Stock Market Gains From Past Three Years Wiped Out

Back to blog

GREED, GREED

Did you notice that we did not have this problem untill the democrates took the house, greed greed greed. GOD still ownes this world,

cletlis.graham of LA @ Oct 22, 2008 06:51:16 AM

seriously? al qaeda?

maybe you don't understand how the markets work, or the definition of the word leverage. unless al qaeda has been infiltrating wall street for the last 25 years your scenario is preposterous.

these banks and investment and lending institutions were taking money they had, borrowing between 3 & 30 times that same amount to make investments. they would pay back the loans & keep the profits. lots of these investments were in mortgage-backed securities. mortgages were being written to get anyone who attempted to buy a house into a house. these mortgages were written in such a way that people could make their payments for a year or two or three. after that the terms change and the amount of the payments skyrocketed in many cases. also, when the bankruptcy bill was rewritten there was no protection for people who file bankruptcy due to medical reasons. medical reasons were previously the #1 reason for mortgage defaults. with the rising costs of health care and the swelling numbers of people who are uninsured or under-insured, coupled with these bogus mortgages has caused record-breaking foreclosures. these defaulting loans are mixed into huge packages of thousands and tens of thousands of mortgages so now there is a situation where the holders of these mortgage-backed securities don't have any idea what their investments are worth.

institutional and individual investors get worried and decide that they want to pull their money out so that they don't lose their profits from the past several years. so many investors did this that cash started running out and when attempts were made to cash in on the paper wealth it came to light that money wasn't actually there.

so basically it hsa been a grand illusion of wealth.

now truly there are people that made huge earnings in this whole situation. the ones who kept it are the ones who got out early. any real money that was made was either pulled out or now sits frozen. for everyone else they are sitting around scratching their asses and wondering where their money went.

most of the value that was added to the stock market in the past few years was artificial and now it is being corrected. problem is that now that wealth is gone, costs are not going to fall in unison. there will be greater demand for basics and less demand for luxury in this next year or two.

al qaeda's role is different. bin laden announced his war with us in 1996. He stated that his aim was to attack America and cause us to fight an unwinnable war and drain our treasury. bush & co fell into that trap. we are dumping over 10 BILLION dollars a month into Iraq and Afghanistan of money we don't even have. In an attempt to assuage Americans fears, and distract the citizens from what is going on over there Bush overcompensated by turbo-charging our consumption based economy. That was all done on credit. So we've thrown away hundreds of billions of dollars, our country is falling apart, and bin ladens bones are laughing away in a cave somewhere

Drew of NY @ Oct 19, 2008 20:25:04 PM

Recency.....cont.

If you are in your 50s and intend to retire in 10 or 15 years, this market is heaven-sent to purchase stocks at unheard of values. Missed your chance at buying cheap stocks in the 2002-2003 bear market? The gods of Wall Street gave you a second chance! (I still regret not buying more stocks 21 years ago in Oct. of 1987 when the Dow fell 22% in a day!)

Oh....and Al Qadea might not cheer so loudly when it looks at its own portfolio i.e. oil revenue from Saudi Arabia, and find that oil has plummetted into the $80 range! I suspect they will soon be asking Allah to smile upon the world-wide fiscal bailout to shore up their own finances to defeat the Great Satan!

David of CA @ Oct 13, 2008 22:42:32 PM

Too bad...soooo sad.

Magnus of @ Oct 12, 2008 19:19:51 PM

1 Not so fast, The markets could recover. If you sold you lost. If you held on you may recover.

2 As to the recent wild markets:

It seems suspicious that the financial crisis occurred during the US election season. On his new TV show Mike Huckabee (FOX NEWS) suggested that there could be malicious manipulation that caused the wild swings in the markets recently. That this could be economic terrorism. Coincidently, a recent Al Qaeda tape cheered the crisis. Could Huckabee be correct; was this an act of terror against the modern world financial system? Sounds logical

Jerry L of PA @ Oct 12, 2008 15:16:36 PM

Investors Be Damned!!!

Everyone seems to be concerned about business investors when it is the personal investors who rely most upon their investments for living not simply playing the market. While I understand the arguments about job creation and such, the modern outsourcing craze negates old arguments of business tax breaks, trickle-down economics, increased revenues, etc... in favor of shipping our jobs & money to foreign nations in the name of globalization. Somewhere in this world, someone is eating food which was paid for with American dollars received either from an outsourced job or outsourced investment on our national debt. Greedy investors will do anything for money including starving our citizens yet forget that without America and our citizens their precious investments will soon disappear and the market which they enjoy abusing does not exist in any other nation as they are all constrained by governments except America. Lets first talk about saving and try to salvage what's left of our retirement accounts and let the greedy investors stand in line for a change.

Ray Fisher of NM @ Oct 12, 2008 02:39:18 AM

Back to blog

Add Your Thoughts
About You
Planning to Retire

Planning to Retire

Reporter Emily Brandon tells you how to get ready financially for retirement and to make your golden years the best they can be.

advertisement

advertisement

Subscribe

U.S. News Digital Weekly

A weekly insider's guide to politics and policy — in a multimedia, digital format. 52 issues for $19.95!

U.S. News & World Report

6 months of U.S. News & World Report's print edition for only $15. Save up to 67% off the cover price!