Isn't there an inverse Jim Cramer ETF?
SWCBonfire said:
Isn't there an inverse Jim Cramer ETF?
cone said:
the pressure on Jay Powell must be completely crushing
Yes, I agree, I think we're looking at another .5% increase very soon.tremble said:cone said:
the pressure on Jay Powell must be completely crushing
I think Powell has come to the realization that he must become the Batman for the markets. I don't think he cares about his short-term reputation, nor should he. He's only one man, but he can take steps (rising rates) to combat the financial insanity that resulted in "tech" companies lighting money on fire to try and push scale.
i hope he's got the stomach for the fightQuote:
I think Powell has come to the realization that he must become the Batman for the markets.
Or in medicine, PE/VC can just take out massive loans and buy out everyoneDies Irae said:It's actually a great thing and needed for the economy to actually become "real". Easy obtainable money throws the "risk/reward" equation out of whack and creates havoc in the industry, like the situation I mentioned above where bad companies can put good companies out of business because they don't care about making profit when they have billions from San Jose.Admiral Adama said:LMCane said:
well stated
aside from a bank failure
won't this make it much more difficult for new startups to get funding and actually succeed?
bullish for the economy!
Yes, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. If the source of that start up funding was due to unprofitable lending from a culture of grow market share, grow fast and break things, we are big tech and we'll figure out the business plan later, it shouldn't have been given out in the first place.
There's still going to be tons of venture funds that will just tell their clients to move their operating accounts to Chase.
SWCBonfire said:
This says SJIM
https://www.thestreet.com/etffocus/blog/inverse-cramer-etf-is-live
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Waiting for the screams next Wednesday when startups don't make mid-month payroll.
CDUB98 said:SWCBonfire said:
This says SJIM
https://www.thestreet.com/etffocus/blog/inverse-cramer-etf-is-live
It only started on March 1 of this year and has a ridiculous expense ratio. Will have to pass for the moment. Need more data.
back in 2008-10, the FDIC seemed to standardize this whole receivership process.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Waiting for the screams next Wednesday when startups don't make mid-month payroll.
LMCane said:
well stated
aside from a bank failure
won't this make it much more difficult for new startups to get funding and actually succeed?
bullish for the economy!
CDUB98 said:
Wow, thank you. Gonna put that on my watchlist.
Definitely Not A Cop said:
There has been a sentiment for about 10-15 years that it's ok to throw insane amounts of money at apps like Facebook, Snapchat, etc, based on the amount of eyeballs it makes, not the profits it produces.
If that is widespread throughout the VC industry, I could see a big course correction coming to them.
UPDATES - US treasury chief voices ‘concern’ amid bank sell-offhttps://t.co/AWrH4DHmEC
— Insider Paper (@TheInsiderPaper) March 10, 2023
Then again, if your company did payroll through Rippling (which uses SVB), you're not getting paid this weekhttps://t.co/ohxVi4YZFB
— Aaron Stannard (@Aaronontheweb) March 10, 2023
My post to our employees. This is dumpster fire. From regulators to SV investors doing nothing to bailout their companies from breaching contracts. pic.twitter.com/ye8W8AkNaq
— Alex Meshkin, GED (@alexmeshkin) March 10, 2023
It's the same story with everyone, nobody wants to be the one who gets blamed when the jukebox stops, whether we've got quarters or not.Kansas Kid said:
The key bank to watch is Credit Suisse. SVB is too small by itself to cause a repeat of 08 but CS has some serious problems and is a too big to fail type of firm in the global economy
This is the issue with zero interest rates for 12 years and Obama and Trump both pushed for it. Trump even wanted the negative rates from the Fed that the Europeans had. It felt great if you had money invested in stocks, bonds or real estate while it lasted but it was like a drug addiction causing a bubble in all assets. Getting out of the everything bubble caused by that and the massive stimulus money is going to be painful for a lot of people.
ChiefKiefton said:
Would this affect banks like Wells Fargo? My account went to zero this morning and it seems to be happening to a lot of people.
Damn!
— The Real Johnald (@SavageDystrophy) March 10, 2023
NYPD called to Silicon Valley Bank branch as depositors attempt to pull cash: report
@dailyrealtimenews https://t.co/s2tdUgnp5U
I remember at the time "60 Minutes" did a piece on the FDIC taking over a bank with a lot of behind-the-scenes stuff. It wasn't an industry-specific bank like SVB appears to be but just a standard neighborhood bank where local residents and businesses had their checking and savings accounts.tysker said:back in 2008-10, the FDIC seemed to standardize this whole receivership process.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Waiting for the screams next Wednesday when startups don't make mid-month payroll.
-show up on Friday AM
-shut down all outgoing transactions
-transfer ownership of accounts to a larger institution after providing some sort of FDIC and Fed-level protection
-open up accounts to customers at 'new' bank on Monday
But I'm not we had a pure bank (not brokers like Bear or Lehman) of this size fail back then. Wachovia maybe but i think that was earlier