Banks are in the business of buying securities. That loan contract goes on the bank's ledger as an asset and a liability appears on the bank's ledger which is the amount owed to you. The bank then tells you that there is money in your account. They cannot tell you that they deposited it there because they would be lying 🤥. All the banks recognized this and straighten things out by clearing. This making up money creation is what causes bubbles. Unlimited money chasing limited supply, assets, whether it's stocks or real estate. Glass Steagall did not allow speculators access to this money. The stock market was relitively stable until Glass Steagall was chipped away at in the Eighties until it was totally repealed in 1999.
@LisaRooke
@LisaRooke 6 лет назад
I was originating mortgages back in 2006-2008 and actually interest rates averaged about 6% on 30 year fixed rate mortgages and averaged about 5-6% in the following years (you can also google this to verify). The mortgage rates were never 1% even on ARMs (adjustable rate mortgages). The Feds Funds Rate is the interest rate the Federal Reserve Bank (and other banks) lend money to commercial banks so that they can lend out to the public. The reason for the dramatic decrease in this Federal Funds Rate was because after the crisis, the banks wanted to freeze credit. The Federal Reserve encouraged "loosing up of credit" to those commercial banks by dropping the rate down to 0% or 1%. The 1% rate was never offered to consumers for purchasing homes with. Mortgage rates are determined by what investors of mortgage backed securities (or mortgage bonds) want to get paid for investing their money into those bonds.
@daveroy1066
@daveroy1066 6 лет назад
+Lisa Rookaird Thanx for not letting this blatant propaganda go unchallenged. He also portrays the Savings and Loan event as poor interest rate policy when it was in fact a criminal action for which over 1500 bankers were prosecuted. When he says the FED injected money (750 billion$ TARP) into the banks to save the banking system is total BS. The banking system is really a system of ledger entries. The FED it was later discovered conjured up off the books money to the tune of $20 - $23 trillion and fixed the ledgers of whole countries and corporations around the world. It is smoke and mirrors. Take the Galveston House example he gave; 500K house, owes 300k, never missed a payment, hurricane coming and bank worries about loss of asset, so a single bid of 20K becomes new value of the house according to the bank but you can have it for 280K or the bank will forclose releasing you from the liability to them of 300K to give the house away for 20K. Malarkey. Upon signing a mortgage the agreement becomes a debt instrument worth the value of the loan and is indeed the source of the newly created credit put in your account, you are the creditor not the bank, the bank has no money or credit nor do they loan deposits.
@straightfacts5352
@straightfacts5352 Год назад
The fact this is titled 2008 financial crisis and not 2008 financial scam says all I need to know regarding whether I need to watch this or not.
@jamessykes2760
@jamessykes2760 4 года назад
Great explanation.... Bleed me out!
@grahamreed8431
@grahamreed8431 5 лет назад
Total BS. It's rare to see someone attempting to defend the loathsome investment banking system. No mention of the toxic assets sold on for short-term profit. Any Interest rate changes just helped to trigger the collapse of an already rotten and overstretched system of greed. Oh, and by the way, we are all still paying for 2008, and they are continuing to do it all over again.
@iam007richie
@iam007richie 4 года назад
partially agree but "people" i.e. common folk have to take some responsibility as well for trying to live too large when they did not have enough money so kept borrowing. Living beyond your means only works for a small time. Unfortunately; major proportion of the population decided that they want to live beyond their means and it came back to bite them on their behind. Bankers are too be blamed yes; but so are the people who wanted to live beyond their means. Both got what they deserved IMO; could this have been stopped? yes; govt could have regulated it better but lets not let the morons who kept borrowing money to live large off the hook either
@MrR40388
@MrR40388 4 года назад
iam007richie somone has to approve those loans.
@Tsadi9Mem9Khet9
@Tsadi9Mem9Khet9 4 года назад
Mindless human cattle SJW C sucker. EID in reverse.
@apointtomake1517
@apointtomake1517 3 года назад
@@iam007richie That is why a bank should deny a loan attempt when the person requesting it clearly will not be able to pay it. But it was in the banks best interest to give the loan full knowing it will fail.
@tomrobertson3236
@tomrobertson3236 8 лет назад
corelation does not equal causation his point is valid only so far the market crashed every 15 year until the regulation after the depression for 70 years we were ok then when regulations were weakened we started having problems.
@godlesslibertarian3381
@godlesslibertarian3381 8 лет назад
+Tom Robertson We have had 23 recessions since major banking regulation. We even had Black Monday.
@tomrobertson3236
@tomrobertson3236 8 лет назад
Weve had minor ones. The great depression was just the last one in a series. With regulation, the wild swing s stoped. With deregulation, the wild swings are back. Wall street and banksters have fought reregulation. We have no safeguards to stop another recession or even a depression. I am a pessimist . I have become dept free and started a garden. I give our economy only a ten percent chance of not having a great swing in the next decade
@godlesslibertarian3381
@godlesslibertarian3381 8 лет назад
Tom Robertson The Dot Com Bubble, Black Monday, the 1970's Misery Index with stagflation were far from minor economic downturns. We have a recession every 8-10 years. We are excepted to have another recession in the next year or two. This goes back to the saying "who watchers the watcher?" Are government officials somehow more intelligent and deity like than any other person? What is government? Government is just society, you and me.
@tomrobertson3236
@tomrobertson3236 8 лет назад
Dot Com was after deregulation Same with black Friday Same with s and l. Any thing since Regan is because of deregulation Banks were never allowed to do naked derivitivex. Banking was a very boring occupation. It was safe. No more The firewall between services is no longer in place. Dems tried to make financial counselor tell customer who they represented. Rebs struck that down. With libertarian in your handle, I know your basic belief system. I'm 60. I have watch all this unfold with intrest Regan stopped enforcing the Sherman anti trust act. No other president has either since then. In my youth, I could be kidnapped and dropped anywhere in the USA And I would know exactly where I was. No more. The same corporate names are everywhere. All the regional chains are gone. I am pessimistic because citizens united states the corperations are real people and money equals free speech We have the koch brothers spending a billion dollars on this election. How much are the other billionaires spending? How much are corperations spending. Citizens united said congress had the right to for e transparency Dems put a bill up Rebs blocked it. I see bernie having a chance to stop the slide. I see clinton as a place holder, neither good our bad. I see disaster under any other republican Trump is even worse.
@godlesslibertarian3381
@godlesslibertarian3381 8 лет назад
Tom Robertson President Bill Clinton is the one who deregulated the banks. President Ronald Reagan had nothing to do with that at all. Do you know unions have donated more money to politicians and super pacs than 1% or corporations? The Sherman Anti-Trust Act has done very little for anyone in the long run.President Regan actually used anti-trust on AT&T. Then in 2001 Microsoft had antitrust put up against it. Did you know the anti-trust act against Standard Oil that oil prices had dropped and the supply filled the markets, Microsoft had it used on it as well. Microsoft had lowered PC prices and had made it available to everyone.
@timw4369
@timw4369 Год назад
The real truth is 2008 never got solved we swept it under the rug and kept on going.
@LG-tw5vm
@LG-tw5vm 4 года назад
The 2008 recession wasn't a crisis. It was an opportunity. Hindsight being 20/20, it was an opportunity I didn't take full advantage of. I'm looking forward to the next opportunity.
@MegaBbqbbq
@MegaBbqbbq 4 года назад
"The time to buy is when there's blood on the floor'
@Badg3r001
@Badg3r001 7 лет назад
"Capitalism doesn't have a press office" is a contradictory statement when you're standing on a stage talking about how great capitalism is. Always be suspicious of people complaining about the regulation of 'the market'. Whilst there is both good and bad regulation, most of it is their to protect consumers and workers against companies that would do anything within the law to make money, no matter how immoral or how many people it hurt.
@Dj84JA2
@Dj84JA2 7 лет назад
I disagree. I believe that state capitalism is more dangerous than anarcho capitalism. State capitalism uses guns to make it so that certain people get to stay in business while others don't. Anarcho capitalism uses freedom so that everyone can run a business. State capitalism creates monopolies and breaks them when it sees fit. Anarcho capitalism uses demands to stay in business and the business perishes when the demand is no more.
@TheInsaiyan
@TheInsaiyan 7 лет назад
I see myself as extremly pro capitalism and i based on my current knowledge i am against any form of regulations or Goverment influence on the Market, because that makes it impossible for small businesses to compete and hire people in the US . But i want to broaden and challenge my viewpoint and read Marx. So, what are some of the main points Marx made against Capitalism? That are comparable to todays issues and are truly points against a free market and not because of Goverment influence of creating synthetic market growth. Because in true Capitalism without Big Gov taxpayers Bailouts this would never happend because Banks and Big Companies would know that such fraudet behaivor is going to kill them and others who are more capable in managing such things would take over. Because in a real free market everybody is resoponsible for their own actions. But those Big Banks and Huge Companies where not because they knew all along that they get Big bailouts from taxpayer money and can blame it on others because the goverment has such power todo so legally. Thats basically what creates corporatism and lobbyism and not capitalism. This vicious cycle couldnt sustain itself in a free market and trades based on frauds would collapse and competition would've taken over with a much better system that can benefit all and still be highly profitable.
@TheInsaiyan
@TheInsaiyan 7 лет назад
Christopher Hall Thanks. I'll try Das Kapital :)
@askformoreinfowhichyouwont7510
+Kaiserlicher “Gott” König :))) Das Kapital will get real with Trump. US gets their own Dick tator now
@BenChieeal
@BenChieeal 7 лет назад
Who suggested unrestricted capitalism?
@BertholdTheFiretruck
@BertholdTheFiretruck 5 лет назад
On the bright side, this talk was better organized than most TEDx talks, in that within the first couple of minutes you actually have some hint about what it is he's going to be arguing. But beyond that it's not *much* better than most TEDx talks in that he tackles a deep subject at a level you could get by talking to a random person at a cocktail party. If you want to hear an insightful take on the financial crisis, look for just about any talk by Mark Blyth. There are many of them and they are all more knowledgeable and more engaging than this.
@BertholdTheFiretruck
@BertholdTheFiretruck 2 года назад
@Dave Park TEDx talk, not TED talk. The two are very different. And this is more of a statement about how bad TEDx talks are in general.
@BertholdTheFiretruck
@BertholdTheFiretruck 2 года назад
@Dave Park Why yes. Because I don't think we're having the same conversation at all. I thought all this was obvious but let me spell it out: the quality of TEDx talks is typically abysmal. People get tricked into thinking they will be good because TED is in the name. My original comment suggested that as bad as this is, it is probably still better than the average TEDx talk because you can at least tell what it's about. Then I went on to say some negative things about this talk. You seem to have interpreted that as me meaning that this talk was good.
@andrewmckeown6786
@andrewmckeown6786 2 года назад
I would recommend Matt Taibi's work on this subject. I believe he was with Rolling Stone at the time. Matt is a straight up, honest journalist. I cant say that his is the definitive word because I am painfully uninformed on the subject. He does illuminate some activities by the institutions that this speaker seems to omit. Regardless, much appreciation for all involved in allowing me to listen and learn. God Bless❤
@robertparadis3395
@robertparadis3395 Год назад
appreciate your insight and humility.
@randalltilander6684
@randalltilander6684 2 года назад
Thanks friendly one. I got three and a half minutes before I discovered that what this guy was selling is fit only for fertilizing the garden. The comments were awesome.
@jmichaelewan8455
@jmichaelewan8455 Год назад
Took me 5:30 but I’m a slow learner 😂
@matthewwilson2369
@matthewwilson2369 4 года назад
My not-expert twist on this story is that the loan defaults alone weren't sufficient to spread the GFC contagion. Reading a The Economist article when the GFC was just getting under way in late 2007 or so, I saw an interview with a banker who described the problem as banks realising (too late) that they'd bought rubbish debt-backed securities and at that point they no longer knew if they had the assets that they needed (under law) to even keep trading as a bank. If they'd accurately known the risk, they could have planned accordingly. But they didn't, and when the crunch came they simply had no idea what their real position was. So they closed their teller windows and credit dried up. Low interest rates don't force mortgage brokers and finance companies to lie about what they're selling to banks. But I'm not an expert.
@ryanpollifrone9327
@ryanpollifrone9327 6 лет назад
To deduce the largest economic contraction since the Great Depression down to a "little known accounting 'rule'" is an unjust oversimplification. An economic event of this magnitude is by no means a static issue - the issue at hand is incredibly dynamic and contains many layers of intricacies.
@coreyham3753
@coreyham3753 2 года назад
Not really ...... to turn a 300 billion dollar bad debt problem into a 4 trillion dollar bad debt problem was a big deal. It essentially bankrupted most of the large banks and financial institutions. BTW, eminent market historian, John Hussman, agrees that mark to market accounting was the key problem. And the proof was and is ... that once mark to market accounting rules were eliminated .... the market and economy has recovered virtually on a straight line ever since. Hard to deny that evidence.
@FoxyCAMTV
@FoxyCAMTV 4 года назад
There are people in this world who have no qualms about killing civilization,but for as long as civilization continues these people want to be on top.Thats it,thats all you need to know.
@JudgeBluey
@JudgeBluey 4 года назад
When the entire world gets to watch the WAR CASTLE series, you will ALL understand completely what's been going on, not only behind your backs, but right in front of your very eyes!!
@AryanVerma-ih5yq
@AryanVerma-ih5yq 3 года назад
It is on RU-vid or anything else
@addij3689
@addij3689 7 лет назад
all I know is that bankers were betting with each other and the ones that lost got bailed out by the middle class taxpayers.
@sixsix7minus1
@sixsix7minus1 6 лет назад
Diligent investors continue paying for it from the unlawful upward manipulation of the stock market - those who got hit the worst.
@SleekMinister
@SleekMinister 6 лет назад
Wrong! Everybody payed.
@SleekMinister
@SleekMinister 6 лет назад
+goodcat1982 That's what insider trading looks like.
@glenndower2513
@glenndower2513 6 лет назад
Correct. Most everybody missed the point of why banks and mortgage lenders took these unparalleled risks- they thought that the government would bail out the next guys upline, that the government would bail out FANNIE MAY and FREDDIE MAC. In other words, the government ensured the moral hazard.
@bademoxy
@bademoxy 6 лет назад
"all i know is that god talked to me"
@nikoladd
@nikoladd 4 года назад
Never attribute to malice what you can attribute to incompetence...
@somethingelse4150
@somethingelse4150 4 года назад
It really is hard to believe Alan Greenspan was so damn incompetent. He ignored all the red flags and standard reactions to those red flags. Negligence to that degree is malicious, even if it wasn't premeditated. But, I do believe the bubble and collapse was premeditated. It was the largest transfer of wealth (theft) ever, by far.
@hollythorn9004
@hollythorn9004 4 года назад
He's leaving out the biggest problem. banks were bundling loans and passing them off to investors. Banks were encouraged to just sell more properties regardless of weather or not the loan was a good bet. Loans were just traded as a stock option. It wasn't the average person buying more then they could afford. It was banks encouraging people to buy outside their means. Only in the crash did the buyer find out. Their house loan was not really theirs. It was bundled. So who gets stuck with the bill for all the cooked books. The American taxpayer. Because the banks are to big to fail. It happened in 29. Again in 08. Banks / wall street need strong regulations.
@charlesludwig8672
@charlesludwig8672 Год назад
Happening again today
@blindingshadow3463
@blindingshadow3463 Год назад
Really really wish I saw this a year ago. I sensed it, but did not understand why the market was collapsing in a step down pattern followed by cliff dives
@nthperson
@nthperson 9 лет назад
All things being equal, a drop in mortgage interest rates will be capitalized into higher property (i.e., land) prices. The economics are simple: every parcel of land yields some potential (i.e. imputed) rental value, capitalized by market forces into a selling price for land. The lower the effective rate of taxation imposed on this rental value, the higher is the net imputed rent to be capitalized. Thus, capitalized land rents represent a primary, inflationary driver in any economy. What happened to make the 2008 land market crash worse than in previous recessions was the high level of fraud associated with the private label mortgage-backed securities issued by the banks and sold to investors by Wall Street.
@Zone47.
@Zone47. 4 года назад
Edward Dodson what fraud? Securities are rated. Also why just “private label” cmbs and rmbs?
@davrsch
@davrsch 2 года назад
add to that interest only loans and you have an inflation bubble in R/E
@nthperson
@nthperson 2 года назад
@@Zone47. Just noticed your comment. There is well-documented evidence that the residential mortgage loans pooled as collateral for private-label MBS were characterized by a high degree of fraud and misrepresentation of borrower income, credit and the assigned value of the subject properties. There may have been similar problems with the underwriting associated with commercial properties. I simply have not researched the issue.
@nthperson
@nthperson 2 года назад
@@davrsch Yes, of course. Interest only loans are for the most part an effect of a property inflation that has reached a high level of stress on borrower ability to qualify for a full amortizing loan. But, then, higher asking prices for property becomes a market reaction to this and all measures that maintain demand at a high level.
@davrsch
@davrsch 2 года назад
@@nthperson over about five years the price of 'a house' increased until they fell off the cliff. Because the higher prices meant higher tax revenues, higher mortgage portfolio valuations etc everyone was onboard- Government national and local, the industry of builders and the banks including the FOMC and FDIC. This is/was a classic bubble and burst scenario.
@rpaleogos
@rpaleogos 5 лет назад
Talked almost 20 minutes about his "real truth" and never once mentioned the word 'derivatives'. Incomplete.
@wildmaninmt
@wildmaninmt 5 лет назад
Rick Paleogos The mark to market rule caused market valuations to free fall and thus derivatives collapsed in value which lead to Lehman Brothers to fail.
@jyoung5256
@jyoung5256 4 года назад
Don’t blame derivatives for the financial crisis. Derivatives are more frequently to hedge against risk than to increase it. The problem was the leverage that banks had, not the fact that derivatives were involved.
@steveeric6942
@steveeric6942 4 года назад
No really. He is talking about guns you are talk long about bullets.
@turnech
@turnech 4 года назад
@@jyoung5256 not sure how you can say derivatives are to hedge risk and thus aren't to blame. Derivative are indeed to hedge risk. And when the counterparty to the derivative goes out of business, it's value as a hedge disappears, and leaves your portfolio totally exposed to a free falling market caused by the FDIC death spiral.
@jamesalvarado3961
@jamesalvarado3961 4 года назад
Or how after the CEOs recieved the bailout money they went on vacation. The bank's never inform the public how they spent that bailout money.
@kenzong8427
@kenzong8427 3 года назад
very good lecture till at the end, Sir the economy for the bottom 99% has not recovered, it has worsened......
@superdog797
@superdog797 Год назад
That's completely false of course
@karabomafa5609
@karabomafa5609 4 года назад
"Alan Greenspan the smartest mind in the world" hearing that is enough to make one puke
@willtrillich624
@willtrillich624 4 года назад
Yep. I think that was the point. Sarcasm often gets lots on the interwebs.
@OrangePony75
@OrangePony75 4 года назад
I don’t doubt a little bit about his smarts. Human decency has nothing to do with that.
@georgewbushcenterforintell147
@georgewbushcenterforintell147 4 года назад
Irrational exuberants
@MrGoatflakes
@MrGoatflakes 4 года назад
He was saying this in the character of a fictional banker.
@captnnero
@captnnero 4 года назад
Greenspan testified before Congress that he should have factored in greed. That's how smart he is.
@robbedontuesday
@robbedontuesday 4 года назад
TED Talks, you should be held accountable for spreading this bs.
@jasonwilliams9485
@jasonwilliams9485 4 года назад
robbedontuesday - so you're one of those who wants the government to "hold accountable" anyone who says something that disagrees with your view of the world... Wake up and smell the coffee hominid, you're living in an alternate universe.
@robbedontuesday
@robbedontuesday 4 года назад
@@jasonwilliams9485 wise up. I want everyone to be accountable for their actions, specially bshitters like the lecturer. Who said anything about government?
@waicollins3594
@waicollins3594 4 года назад
@@robbedontuesday Why is this bs?
@robbedontuesday
@robbedontuesday 4 года назад
@@waicollins3594 because it's a lame try to brainwash ppl, even after 11 years of bailing out the corrupt banking system.
@waicollins3594
@waicollins3594 4 года назад
@@robbedontuesday Can you be more specific? Which part are you talking about? As of right now I'm not even sure we're watching the same clip.
@JonROlsen
@JonROlsen 6 лет назад
I'm skeptical that, finally, this guy is going to explain the real truth.
@lars.nordberg
@lars.nordberg 2 года назад
No. Its been out there LOOOONG TIME...
@recupdata9213
@recupdata9213 Год назад
This issue with the 2008 financial crisis wasn't Marktomarket accounting but an incorrect risk assessment of the bond market. Banks and financial institutions use AAA bonds as "cash equivalents", which means an asset that is so liquid and stable in value that it can be turned into a predictable cash amount. As we all know today, MBS products were actually much riskier than models predicted. This is because the loans that composed them were not rated accurately. When default rates began to rise, the MBS products began to fail and subsequently drop in value. Since these assets made up a sizeable portion of the banks' and financial institutions' "cash reserves" they suddenly found that they had much less money than they thought. So when people went to withdraw their money, or when institutions faced margin calls, banks and financial institutions found they didn't have enough liquidity to pay up. But the key thing to note is that this was a liquidity crisis and not a solvency crisis. In other words, the banks had enough assets to cover their debts, but not the cash on hand to pay everyone at once. This is why Lehman was eventually able to pay back all its creditors given enough time. An argument can be made that the government's desire to increase homeownership rates by facilitating mortgage lending was ultimately to blame, or that it was the fault of people who took out loans that they knew they wouldn't be able to pay back, or the rating agencies that incorrectly rated the loans. Ultimately though it was giving the banks the liquidity needed to keep up with expenses, and most importantly to reassure creditors, which undeniably prevented a complete collapse of the banking sector. Which would have cascaded into an economic collapse. The minimum reserve requirements put in place by governments since then is also what prevents such a situation from occurring again.
@ytj2053
@ytj2053 Год назад
I was a loan officer/approval officer at a major CMBS lender at the time. This is not entirely accurate. The Loans that are in question for the housing market were never intended to be held on the bank's books for any length of time. Banks were writing loans with the sole intention of selling them every 30 - 90 days. Therefore, if the loans were NOT going to be sold and would have to be held on the bank books, they would have to be adjusted accordingly based on the shorter term underwriting parameters and pricing. Banks were not structured asset/liability wise to be making long-term, fixed rate mortgages. The beneficiaries who gained more on the other side of the Barney Frank law were given preferential treatment. That's why some large banks grew larger while other banks suffered. IMO
@exenrontexas
@exenrontexas 6 лет назад
What a load. I worked for Enron Corp, the largest Texas bank, the second largest Texas bank and the largest US bank. I sat in executive meetings with all level including the meetings of the Structured Finance sub of the largest bank. This guy is quite a salesman but I would not buy any car from him. The banking problem in the US is..DEREGULATION. The S&L collapse was caused by DEREGULATION. the huge market collapse of '87 was caused by DEREGULATION. Alan Greenspan was a follower of Ayn Rand and believed and promoted DEREGULATION. This led to the derivative bubble, it was NOT a HOUSING bubble but the irresponsible lending practices caused by, you guessed it,....DEREGULATION along with overleaning GREED. How many bank failures did were have after FDR regulated the banks during the Great Depression until Reagan?? ZERO. Reagan opened the door for crooks to start S&Ls and when you let crooks open a bank, guess what happens. When did the criminals take over at ENRON CORP? Yup, that's it, 1985. Watch the Frontline program called "The Warning" which is about the Clinton regulator who tried to stop the slide into deregulation and derivatives. Broolksley Born. Why didn't Clinton back his own regulator? Could be a stain on a blue dress and his impeachment that distracted him? Who pushed for deregulation of her office? Yup, A\lan Greenspan. Mitch Mcconnel and Phil Gramm. Who also had Born's job? Gramm's wife, Wendy, who was an director of..ENRON CORP.
@donnrutherford7059
@donnrutherford7059 5 лет назад
Bang on you couldnt have put it better. Brooksley Born tried to halt Greenspan and they shafted her
@NathanRyanAllen
@NathanRyanAllen 5 лет назад
Finally someone who gets it. OTC derivatives, not a housing bubble.
@richardfrost4936
@richardfrost4936 5 лет назад
weworkforamerica If Roosevelt would have kept the domestic gold standard they wouldn’t need regulation. They would never have less than 4% interest.
@brianboucher4248
@brianboucher4248 5 лет назад
Freaking WORD....
@mikedickerson4104
@mikedickerson4104 5 лет назад
This argument is like blaming a drug dealer for 100% of the drug problems in the world today. The people buying the drugs are also part of the problem. Many people made piles of money flipping houses and condos before the music stopped, but like all pyramid schemes, someone gets caught holding the bag. The real problem was greed, and that greed was wide spread on Wall Street and Main Street. To say “poor average people were taken advantage of” is to deflect or deny responsibility for 50% of the problem.
@gerardvaughan1847
@gerardvaughan1847 4 года назад
"..then the government had to come in an save us ". There was me thinking everyone saved the banks with their savings.
@GoldFever44
@GoldFever44 4 года назад
I know right? You could tell buy the guy's tone when he first started talking that he was selling us BS.
@maddysydney
@maddysydney 4 года назад
To put it as Sherlock Holmes would you need motivation and opportunity. Motivation = Greed of Banks, Rating agencies, common man’s greed to make a quick buck on real estate Opportunity = Low interest rates, banks lending with less due diligence, you can walk away from your debt with no recourse
@rlud2173
@rlud2173 10 месяцев назад
finally this ted talk is getting some traction. would love to do a call with Brian S. Wesbury
@MustangsTrainsMowers
@MustangsTrainsMowers 5 лет назад
During the fall 2008 crisis Minnesota am 830 WCCO had a financial expert on a radio program who mentioned the Mark to Market rule. The way he explained it is that banks had to record non liquid assets like houses at zero dollars. It was the straw pulled out from under the teetering housing market that helped cause it to crash down. I really wonder if some powerful people in Washington D.C. knew exactly what they were doing when they revived the Mark to Market rule? I know a couple who lost everything including their house and even had to sell their car. I went from working 6 nights a week to 2. I think sometimes it’s just greedy fools who get in charge in Washington D.C. and who F up things for millions of people to their own selfish benefit.
@dalewilliams1155
@dalewilliams1155 5 лет назад
Well, your comments are all well thought out and intriguing, but I still agree with a Federal Reserve VP who during the crisis said: "It took millions of people working long hours to get us into this mess - and it will take millions of people working even longer hours to get us out of it" Amen, brother! Trying to focus on one piece of paper on one person's desk as "the cause" is silly, lazy, and ridiculous!
@gerrys6265
@gerrys6265 Год назад
I'm not sure it took million to get u into this. What it really took is a 'few' corporate CEOs, a 'few' corrupt real estate agents, a 'few' greedy (corporate) bankers and a government unwilling to accept that their responsibility is to the people and not the aforementioned 'few'. If financial education was part of the education system so people has a better (or some) understanding of how they are being duped and cajoled out of their money on a daily basis by the consumeristic culture that feeds off of them, the 'millions' would not get themselves into the pickle that crashes the economy and sends them to the poor-house while the government bails out the banks et al. that caused the problem in the first place. I don't think it is fair to blame the people with the least control.
@kortyEdna825
@kortyEdna825 День назад
More and more people might face a tough time in retirement. Low-paying jobs, inflation, and high rents make it hard to save. Now, middle-class Americans find it tough to own a home too, leaving them without a place to retire.
@KaurKhangura
@KaurKhangura День назад
The increasing prices have impacted my plan to retire at 62, work part-time, and save for the future. I'm concerned about whether those who navigated the 2008 financial crisis had an easier time than I am currently experiencing. The combination of stock market volatility and a decrease in income is causing anxiety about whether I'll have sufficient funds for retirement.
@carssimplified2195
@carssimplified2195 День назад
This is precisely why I like having a portfolio coach guide my day-to-day market decisions: with their extensive knowledge of going long and short at the same time, using risk for its asymmetrical upside and laying it off as a hedge against the inevitable downward turns, their skillset makes it nearly impossible for them to underperform. I've been utilizing a portfolio coach for more than two years, and I've made over $800,000.
@brucemichelle5689.
@brucemichelle5689. День назад
How can I reach this person?
@carssimplified2195
@carssimplified2195 День назад
‘’Colleen Rose Mccaffery’ maintains an online presence. Just make a simple search for her name online.
@brucemichelle5689.
@brucemichelle5689. День назад
I checked Colleen up out of curiosity and i must say i am impressed by her Credentials. i emailed her already, waiting on her response.
@burtonschrader2
@burtonschrader2 Год назад
Greed is what you describe. The practice of giving mortgages to people who clearly could not afford them is outside your 'a normal person would buy a bigger house with low interest rates' description. Also bundling these toxic loans and selling them as an asset is not what 'any person' would do. This was/is corporate greed. You are an apologist for these executives who get bailed out then pay themselves a bonus with the money.
@Daniel-dg3np
@Daniel-dg3np 5 лет назад
Hard to tell if this guy honestly believes what he is saying or if he is just a really good salesman.
@thomassherer5962
@thomassherer5962 5 лет назад
He's a Republican (Real) who worked for W. But, he has a point of two ... Just not THE points.
@martymartmartin4740
@martymartmartin4740 4 года назад
but he read a bible's worth of transcripts lol
@joeld8199
@joeld8199 4 года назад
Shill!!!!!!
@0530628416
@0530628416 4 года назад
Not really, actually he moves more like a trained robot than a human being, he sucks at lying too. In addition there is a clear separation between himself and the audience which couldn't not be more apparent than when he said "let me explain this in a way you could understand" he is assuming that the audience is not capable of understanding what he knows, which is okay as a fact but stating it this way means that he does not even care that people actually understand what is happening as he probably think they are "mediocre human beings" this is not a judgment but the word could is a description of capacity not learning.
@Camulus777
@Camulus777 4 года назад
@@thomassherer5962 so because of a political viewpoint his findings and conclusions don't matter? What he is saying makes a lot of sense especially when you look at what happened during the depression. Government go involved creating the new deal and the depression lasted ten years longer than it should have.
@chadbentoski5778
@chadbentoski5778 4 года назад
So a banker says that banks are not to blame. Go figure.
@catlic3
@catlic3 4 года назад
Chad Bentoski hey Chad, I know him personally and he is not a banker. He’s an economist. He deals in facts and reality. I was there on 3/09/09. The announcement of the accounting change and just watching the market take off like a rocket. I received two messages from independent $$ managers, “throw everything you have in now!” On that day. Look it up yourself!
@chadbentoski5778
@chadbentoski5778 4 года назад
Economics is a dysfunction.
@SteTVon
@SteTVon 4 года назад
@@ogukuo72 Here's a lesson. A truly intelligent person would never call someone else a moron. They would educate them or keep their mouth shut.
@SenorJuan2023
@SenorJuan2023 4 года назад
@Burt Gummer yes, because banks are the ones lending and should know better.
@SenorJuan2023
@SenorJuan2023 4 года назад
@Burt Gummer Bankers have what they call lending standards and they're supposed to be well regulated. So clearly they were engaging in criminal activity.
@theodevries6435
@theodevries6435 Год назад
The moral of the story is if you get a mortgage, make sure the interest stays the same for 20 years, even if that means you pay 1% more from the start.
@Friendznco
@Friendznco 4 года назад
Reminds me of the South Park episode where everyone is blaming everyone. It was greed among US Consumers, it was greed among investment bankers, it was ineptitude by the government and it was robbery by the Fed. Blaming one institution for the problems of 2008 is wrong on so many levels.
Далее