I agree with everything Marvin Gandall writes below.  The government has 
decided to start up a vulture fund and buy distressed assets.  However, as it 
is the government, an entity that lost money operating a casino and off-track 
betting, it will inevitably buy high and then either (1) sell low to the 
distressed investors who know what they are doing and have been on the 
sidelines while the government does what it is doing, or (2)  hold the assets 
to maturity on the hope and a prayer that the securities won't default.  Good 
luck.

David Shemano


--- Original Message---
 To: PEN-L <[email protected]>
 From: Marvin Gandall <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 Sent:  9/25/2008  4:58AM
 Subject: [Pen-l] My take - any comments?

>> Excluding the banks and utilities, corporate cash in the US is at an
>> all-time high. The housing and auto industries and heavily indebted
>> companies are in trouble, but major corporations across all the other
>> sectors are well equipped to deal with the credit squeeze. The big hedge
>> funds, commercial banks, and sovereign wealth funds are also sitting on
>> mountains of cash.
>> 
>> The credit markets have seized up, and the official concern bordering on
>> panic about a global financial death spiral does seem geniuine enough. But
>> there is enough private sector domestic and international capital sitting on
>> the sidelines to recapitalize the banks.
>> 
>> However, I think there is, in effect, a capital strike going on designed to
>> force a public rescue of the banks and a subsequent sorting out and fire
>> sale of their (notionally) distressed assets. The entity being created by
>> Treasury with congressional approval will make a market in these assets by
>> buying high and reselling low. The private sector, including many of the
>> banks which were holding these illiquid securities, will then sweep in to
>> buy back the marked down assets and watch them appreciate as the financial
>> sector recovers.
>> 
>> Warren Buffett's comment that he was buying into Goldman Sachs in
>> anticipation of the bailout was revealing.
>> 
>> At least this is how it seems to me. I don't believe in conspiracies, but
>> politics, war, and business do have a lot in common with poker and chess.
>> 
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>> 
>> 
>> 


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