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Reality Bites
22/01/2008, 9:47 AM
I had to add this in alongside the property crash discussion as its the talk of the town!! so has your pension talking a bashing are you running for cover or predicting the Great Depression part two after the events of Blue Monday, The US stock exchange set to open shortly should be interesting!!

Block G Raptor
22/01/2008, 9:54 AM
Asian Markets Plummeted Overnight (http://www.nytimes.com/pages/business/index.html)Not looking good

jebus
22/01/2008, 10:05 AM
Not looking good alright, but I guess thats what happens when you build societies on ridiculous overspending and credit, still we've had a good run in the last ten years of frithering our money away on zany gadgets and booze, we should all be proud

anto1208
22/01/2008, 10:19 AM
This is why a pension is completly worthless one little stock market blip can wipe it out. Only sure fire way to have money when you retire is to buy property or land.

monutdfc
22/01/2008, 10:51 AM
This is why a pension is completly worthless one little stock market blip can wipe it out.
Rubbish. A pension is a long-term investment; look at the long-term returns on equities over any 20-year period and it is positive. A you approach retirement age the fund is moved into cash to insulate it against short-term volatility.

(The biggest problem with pension funds is that you have to buy an annuity with it on the day you retire, and so are exposed to the interest rates on the date of your retirement. But that is changing and by the time I retire I will be able to draw down my pension fund over time.)

BohsPartisan
22/01/2008, 11:13 AM
This is why a pension is completly worthless one little stock market blip can wipe it out. Only sure fire way to have money when you retire is to buy property or land.

I'd suggest keeping it under the bed.


Not looking good alright, but I guess thats what happens when you build societies on ridiculous overspending and credit, still we've had a good run in the last ten years of frithering our money away on zany gadgets and booze, we should all be proud

Good call. Was Ollie Byrne running world Capitalism in his spare time?

dahamsta
22/01/2008, 11:14 AM
Better yet, keep it under my bed.

pete
22/01/2008, 12:10 PM
Pensions will be taking a pounding so no chance I can retire next year :(

If the markets go down they will still come back in the long term so really nothing to worry about for any one under 50 if not older.

I like this quote:


It's a recession when your neighbor loses his job; it's a depression when you lose yours.” ~ Harry S. Truman

Technically a recession is defined as a decline in a country's gross domestic product (GDP), or negative real economic growth, for two or more successive quarters of a year but that is too simplistic. One bank has already said the US in a recession but others slow to follow. I think the US will be first to hit a recession but Ireland may not hit it but will be big downturn this year. Unemployment very low in Ireland so I suppose we working off good base.

If people stop spending money the economy grinds to a halt as tax revenue sinks. Contrary to general opinion I read recently that Irish people actually big savers as a lot of SSIA money went on paying off debts. Compared to the US we fairly frugal as a lot of our debt on property which obviously is a lot better than credit cards & personal loans.

anto1208
22/01/2008, 12:26 PM
Great day to buy shares though ! BOI 9 euro :eek::D

dahamsta
22/01/2008, 12:58 PM
The Fed has cut interest rates by 75 points or three-quarters of one percent. That's one hell of a cut, and it doesn't come from a scheduled meeting either.

http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5g_NKHnzvAfxyeRlIYmguTWg4CHSg

adam

BohsPartisan
22/01/2008, 1:01 PM
Compared to the US we fairly frugal as a lot of our debt on property which obviously is a lot better than credit cards & personal loans.

But that includes people who have re mortgaged houses to pay for Holidays and cars and other stuff. Theres a lot of that about and the banks encouraged it.

OneRedArmy
22/01/2008, 1:33 PM
Unfortunately for Ireland its a bit of a perfect storm, as the wheels falling off our property bubble (to use a Bertie-style metaphor), which is a welcome and overdue event for our long-term health, this has coincided neatly with what appears could be a global recession driven by rising inflation and the credit crunch.

I wouldn't touch any equities for at least the next month or two as I don't think we're near the bottom yet but there will be a lot of value out there if you're in for the long-term.

As for what or what not to invest in, there's no real magic theory. As a few posters have said you need to assess your investment horizon and risk appetite and re-balance according. Diversify as much as you can, and reduce your exposure to volatile assets (eg equities) and increase cash or cash equivalents the closer you get to retirement.

The Fed actions are firmly in the category of shutting the stable door after the horse has bolted. Greenspan clearly saw the writing on the wall when he retired!!

dahamsta
22/01/2008, 1:39 PM
Using "low employment" as a foundation for our future financial security is about as logical - and will be as accurate - as predicting a "soft landing" in the housing market. ;)

John83
22/01/2008, 1:42 PM
The Fed has cut interest rates by 75 points or three-quarters of one percent. That's one hell of a cut, and it doesn't come from a scheduled meeting either.

http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5g_NKHnzvAfxyeRlIYmguTWg4CHSg

adam
Holy ****! When's the last time they did that?

Risteard
22/01/2008, 1:47 PM
1982.

dahamsta
22/01/2008, 1:49 PM
It may have worked though, the Dow hasn't been too bad since it opened.

India was in trouble this morning, they suspended trading when it hit -10%.

adam

OneRedArmy
22/01/2008, 1:49 PM
Using "low employment" as a foundation for our future financial security is about as logical - and will be as accurate - as predicting a "soft landing" in the housing market. ;)My point was squarely based on the maxim that if you're going to suffer pain, get it over with and then you can start the recovery earlier :D

The next few years are not going to be a good experience for many people in Ireland.

dahamsta
22/01/2008, 2:50 PM
I was replying to pete ORA. You've already conceded that the property bubble has burst, and of course the property bubble is responsible for a very large proportion of employment in Ireland. Century Kingspan laid off 24 last week, and that's only the start of it in the building manufacturing sector. Employment on site has been in trouble for months now, what with half of them being closed or on a go-slow and all...

It's over, we just have to cross our fingers now and hope that the dimwits in the US - and closer to home of course - don't drag us all the way down with them.

adam

OneRedArmy
22/01/2008, 3:03 PM
I was replying to pete ORA. You've already conceded that the property bubble has burst, and of course the property bubble is responsible for a very large proportion of employment in Ireland. Century Kingspan laid off 24 last week, and that's only the start of it in the building manufacturing sector. Employment on site has been in trouble for months now, what with half of them being closed or on a go-slow and all...

It's over, we just have to cross our fingers now and hope that the dimwits in the US - and closer to home of course - don't drag us all the way down with them.

adamApologies Adam.

ii've recently heard a few alarming stories about how far the property crash is spreading. One about a large kitchen maker whose sales are down 50% as they specialised in fitting new turnkey homes.

Fasten your seatbelts everyone, there may be some turbulence in the descent!

dahamsta
22/01/2008, 3:34 PM
No need to apologise. TBH I don't monitor local/national news as much as I should* so I'm working more off intuition than anything else; but to be perfectly frank, I'd view anything but some level of doom and gloom as counter-intuitive and counter-productive. There's a bizarre - and dangerous, in my view - lack of realism out there on these subjects, and has been since the downturn started a year or more ago. Deny, deny, deny. What's the point like?

US markets still seem to be holding up.

adam

* Thankfully I have someone to do that for me these days. :)

Reality Bites
22/01/2008, 3:39 PM
I was replying to pete ORA. You've already conceded that the property bubble has burst, and of course the property bubble is responsible for a very large proportion of employment in Ireland. Century Kingspan laid off 24 last week, and that's only the start of it in the building manufacturing sector. Employment on site has been in trouble for months now, what with half of them being closed or on a go-slow and all...

It's over, we just have to cross our fingers now and hope that the dimwits in the US - and closer to home of course - don't drag us all the way down with them.

adam

I am with Adam, I hope we go and OneRedarmy - heres to a recession /depression, Its the four horsemen of the apocalypse if you ask me - Worldwide property Crash / Stock Exchange Crash / need two other Jockeys - possible suggestions include Terry Venables as Irish Manager and deadly strain of Avian Bird Flu...

dahamsta
22/01/2008, 3:53 PM
I'm not averse to a recession, in fact it could could suit me both professionally and personally, as my business is less likely than most to be affected; and I've held off on buying a house for a long time now because of the economy. Neither are guaranteed though, and it doesn't take a lot to push a recession over the brink to a depression.

In general, our economy needs an adjustment in a big way, and that's not going to come from the blinkered economic policies of the incumbents.

I wouldn't wish a depression on anyone though.

adam

jebus
22/01/2008, 5:59 PM
I'm not adverse to a recession because I'm a work shy *******, one who isn't in debt I might add, and a recession would suit my choice of lifestyle

beautifulrock
22/01/2008, 7:31 PM
FTSE nicely up and recovered some of the losses of yesterday, Dow was calm(ish. All eyes on the Hang and the Nikkei now.

Poor Student
22/01/2008, 7:47 PM
Unfortunately for Ireland its a bit of a perfect storm, as the wheels falling off our property bubble (to use a Bertie-style metaphor), which is a welcome and overdue event for our long-term health, this has coincided neatly with what appears could be a global recession driven by rising inflation and the credit crunch.


You forgot to mention the strengthening value of the euro against the dollar and the pound making it harder and harder on exporters. Also, it's possible the ECB will go on to increase interest rates in the near future in an attempt to curb inflation.

pete
22/01/2008, 9:11 PM
Firstly Fed rate cut is a dramatic move when in one go. However they have numerous .25 rate cuts close together in recent years as much quicker to make changes than EU Central Bank. The Federal Reserve is a private bank so possibly not under as much political influence as others.

There is no doubt the Irish construction market in decline but using 24 job loses as an example of a property crash is to put it bluntly bizarre. Could such logic be used in any other sector of the economy? I am sure there are many other job loses in that sector on a daily or weekly basis.

Ireland is still close to full employment & I would prefer to be entering into possible worldwide recession off 4.5% unemployment than 9% (EU average).

I work in an industry that has nothing to do with construction. I find it bizarre that anyone could wish for a recession. Hoping for property price reductions is fair enough but recession? How does that benefit anyone aside from rich equity investors looking to join at the bottom...

:confused:

p.s. In the last 2 years Ireland unemployment rate gone from 4.4 to 4.6%

Bizarre Article on Irish Property (http://www.moneyweek.com/file/29122/is-ireland-heading-for-recession.html)



Morgan Kelly, professor of economics at University College Dublin: He forecasts unemployment reaching 12%-13% within the next year to 18 months, as builders continue to cut back on construction.


:eek:

Stuttgart88
22/01/2008, 9:36 PM
Just on the pension argument, if I'd put 100 euro into stocks on Friday I'd still be quids in because of the tax concession. It's a long term investment anyway and unless you're about to retire this isn't necessarily bad news for anyone with a pension.

There are major imbalances in the global financial system and since the mid to late 90s money has been cheap and its value diminished as a result, hence bad lending decisions and lack of aversion to extreme indebtedness.

My only surprise has been that it has taken the equity markets so long to cop on to what the credit markets have known for months.

My personal view on the US rate cut is that it has been knee jerk feelgood driven rate cuts over the last decade that has caused a lot of the imbalances that have built up this century and that maybe a good old recession - not a deep one - is what's needed to inject a reality check and to restore some normality. On the flipside, the sheer scale of the real asset declines and the absolute aversion to moderately risky lending in the US could be the start of a Japanese style recession so action is justified. It'll be interesting to see how it pans out. My personally favoured policy response is specifically targeted fiscal measures accompanied by appropriate monetary policy. Vague, I know, but monetary policy itself is too blunt an instrument (these rate cuts punish savers for example and it's a lack of savings that has caused this mess) and in Japan monetary policy was like, as Keynes said, "pushing on a piece of string".

The sheer contardiction in the US economic model is funny on a philosopical(?) basis: zero regulation at grass roots lending level (i.e., their favoured "small government") versus the almost communist-style state agency involvement in the mortage market in aggregate, further underwritten by a federal morgtgage bank last resort lender (the FHLB). What is it George W? Big government or small government, or both?

If it's on youtube, Jim Cramer's Dunphyesque rant on CNBC last week is well worth a look.

Very interesting times.

dahamsta
22/01/2008, 9:49 PM
There is no doubt the Irish construction market in decline but using 24 job loses as an example of a property crash is to put it bluntly bizarre.


that's only the start of it in the building manufacturing sector

(For that matter I'm pretty sure it isn't the start of it, weren't there other layoffs in construction manufacturing earlier in the year?)


Ireland is still close to full employmentTry projecting the figures for November and December.

Are you still betting on a magical "soft landing" pete? :)

adam

BohsPartisan
22/01/2008, 9:52 PM
Are you still betting on a magical "soft landing" pete? :)



Did someone say soft landing?
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/44362000/jpg/_44362466_heathrow1.jpg

dahamsta
23/01/2008, 12:00 AM
Arf arf. I actually heard someone on a UK TV programme this week mention the term in relation to their housing market, and nearly widdled myself. Funny how the UK follow us these days instead of vice versa, only with all the wrong things...

OneRedArmy
23/01/2008, 9:49 AM
I work in an industry that has nothing to do with construction. I find it bizarre that anyone could wish for a recession. Hoping for property price reductions is fair enough but recession? How does that benefit anyone aside from rich equity investors looking to join at the bottom... Pete I'd wager your work doesn't involve economics either.

Economies move in cycles and unless we find a way to change this (and nobody has), then recessions are inevitable. Surely you have grasped this? Then the only question becomes one of timing and impact, ie when it will occur, how long it will last and how much it will impact GDP.

In terms of how its beneficial, well, there's an element of Darwinian evolution where less efficient companies are forced out of the market leaving strong companies who are comparitively more productive given scarce resources. Also, generally low interest rates stimulate investment and growth (the major worry this time is that base commody inflation means that rates can't drop and we could have stagflation which would probably produce a very long and deep recession).

Lastly, recession is generally thought of as a historic measure. Due to the time it takes to properly aggregrate and produce GDP, generally by the time the figures are produced and we realise we are in a recession, we've been in it for a while.

As for your comments on the housing market, well they're risible. Nobody was suggesting 24 jobs is the only bad news. Do searches on December construction industry employment and second hand housing stock and you'll see a few more indicators.

Angus
23/01/2008, 12:35 PM
As a cynical man, who works in financial services, I am struggling with the losses reported by investment banks.

The ego driven culture of large investment banks, to me, says that the new CEO's of these firms will only be focussed on increasing the share prices of their firms.

Therefore, while I have no evidence, the numbers look too big to me - my suspicion is that firms have overstated losses to make it easier to achieve profits later in the year. I reckon those guys have written every illiquid asset down to overstate losses now and to write themn back up later in the year..............allegedly.

OneRedArmy
23/01/2008, 1:00 PM
As a cynical man, who works in financial services, I am struggling with the losses reported by investment banks.

The ego driven culture of large investment banks, to me, says that the new CEO's of these firms will only be focussed on increasing the share prices of their firms.

Therefore, while I have no evidence, the numbers look too big to me - my suspicion is that firms have overstated losses to make it easier to achieve profits later in the year. I reckon those guys have written every illiquid asset down to overstate losses now and to write themn back up later in the year..............allegedly.Undoubtedly the case, but then again it always was.

However, its further complicated by the illiquid nature of many of the structured vehicles that containe the assets which basically means you are valuing, and marking, off a model made of fundamentally untested assumptions.

So the truth is likely to be more than the investment banks don't have a clue how accurate their provisions are.

beautifulrock
23/01/2008, 1:22 PM
So the truth is likely to be more than the investment banks don't have a clue how accurate their provisions are.

Indeed and as a result neither do the rating agencies, hence we see sub prime mortgages rated as AAA securities

OneRedArmy
23/01/2008, 1:31 PM
Indeed and as a result neither do the rating agencies, hence we see sub prime mortgages rated as AAA securitiesAbsolutely.

I don't know why a lot of the media seem surprised that ratings agencies have failed to accurately gauge default risk, as every time they are tested they seem to fail. Enron, Brazilian and Asian banks etc have all seen cliff-edge type scenarios with a failure to predict default.

In this context, amount of reliance placed on the credit agencies by the new Basel II Accord is mindblowing (for most smaller institutions who aren't modelling their own default risk).

pete
23/01/2008, 4:44 PM
Until the full details of the sub prime loaded financial products come out I think it will hang over the world economy as investors will be suspicious about who is exposed. In that respect better to know sooner & get over with the recession.

When this is all over financial stocks will be a buy. AIB & BOI will still make big profits just not as big as previously.

dahamsta
23/01/2008, 4:55 PM
Financial stocks were a buy yesterday pete. Waiting for a market to bottom is just plain greedy, there's enough in buying on the way down for any reasonable, patient person.

adam

monutdfc
23/01/2008, 5:03 PM
In this context, amount of reliance placed on the credit agencies by the new Basel II Accord is mindblowing (for most smaller institutions who aren't modelling their own default risk).
And despite my pointing this out several times they want to do the same for Solvency II for insurance

beautifulrock
23/01/2008, 9:29 PM
Until the full details of the sub prime loaded financial products come out I think it will hang over the world economy as investors will be suspicious about who is exposed. In that respect better to know sooner & get over with the recession.



Think most of the banks have now hung out their dirty washing by now while paying off their CEO's with buckets of gold. The next "victims" of the sub prime debacle will be the AAA monoline insurers who provided the wrap security for these transactions. Then we will move to the E&O insurers who are also in serious trouble I would imagine.

Stuttgart88
24/01/2008, 9:08 AM
Societe Generale (SocGen as it's known) has just announced the discovery of massive trading losses (more than 5 billion euros) in equity derivatives due to the actions of a sole rogue trader. Closing out his positions in a sharply falling market seemed to have compounded the losses.

John83
24/01/2008, 9:16 AM
Societe Generale (SocGen as it's known) has just announced the discovery of massive trading losses (more than 5 billion euros) in equity derivatives due to the actions of a sole rogue trader. Closing out his positions in a sharply falling market seemed to have compounded the losses.
Galway are rumoured to have offered him a trial.

Stuttgart88
24/01/2008, 9:22 AM
Galway are rumoured to have offered him a trial.LOL :)

Risteard
24/01/2008, 10:50 AM
Any chance of a recruitment freeze in the civil service, do ye reckon?

dahamsta
24/01/2008, 11:14 AM
What we need is a "jobs for life" freeze. The policy is simply preposterous.

passinginterest
24/01/2008, 11:24 AM
What we need is a "jobs for life" freeze. The policy is simply preposterous.

I believe certain departments have made fairly major strides in this area. Revenue has a bit of a reputation for sacking people.
Disciplinary procedures are certainly clearer now than in the past and promotions have become more performance related, time served no longer increases your chance of promotion (at least it's not supposed to).

Any way that's off topic.

Back on topic:
The end is nigh!
Where's my parachute?

dahamsta
24/01/2008, 11:50 AM
Oh, and can we sack half the middle managers too please?

pete
25/01/2008, 12:59 PM
I thought it was funny the way the French bank claimed trader used elaborate system to hide his trades. How could he hide 5 billion? His managers were sacked & CEO offered his resignation which was rejected.

dahamsta
25/01/2008, 1:51 PM
Have they checked behind the fridge do you think? It's always in the last place you look, like.

beautifulrock
25/01/2008, 4:29 PM
Have they checked behind the fridge do you think? It's always in the last place you look, like.

Have to one of those large American walk in fridges to hide that amount to be fair. :D

John83
26/01/2008, 10:39 AM
Have to one of those large American walk in fridges to hide that amount to be fair. :D
Depends. It could be on a debit card.