April 2006 in "Risk Pollution: Financial Markets Polluted with Risk" I compared the era of unregulated lending to the period of the unregulated chemical industry. The latter polluted the environment with chemical toxins and the former with toxic debt. The article contains the first use of the word "toxic" that you will find on the internet in connection with mortgage and other debt.
In that article I made the following forecast:
In truth, no one knows who will be left holding the bag when defaults on loans made using these innovations occur. But we can be fairly certain it won’t be the institutions that made the money selling them. Most likely, it will be the same folks that paid for the Super Fund projects that cleaned up after the chemical industry -- you and I.
And here it is, two years later, a credit toxins superfund paid for by you and I. Stocks surge on report of entity for bad debt
September 18, 2008 (Tim Paradis, AP Business Writer)
Wall Street soars on report that federal govenment will create entity to hold banks' debt
NEW YORK (AP) -- Wall Street had a stunning late-session turnaround Thursday, shooting higher and hurtling the Dow Jones industrials up more than 400 points after a report that the federal government may create an entity that will take over banks' bad debt.
The report on CNBC said Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is considering the formation of an entity like the Resolution Trust Corp. that was set up after the failure of savings and loan banks in the 1980s.
Investors were cheered by the notion of a huge federal intervention like the establishment of RTC to acquire the real estate debt that has hobbled financial institutions and led to the intense volatility in the markets this week.
AntiSpin: If I could see the development of a toxic debt superfund by the government more than two years ago, what do I think of it now that it's here?September 18, 2008 (Tim Paradis, AP Business Writer)
Wall Street soars on report that federal govenment will create entity to hold banks' debt
NEW YORK (AP) -- Wall Street had a stunning late-session turnaround Thursday, shooting higher and hurtling the Dow Jones industrials up more than 400 points after a report that the federal government may create an entity that will take over banks' bad debt.
The report on CNBC said Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson is considering the formation of an entity like the Resolution Trust Corp. that was set up after the failure of savings and loan banks in the 1980s.
Investors were cheered by the notion of a huge federal intervention like the establishment of RTC to acquire the real estate debt that has hobbled financial institutions and led to the intense volatility in the markets this week.
A superfund is at this point in the process of the dissolution of the FIRE Economy a desperate last stand. It takes an equally desperate optimist to believe that the government can continue to pile securities that have no value onto its balance sheet without doing serious harm to the nation's currency.
See today's commentary DJIA falls 7% while gold rises 14%: DJIA/gold ratio reversion continues ($ubscription) for details.
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