RandFan
Mormon Atheist
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2001
- Messages
- 60,135
It's not misleading.What does this have to do with the fact that the picture you posted was completely misleading.
From the article:
It was simply a sweet-heart deal. No, not entirely risk free but the public bore most of the risk. I stand by the picture. No one offered to give me $220M to purchase loans where the public would eat 90% of any losses. You?It's hard to imagine a pair of people you would less want to hand a giant welfare check to — yet that's exactly what the Fed did. Just two months before the Macks bought their fancy carriage house in Manhattan, Christy and her pal Susan launched their investment initiative called Waterfall TALF. Neither seems to have any experience whatsoever in finance, beyond Susan's penchant for dabbling in thoroughbred racehorses. But with an upfront investment of $15 million, they quickly received $220 million in cash from the Fed, most of which they used to purchase student loans and commercial mortgages. The loans were set up so that Christy and Susan would keep 100 percent of any gains on the deals, while the Fed and the Treasury (read: the taxpayer) would eat 90 percent of the losses. Given out as part of a bailout program ostensibly designed to help ordinary people by kick-starting consumer lending, the deals were a classic heads-I-win, tails-you-lose investment.
No it doesn't. It gives the impression that these two people, who are wives of wealthy businessmen, benefited from 220 million dollars of public money for no apparent reason other then they had connections to people who could fix them the deal. A fact not disclosed to the public.It gives the impression that these people were given 220 million dollars to do with as they pleased.
That it is convenient belies your point.I wasn't commenting on whether or not it was convenient. I was showing how you made a misleading statement.
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