Dec 07
There’s nothing like a honking stock market rally to prompt us to declare the end of a financial emergency. But whether or not the economy and the financial markets are really out of the woods, it’s clear that the way we approach investing has changed forever.
Here are seven ways your money will never be the same.
1.
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Dec 06
As I just mentioned in the post below, I bought an Ooma Hub/Scout system which advertises Unlimited Home VoIP Phone Service with no future monthly fees. Features included free domestic long distance, 911 service, caller ID, voicemail, and call waiting. It was a bit of an impulse purchase, as I can still return it later but who knows how long the 20% cashback will last.
One major concern of Ooma is that it seems like just a matter of time before the FCC shuts it down. I have done some reading on the technical background of Ooma, but not enough to really write intelligently about how their business model can last long-term.
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Dec 06
The WSJ has a pretty good article on the failure of AmTrust.
Frankly, it reads like a reprise of the S&L days, replete with indecision on the part of the regulators, asset valuations that make no sense and political interference. Once upon a time politicians were punished for interfering in this manner.
I’ll let you read the story. It’s short and predictable but this caught my eye:
New York Community Bancorp Inc., Westbury, N.Y., is acquiring AmTrust and its 66 branches. The purchase is a dramatic expansion for New York Community, which runs a handful of banks in New York and New Jersey. The company has made seven acquisitions since 2000, none of them outside the New York City metropolitan area, where it has about 212 branches.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. said the AmTrust failure was expected to cost its deposit-insurance fund about $2 billion. AmTrust’s deterioration over the past year likely resulted in the bank selling for a lower price than it would have fetched if the thrift had been seized earlier, said people familiar with the government-led auction.
As part of the deal, the FDIC is shielding New York Community from most losses on $9 billion of AmTrust’s assets.
When I read the FDIC press releases on the failure, I scratched my head at the part about the acquiring institution. I had never heard of this institution and now with a little more data I’m still scratching my head. Based on the WSJ article one has to wonder what in the world New York Community Bancorp (NYB), a New York- and New Jersey-focused financial institution, wants with an Ohio bank with a smattering of banks in some of the more destitute economies in this country.
There have been a few articles and posts concerning the plethora of bidders for FDIC seized banks and assets. This might be a good example of that phenomenon. One would hope that the agency is not just shunting failed bank assets off to anyone that can pay somewhere near their price but this one makes you wonder.
Hopefully, they aren’t just creating serial failures in their quest to rid themselves of banks, but I wouldn’t bet on that.
Dec 05
The CBS Sunday Morning news show aired: Help Wanted this morning about some of the people behind the unemployment numbers. Read more…
Dec 05
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As the winter approaches people should be planning on ways and methods to surely save energy.
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Dec 04
There is a wide variety of ways to ” evade ” taxes, perhaps short alone by human understanding. Fortunately, the weight has a powerful tool to address taxpayers the juice believes are skipping surface on the civic responsibility to pay taxes: the ” evasion ” statute. The words of the statute itself is low and the courts have also interpreted the statute broadly. It could be said that the statute, and its interpretation, necessarily have to be broad to be able to superscription the wide crew of evasions and schemes. The government wields the evasion statute in command with altered Home Revenue Judicatory criminal statutes to prosecute unscrupulous taxpayers. The dai
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