Thursday, November 3, 2011
Andy Borowitz and the buy case for Bank of America
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16 comments:
oh fo sho they won't notice
is moynihan really so dim witted to believe the $5 charge would fly? apparent so..
John - I view BAC as somewhat of a binary situation: 1x down or 3x or 4x up. Esentially a call option on USA recovery. What could 'kill' this investment? I.e. what realistic situation could wipe out shareholders on this?
I'm sorry for this, Hempton, because it's off topic but this has almost become a white whale for me.
HRBN's closing seems to be delayed. The OCC is saying that DTCC hasn't distributed money to shareholders because they haven't received it yet. No word as to what's going to happen in the next few days.
If no one writes a book about this crazy company I just might do it myself.
I am just as intrigued by Harbin as anyone. Look at my twitter feed to see what I retweeted.
J
Also on HRBN, what happens if don't fund it? Has this ever happened before?
John,
I cannot find your twitter feed. Can you please provide a link?
Thank you.
http://www.theocc.com/
Its the second link....its not anymore. Its somewhere in the Latest Informemos.
This is from someone who doesnt use twitter and had some small trouble finding the link.
my twitter
http://twitter.com/#!/John_Hempton
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/harbin-electric-completes-closing-of-going-private-transaction-2011-11-03
Not sure if this means anything, but Marketwire seems to have a press release. I cannot find anything new on OCC.com though.
Eh. Borowitz has made a career out of being less funny than the people who first told his jokes. But we all have to make our sacrifices for Mother Earth, I suppose, and at least he's a conscientious recycler.
Where are the barriers to competition?
http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/post/2011/11/credit-unions-add-650k-members-ahead-of-bank-transfer-day/1
With respect to comparables for HRBN, if it in fact fails -There was a small deal around 1980, where Ohio Ferroalloys was to be bought by Fesil, a Scandinavian firm. First there was a price cut on the deal price. There was a vote, and OFER and the lawyers went to the closing, and Fesil never showed up. As Fesil had no US assets, the deal simply broke at the last minute with no way to sue the buyer who reneged.
Well that didn't take long:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/14/business/banks-quietly-ramp-up-consumer-fees.html
"Even as Bank of America and other major lenders back away from charging customers to use their debit cards, many banks have been quietly imposing other new fees...."
The letter is missing a paragraph -
BY forcing you to Bail Us Out Again because we are Too Bigger To Fail and pay gigantic bonus's to C level executives...
hahahaahahaha... suckers
Regards, Your TBTF Ruling Class masters @ BOfA.
Hmmm.....there used to be a gentleman by the name of Mark Effron who worked in the swap group (they were called derivatives in those days) at Goldman Sachs in London in the mid- to late-1980s.
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