- there is a large grassed area where large family groups (extended newer-Australian families, drunk groups of younger Anglo-Saxons) have barbeques, play cricket or kick soccer balls, and
- propped against the southern edge of the beach is a big rock hole which is very child-friendly at low tide. Bulldozers have dragged the rocks out of the centre – and left a beautiful and calm sandy swimming hole – known ubiquitously as the “bogey hole”. You can see a picture of it in calm conditions here.
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Weekend edition: surf lifesaving as a spectator sport
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Even Krugman doesn't get how plainly irrationally bad it is out there
The Fed is confusing me
OK, so the Fed is planning to buy obligations of the GSEs — as well as securities guaranteed by the GSEs. This is in an effort to lower spreads. The Fed will in effect pay for these purchases by having the Treasury issue U.S. government debt.
But the GSEs have been nationalized. Their obligations are already U.S. government debt. What’s going on here?
It’s true, as the Fed’s statement says, that
Spreads of rates on GSE debt and on GSE-guaranteed mortgages have widened appreciably of late.
But that’s presumably because the Bush administration, weirdly, has refused to declare that GSE debt is backed by the full faith and credit of the US government. Why not just make that declaration, turning GSE debt into Treasury obligations, rather than stuff the obligations onto the balance sheet of the Federal Reserve?
Is this some kind of strange political game? Is there something else going on here? Inquiring minds want to know.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Proof we are not in Kansas any more
Arguably the best proxy disclosure of the year
During fiscal 2008, the Compensation Committee determined that maintaining a lease on a private airplane was no longer a cost-effective method for providing business-related transportation to our Named Executive Officers and Directors. The airplane was used only for business-related travel, and personal use was not permitted. With the termination of the lease on the airplane, it also became increasingly difficult and cost prohibitive to access our Canadian fish camp. Consequently, the fish camp, which was only used for business entertainment purposes, was offered for sale during 2008. The only offer to purchase the fish camp came from Terry L. Haines, our former Chief Executive Officer and President. Ultimately we negotiated with Mr. Haines to sell the fish camp for a purchase price of $55,000 and the transaction closed during fiscal year 2009.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Reaction to the bailout
The Brad DeLong question - and how to design a bailout that works
Why oh why can't we have a better press corps? Eric Dash and Julie Creswell write that:• Citigroup had poor risk controls.• As a result, the bank owned $43 billion of mortgage-related assets that it incorrectly thought were safe.• They weren't.• And so as a result the market value of Citi has collapsed by a factor of ten: from $200 billion to $20 billion.To which the only appropriate response is: "Huh?" How can losses out of $43 billion of optimistically overvalued asserts eliminate $224 billion of value? Eric Dash and Julie Creswell don't answer that question. They don't even seem to recognize that it is a question that they should be interested in. That they were given this story to write, and that no editors said "wait a minute! this doesn't add up!" is yet another signal that the New York Times is in its death spiral: not the place to go to learn anything about an issue.
Monday, November 24, 2008
I risk being detained by the Latvian secret police
Tax benefits, Wells and Wachovia
A more sensible idea: A Citigroup pre-pack bankruptcy
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Why Sheila Bair must resign
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