There’s been a lot of talk of late about how the federal government should jump into the mortgage market and either entice or force servicers to rewrite big swaths of loans in order to keep homeowners out of foreclosure. It’s kind of a crazy, but right before the weekend JP Morgan Chase announced it would be implementing such a program …
The shape of the recession
Lots of news organizations offer assessments of whether or not we’re in a recession, or advice on what to do if we are. Here at the Curious Capitalist we focus on the really important stuff–like what shape the recession will be. Together with TIME.com graphics czar Feilding Cage, I have assembled a groundbreaking gallery of potential …
The glorious return of the archives
In the first days after the Great TIME.com Blog Crash of 2008, the Curious Capitalist temporarily lost its past. Now the hardworking geniuses at TIME.com have restored the archives. Not just all the posts but all your comments (excluding any comments left back when this blog lived at CNNMoney, but those were lost long ago). And links to …
Misery loves company: negative equity edition
Almost half of all mortgage holders in Nevada now owe more than their house is worth. Mindboggling to think about. Basically what that means is if you want to sell your house, you’ve got to write a check to the bank on the day you close. Nationwide, the percentage of homeowners with mortgages underwater is 18.3%, with another 5% on the …
GM needs bankruptcy, not a bailout
General Motors would like some taxpayer cash—a bit more than $10 billion should do—to help it buy Chrysler. As a company spokesman told TIME: “We believe the Federal government should consider all of the tools available to it—some recently enacted—to support industries that are in distress and that are essential to the U.S. …
Sometimes government spending is better than a tax cut
Andrew Samwick (inspired by today’s Krugman column) says he told us so:
What we should have done back in January is to start planning for a future in which the consumers, finally, would sensibly retreat (not capitulate) from their debt-laced consumption rampage. Some people [Samwick, that is] were suggesting the following in
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New column: Time to pay the price
My new column is up online and in the magazine with McCain and Obama on the cover, together for perhaps one last time. It begins:
In 2002 the inimitably audacious editorial writers at the Wall Street Journal brought to the nation’s attention the existence of a vast and allegedly pernicious class of “lucky duckies” who pay no federal
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Consoling ourselves through blogging when Serwer and Sloan get the cover
Okay, so I totally missed this. Here’s Time Inc. CEO Ann Moore, talking to the New York Post’s Keith Kelly a little over a week ago:
Moore pointed to the recent Time cover story, “How Wall Street Sold Out America,” which was written by Fortune magazine’s top editor, Andy Serwer, and noted economic and Fortune columnist Allan Sloan.
That
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And the GDP data say … a razor-thin Obama win
With the GDP numbers out today we now have all the inputs needed to figure out who’s going to win the presidential election. At least, we have all the inputs needed to run the Fair Model, Yale economist Ray Fair’s GDP- and inflation-based formula for predicting whether the incumbent party holds onto the White House or not. Plug in real …
An opportunity to invest in cash and pay 2 and 20
Bloomberg has a story this morning about how some high-profile hedge fund managers—Steven Cohen, David Einhorn, Paul Singer—are opening up their funds to new investors for the first time in years. Seems they’re having luck raising money, even as many of their peers are being forced to dump positions to meet redemptions.
As for what …
The GDP report: Moderately bad, perhaps more than moderately misleading
We finally got another quarter of negative GDP–the first since a year ago. The third-quarter number (-0.3%) will be revised as more data come in over the next couple of months, though, and economist Roger Kubarych of Italo-German superbank Unicredit (whose analysis was the first to land in my e-mail inbox) actually thinks it may go …
Karl Rove on Republicans and suburbs
In a break from our regularly scheduled business and economics programming, I offer some notes I just dug up from a conversation I had with Karl Rove about four years ago (on Sept. 10, 2004, to be precise).
We were mostly talking about William McKinley (a favorite subject of his) and the urban-oriented majority McKinley forged for the …