This is an amazing lecture. In an hour or so you’ve made the crisis understandable to this person who is fairly smart but with no background in finance (undergrad physics, then medicine). I never understood why 2008 is often cited as a cause of such deep distrust of government at home in the US and abroad, and why it still reverberates today. Holy cow. It’s so much bigger and shadier than i imagined.
So many quotable lines. My favourite “you couldn’t do law enforcement because if you did law enforcement you would jeopardise public confidence in the banks.” That’s how no one went to jail. Not because crimes weren’t committed but because of fear of bank failure. 10/10. Great lecture
Gordon Brown favoured “light touch” regulation of the banks. The run on Northern Rock was the first since the Victorian era. 125% loans. What could go wrong?
As a resident of the UK, I can tell you that the taxes on ordinary people is not low and we are being screwed big time. The taxes on the extremely rich might not be with tax advice and loop holes to avoid the taxes ordinary citizens pay.
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.
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.
I wholeheartedly concur; I'm 60 years old, just retired, and have about $1,250,000 in non-retirement assets. Compared to the whole value of my portfolio during the last three years, I have no debt and a very little amount of money in retirement accounts. To be completely honest, the information provided by invt-advisors can only be ignored but not neglected. Simply undertake research to choose a trustworthy one.
There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Colleen Rose Mccaffery” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
I started my first semester in September 2008 as a community college transfer student to state university. I didn't know anything about politics or economics, I was an English major, but I happened to be taking a political science course to fill a requirement. I remember another student who knew a lot about mortgages arguing with the professor, telling her she didn't know what she was talking about. It was a heated time, and keep in mind this came at the end of 8 years of Bush, who was hated passionately, and the utopian wishing for an Obama administration. Two years later in 2010 I graduated with a BA in English. What a decade the next ten years would be for me, economically and politically. This decade after 2008 defined me and many like me, thanks for the great lecture.
Pretty much no economists back then and still very few now actually know how anything in banking and the economy works. Your colleague that argued the professor was probably correct.
"Self evident ", implied in self-defining, and know how you are your Self by Observation. It's always NOW everywhere-when in the modulation pulse-evolution management mechanism of Logarithmic Time Duration Timing.., less mysterious when you are prepared to see precisely what is under inaccurate labeling, in Actuality. That's the defining message of this talk. Thank you.
95% of Chinese expressed satisfaction with their government while only 35% Americans expressed satisfaction with their government in Harvard and Gallup polls
He lost me at how the bankers abused minorities People with bad credit pay higher rates period, he's obviously never put his own money up He also seemed to leave out how the democratic congress threatened banks for years to make these loans to minority neighborhoods Mortgage failures in the US were steady for 80 years until Congress forced banks to make loans to people who had terrible credit Unsurprisingly those people with bad credit failed on their payments
80 years? That is total BS. You don't even get from 1929 to 2009 that way. Never mind the savings & loan crisis. On top of that, you'll find more middle class houseflippers than mexican strawberry pickers among the contents of bad MBS from the first two subprime waves in the 1994-2008 period. One cause of the crisis is the Bush admin equating triple-A rated MBS with Fannie and Freddie MBS. That's the moment big banks get permission to repackage the radioactive credit risk that they did. But the banks have succeeded in drawing the wool over the eyes of people like you, by pretending democrats and affordable housing goals were the root, instead of their own apathic risk management. Anyone ever seen a banker do what Congress wanted? Me neither. Not until after the crisis. That's when you start engineering bullshit about minorities to deflect blame.
Exactly, one of the reason why the banks started lending to people to bad credit was due to the government badgering them to start loaning subprime and lowering requirements. The banks have no motivation to abuse "minorities" specifically, if they are able to make money on them, but if they largely lose out on defaulted loans by groups with poor credit histories, then they will be less likely to loan these groups money.
One of the most lucid and comprehensive breakdowns of the crisis I've encountered. Thanks for posting.
This is an amazing lecture. In an hour or so you’ve made the crisis understandable to this person who is fairly smart but with no background in finance (undergrad physics, then medicine). I never understood why 2008 is often cited as a cause of such deep distrust of government at home in the US and abroad, and why it still reverberates today. Holy cow. It’s so much bigger and shadier than i imagined.
So many quotable lines. My favourite
“you couldn’t do law enforcement because if you did law enforcement you would jeopardise public confidence in the banks.”
That’s how no one went to jail. Not because crimes weren’t committed but because of fear of bank failure.
10/10. Great lecture
Gordon Brown favoured “light touch” regulation of the banks. The run on Northern Rock was the first since the Victorian era. 125% loans. What could go wrong?
As a resident of the UK, I can tell you that the taxes on ordinary people is not low and we are being screwed big time. The taxes on the extremely rich might not be with tax advice and loop holes to avoid the taxes ordinary citizens pay.
2:09 Lecture start
02:00:21 lecture end!
01:06:09 some other stuff
01:45:55 the word wobble!
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.
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.
I wholeheartedly concur; I'm 60 years old, just retired, and have about $1,250,000 in non-retirement assets. Compared to the whole value of my portfolio during the last three years, I have no debt and a very little amount of money in retirement accounts. To be completely honest, the information provided by invt-advisors can only be ignored but not neglected. Simply undertake research to choose a trustworthy one.
There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Colleen Rose Mccaffery” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
Thanks a lot for this suggestion. I needed this myself, I looked her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.
Now? Its been that way for over 30 years.
I started my first semester in September 2008 as a community college transfer student to state university. I didn't know anything about politics or economics, I was an English major, but I happened to be taking a political science course to fill a requirement. I remember another student who knew a lot about mortgages arguing with the professor, telling her she didn't know what she was talking about. It was a heated time, and keep in mind this came at the end of 8 years of Bush, who was hated passionately, and the utopian wishing for an Obama administration. Two years later in 2010 I graduated with a BA in English. What a decade the next ten years would be for me, economically and politically. This decade after 2008 defined me and many like me, thanks for the great lecture.
Pretty much no economists back then and still very few now actually know how anything in banking and the economy works. Your colleague that argued the professor was probably correct.
"Self evident ", implied in self-defining, and know how you are your Self by Observation. It's always NOW everywhere-when in the modulation pulse-evolution management mechanism of Logarithmic Time Duration Timing.., less mysterious when you are prepared to see precisely what is under inaccurate labeling, in Actuality.
That's the defining message of this talk. Thank you.
Can’t wait for part 2!
Excellent. Congratulations. Thank you for sharing. 👏
#10 interesting overview of financial banks. I wonder if November elections results will follow similar patterns or lead to financial crisis.
N the first will be last..
N the last will be first..
95% of Chinese expressed satisfaction with their government while only 35% Americans expressed satisfaction with their government in Harvard and Gallup polls
He lost me at how the bankers abused minorities
People with bad credit pay higher rates period, he's obviously never put his own money up
He also seemed to leave out how the democratic congress threatened banks for years to make these loans to minority neighborhoods
Mortgage failures in the US were steady for 80 years until Congress forced banks to make loans to people who had terrible credit
Unsurprisingly those people with bad credit failed on their payments
I agree, the introduction of this fake racist narrative stopped me watching this
80 years? That is total BS. You don't even get from 1929 to 2009 that way. Never mind the savings & loan crisis. On top of that, you'll find more middle class houseflippers than mexican strawberry pickers among the contents of bad MBS from the first two subprime waves in the 1994-2008 period.
One cause of the crisis is the Bush admin equating triple-A rated MBS with Fannie and Freddie MBS. That's the moment big banks get permission to repackage the radioactive credit risk that they did. But the banks have succeeded in drawing the wool over the eyes of people like you, by pretending democrats and affordable housing goals were the root, instead of their own apathic risk management.
Anyone ever seen a banker do what Congress wanted? Me neither. Not until after the crisis. That's when you start engineering bullshit about minorities to deflect
blame.
Exactly, one of the reason why the banks started lending to people to bad credit was due to the government badgering them to start loaning subprime and lowering requirements. The banks have no motivation to abuse "minorities" specifically, if they are able to make money on them, but if they largely lose out on defaulted loans by groups with poor credit histories, then they will be less likely to loan these groups money.
Greed.
😷☕🇺🇸
biggest theft in history = lol