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US Economy in CRISIS! (pg. 19)
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Skipper
quote:
Originally posted by MKpacha
My dad retired the day after the plummet.


Yeah, my BF's mum had her retirement dinner last week.
exstasie
Federal Reserve, Bank of Canada, ECB, Bank of England and other banks have all dropped their lending rates!!

We dropped our rate to 2.5% from 3%!

Don't know if this will have much effect.

And what about TD? They just raised their borrowing rates up 50BP yesterday...they better be lowering those rates back down!

Skipper
there is a good article in the globe today about how the fed's cuts, bailouts and everything else are "firing blanks" - with asian markets down so much this morning, russia halted trading - I'm not convinced this is going to do much. The coordination of the rate cut may reinforce how bad things are! Dow futures are up this morning - but just look at yesterday when the market posted several % pts gain on open and then closed significantly in the red. It's crazy.
MarkT
whoohoo!!!

those of us with variable rate mortgages will take the 50bps drop :)
TO guy
quote:
Originally posted by MarkT
whoohoo!!!

those of us with variable rate mortgages will take the 50bps drop :)


For real. Pretty soon I will be paying 0 interest on the ole mortgage. Time to get that capital down before refinancing at the end of term. Mark, are variable rate mortgages still offered below prime?
Orko
quote:
Originally posted by exstasie
Federal Reserve, Bank of Canada, ECB, Bank of England and other banks have all dropped their lending rates!!

We dropped our rate to 2.5% from 3%!

Don't know if this will have much effect.


It only works if they in fact have money to lend out. Hell they could lower the rate to 1%, but if the banks have nothing in their vaults, then what good is it?
Skipper
quote:
Originally posted by Orko
It only works if they in fact have money to lend out. Hell they could lower the rate to 1%, but if the banks have nothing in their vaults, then what good is it?


The good is that anyone who pays interest on anything now has more cash to pump into the economy.
Orko
Good point, but does it not make saving that much less enticing? And part of the whole credit crunch is that people were not saving enough?
StereoPrincess
quote:
Originally posted by MarkT
whoohoo!!!

those of us with variable rate mortgages will take the 50bps drop :)


or lines of credit :)
Skipper
quote:
Originally posted by Orko
Good point, but does it not make saving that much less enticing? And part of the whole credit crunch is that people were not saving enough?


Some of the cash will end up back in the economy no matter what. Might not make sense, but it does....because Americans like to consume, and they will be told that doing so will help the situation.

MarkT
quote:
Originally posted by StereoPrincess
or lines of credit :)


indeed...although the bank can reset their rates on revolving credit products.

TD-CT just jacked the rate on their secured lines of credit from Prime to Prime + 1% (Prime is standard in the industry).

Further, despite the Bank of Canada's 50bps (0.5%) drop on its target overnight rate, TD only dropped its Prime rate by 25bps (from 4.75% to 4.50%).

This clealry reflects the higher cost of borrowing money faced by the banks these days. It will be intersting to see if the other big banks follow suit, with a more moderate cut to their Prime rates, or if they pass along the full cut (as is normally the case).

edit: CIBC and RBC followed TD's lead. despite the 50bps drop by Bank of Canada, their Prime will only fall 25bps to 4.50%.
spolitta
quote:
Originally posted by Skipper
The good is that anyone who pays interest on anything now has more cash to pump into the economy.


Good luck believing that it will solve any problems...
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