hom36rown
Well-Known Member
Your little equation is ridiculous on so many levels.those little equations are used by some of the most successful investors in the world. they are common practice in every business, from manufacturing, to investment banking. it's called PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS. they are made to ignore all other factors that one cannot control, because of that very same reason. every mathematical model ignores, or assumes as constant, factors that cannot be calculated or accurately estimated. uncontrolled factors such as so many people were going to buy cars anyway, is a baseless assertion, and anyways is not the focus of the time value money analysis i completed.
I agree. What's your point?it is not the government's fault that domestic auto makers were making cars that americans don't want to buy anymore. how many times do we need to go through this. THEY WERE MANAGING THEMSELVES INTO THE GROUND. if you cannot see the mentality of these CEO's and what not: they each flew a different private jet into the capital to ask the government for money because they were broke. maybe if they were more focused on the market, and on american consumer trends instead of living the good life in lala land they would be doing as good as foreign automakers....
As they should be."and now people will be less motivated to buy a car without some sort of handout on the table" actually, people are less motivated to buy a car because we are in a recession. everyone is wary that they might be the next one laid off.
I didn't blame poor car sales on the lack of handouts. I just said some people may be less motivated to buy a car now without a handout on the table, which is true...that was only a very small part of my argument though.to blame poor car sales on the government not giving a handout is good old fashioned bullshit.
LOL, I did not say, sales are down because there are no more handouts. Stop putting words in my mouth. Sales are down, because everyone who was going to buy a car in the near future, rushed to buy one in time to get the tax credit. Basically fitting a couple months worth of sales in to a few weeks. And that is all the program did really...Its estimated(oh dear, I'm using an estimate), that 60% of people would have bought a car within the year anyway...blame the poor economic climate. blame the layoffs, blame outsourcing, the blame game is pointless, until the recession ends sales in general are going to be poor. sales are not gonna be poor because the government isn't giving a hand-out. stop spreading this misleading information, it is just not true, if you choose to believe it i have no problem, but that you blatantly spread it is an insult to intelligence.
You mean those same companies that you just railed on for being inefficient and wasting money? And agian, most of these people would have bought a car in the near future anyway...and destroying perfectly good vehicles is just stupid.give the government praise because it saved many MANY dealerships from closing, gave people a chance to buy new, more efficient vehicles, put money in their pockets, and scrapped all those innefficient, old, antiquated cars off the street.
No...its not.the government actually doing something that's not meant for the corporate swine, doing something that worked, doing something to help people weather this storm and you go around spreading nonsense propaganda...
So people have no responsibility for the loans they take out...they should not worry about whether they can pay it or not, the bank will decide that...give me a break.here you are blaming people for taking on loans they cannot afford....
if you did not know it is up to banks and finance institutions to manage their own risk. , the bank doesn't have to automatically sign off on a loan and approve it. and Allowance for Doubtful accounts is a real accounting term, and estimated with accuracy, and it is up to the banks to decide who affords what. it is not the other way around.
You know, that was a really long post, for not even refuting anything I said.the fact that they (the banks) hide the REAL amount of risk they are carrying in the name of good unrealized profit numbers deep deep in their financial statements is a matter of poor regulation and disclosure.
it is also a matter of allowing creative accounting to put numbers that look great, then hiding the truth behind those numbers with complicated calculations and paragraph behind paragraph of horrendously difficult to understand wording. no wonder investors never saw this coming.