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FINANCIAL MARKET BILL AKA BAILOUT PLAN IS PASSED
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nickyng
Supreme |
06-Oct-2008 12:53
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wow..stagnaflation is DEFINITELY here !! wah ! how? economy no growth...food price still high..electric bill going to be V. HIGH! wah...die liao !! nah....JUST SHORT more! haha...kidding ;D |
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best888
Member |
06-Oct-2008 12:03
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SINGAPORE will suffer an economic slowdown lasting “several quarters” and unemployment is expected to rise, Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam warned see here http://singaporestockmarket.blogspot.com/ | ||||
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nickyng
Supreme |
06-Oct-2008 11:04
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aya...watever is it...be it mental illness or others...u shld be thankful it is NOT AIDS=NOT CURE !! haha..other illnesss still can recover some how :D |
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novicex
Member |
06-Oct-2008 10:48
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hmm interesting.. i thought it as a case of the patient being sick but living in self-denial and refused to seek treatment, not believing that he was sick..
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EastonBay
Master |
06-Oct-2008 10:43
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Greenspan Says Markets to Recover as Investors Return (Update1) By Scott Lanman and John Brinsley Oct. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said financial markets and the economy will recover ``sooner rather than later'' from the worst turmoil in seven decades. ``Trust will eventually reemerge as investors dip hesitantly back into the marketplace,'' Greenspan said today in a speech at Georgetown University's law school in Washington. ``From that point, history tells us, financial and economic revival sets in. I suspect it will be sooner rather than later.'' Greenspan urged lawmakers last week to back ``extensive'' measures to tackle the worst financial crisis since the 1930s and head off a recession. The U.S. Senate passed a $700 billion financial-market rescue package yesterday loaded with inducements for the House of Representatives to approve the measure following its rejection of an earlier version Sept. 29. ``We are living through the type of wrenching financial crisis that comes along only once in a century,'' Greenspan said today. ``Financial markets freeze up as an excess of fear displaces a protracted period of what some might call irrational exuberance. Eventually the market freeze will thaw as frightened investors take tentative steps towards reengagement with risk.'' Greenspan, 82, who served 18 years as Fed chief, took office just before the 1987 stock-market crash. He led the central bank during two eight-month-long recessions, the Asian financial crisis, the 2001 terrorist attacks and the bursting of the Internet bubble. Deepening Crisis He spoke amid signs the crisis was deepening. Corporate short-term borrowing plummeted 5.6 percent, the most on record, to the lowest amount outstanding in three years, the Fed said today. Separately, the cost of borrowing in dollars for three months in London rose for a fourth day as banks hoarded cash. Greenspan, while not commenting today on the rescue bill, spoke from a text about the importance of property rights at a conference entitled, ``Our Courts and Corporate Citizenship.'' He didn't take audience questions. ``Broken market ties among banks, pension and hedge funds and all types of non-financial businesses, will become reestablished, and our complex economy, that has the capacity to produce a fifth of the world's goods and services, will reemerge,'' he said. The House may vote tomorrow afternoon on the rescue bill. In a statement e-mailed to lawmakers Sept. 25, signed by Greenspan, former Treasury Secretary George Shultz and Stanford University economist Robert Hall, the three economists wrote that ``the only way that financial institutions can continue to function is for the government to provide financial support.'' |
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singaporegal
Supreme |
05-Oct-2008 12:05
Yells: "Female TA nut" |
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Haha... I don't think its that the drug is given too late... but rather, the sickness was discovered too late!
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lookcc
Master |
04-Oct-2008 16:27
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good one n also drug given too late [it is icu]
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singaporegal
Supreme |
04-Oct-2008 14:11
Yells: "Female TA nut" |
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This is an analogy of the situation now - the patient has been given an unproven/theoretical drug by the doctor and the relatives are all waiting to see if sickness has been cured. In the meantime minor side effects (ie. wild market swings) may occur frequently. |
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cyjjerry85
Elite |
04-Oct-2008 02:01
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looking at other financial forums ...can see quite alot of ppl staying up just to see if the Bill is passed...yes its passed...but many will look at the screen filled with numbers jumping wildly...swinging in an extreme manner |
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cyjjerry85
Elite |
04-Oct-2008 01:58
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NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The House on Friday passed a far-reaching and historic plan to bail out the nation's financial system. The vote for passage of the Senate-amended bill - 263 to 171 - was the result of strong lobbying on the part of the White House and other supporters of the bill all week, following the House defeat of a similar measure on Monday - a defeat that shocked the markets and congressional leaders on both sides of the aisle. "I applaud the action taken by the Congress," said Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. "The legislation is a critical step toward stabilizing our financial markets and ensuring an uninterrupted flow of credit to households and businesses." According to preliminary numbers, 172 Democrats voted in favor of the bill while 62 opposed it; and 91 Republicans voted for it and 108 voted against it. Republicans who said they would switch their votes from "no" to "yes" included Rep. Howard Cobble, R-N.C., and Rep. Sue Myrick, R-N.C. In a statement, Myrick said, "We're on the cusp of a complete catastrophic credit meltdown. There is no liquidity in the market. We are out of time. Either you believe that fact, or you don't. I do." Democrats who said they would switch their votes include Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., and Rep. Donna Edwards, D-Md. Cummings noted this was the most difficult vote for him in his 12 years in Congress. "But today we must step up and lead," he said. Earlier this week, Cummings and Edwards were part of a group that had been working on an alternate proposal. The lawmakers had lobbied strongly but unsuccessfully to include, among other things, a change to the bankruptcy law that would let judges modify mortgages on primary residences, a move the lending industry has strongly opposed. Cummings and Edwards said they had received calls from Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama, encouraging them to change their minds. They said they received assurances that he was committed to the bankruptcy provision. House Minority Whip Roy Blunt, R-Mo., told reporters before the vote on Friday morning that three things have happened to change some Republican members' opposition to the bill since the House defeated the measure on Monday: more calls to their district offices in support of the bill; a clarification of SEC accounting rules regarding mark-to-market accounting; and the additions the Senate made to the bill, which it passed on Wednesday, including a number of tax break extenders and an increase in FDIC deposit insurance coverage. (What's in the bill.) Economy in need of a fix The House debate began on the heels of two market-moving events: a worse-than-expected monthly jobs number; and a surprise merger announcement between Wachovia and Wells Fargo. The legislation, which would allow the Treasury Secretary to purchase as much as $700 billion in troubled assets in a bid to kick-start lending, would usher in one of the most far-reaching interventions in the economy since the Great Depression. For the past two weeks, lending between banks and between banks and businesses has gotten considerably more expensive. Small businesses are having trouble getting loans. As of midday Friday, one key measure showed that banks were hoarding cash rather than loaning it. Meanwhile, an indicator showing how willing banks are to lend each other was at an all-time high. Advocates say the plan is crucial to government efforts to attack a credit crisis that threatens the economy and would free up banks to lend more. Opponents say it rewards bad decisions by Wall Street, puts taxpayers at risk and fails to address the real economic problems facing Americans. Lawmakers who said on Friday they planned to vote against the bill warned that "being stampeded" into voting the bill through would be a serious mistake. "Wall Street is so hungry for the $700 billion they can taste it. To get it they need to ... create panic, block alternatives and herd the cattle. We ask Congress not to rush. Defeating this bill today isn't the last step. It's the first step in passing a good bill," said Rep. Brad Sherman, D-Calif. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, D-Ohio, who has called for the FDIC and SEC to use their powers to ease the credit crisis, said soon before the vote, "Pray for our Republic. She's being placed in ... very greedy hands." Lawmakers who stood in support of the bill noted that it will help Main Street, not Wall Street. "We [would] rescue the jobs, the savings and the ability to get a loan for each hard-working American," said Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y. Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., noted that the bill also supports homeowners at risk of foreclosure by giving the government more say in how loans for troubled borrowers are modified so people can stay in their homes. "When we buy up this toxic paper, we're in charge. We can do the kind of loan modifications we've been urging [the industry coalition] Hope Now to get done. ... We'll be able to set some standards," Waters said during the floor debate. "For anybody who says there's nothing in this bill for homeowners, they're incorrect."
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TradeChancellor
Veteran |
04-Oct-2008 01:31
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LADIES AND GENTLEMEN, THE US HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES HAS PASSED THE FINANICAL MARKET BILL A.K.A BAILOUT PLAN BY VOTE OF 263 TO 171. |
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