Engineertony
This is the real problem:
"A working man puts some excess cash in pension fund, the pension fund lends it to a bank, the bank invests in an investment trust, the investment trust has shares in an insurance company, the insurance company makes its profit for shareholders by taking the same man’s money and pocketing half. Everyone is making a profit and living well on the proceeds, including Robert on his yacht.. "
All those transactions "churn" our investments!
Nobody cares a monkey what the asset is really worth, as long as it can be bought and sold, and the "churners" make a turn!
One day, in about 2007, somebody woke up, and decided that certain traded assets (sub-prime mortgages) were worthless.
But sub-prime is only the very tip of a very large iceberg, for example:
http://www.accountingweb...d-lemming/1500000000000 And then there is now "sovereign debts" and all the "brilliant" deriratives cds and combinations of these that our brilliant bankers are paid fortunes to think up, so that they can be churned.
But almost all the basic assets (apart from gold) are depreciating, particuarly at this time soveriegn, debt:
We have still not yet sorted out the mess from sub-prime and Lehman Bros etc.
When/if the banks and other financial institutions are forced to take their true losses onto their balance sheets, sub-prime will just be a starter course. What will happen for example, when the value of Italian and Spanish debt is de-valued by say 20%?
How many banks will go bust? How many other banks will be dragged down with them, particuarly when they will not give each other credit, and Libor once again explodes?
Failure to deal with this basic problem is why "the can is being kicked down the road"----and I do not have a better solution than to put off the day of reckoning as long as possible.
Do any of you?