Saturday, September 27, 2008

SAVING AMERICAN ECOMONY The Right Way

BAIL OUT, RESCUE, GOVERNMENT, and COMMON SENSE

RONALD REAGAN: “Government does not solve problems; it subsidizes them.”

Bailout Definitions:

PRATT definitions of a bailout: “Tossing water out of a sinking ship without plugging the hole.”

PRATT definition of Government financial bailout: “Tossing my money into the sinking ship with a hole in it.”

WASHINGTON definition: “We allowed your ship to have a hole in it. Now we are keeping your ship from sinking by stuffing money in the leak. This is temporary. Together we can all row to shore while we decide who caused the leak. We think the money stuffing is good for the economy. Please agree with us, after all we are doing this for your own good.”

Football coaches reminded us when we wanted to give up: “No pain, no gain.” We were taught by those coaches that "performance excellence" required "practicing excellence." You can't "bailout" a game when "excellence" matters and no one can hand high performance to you. Bailouts sound mighty good when you can’t quickly assume responsibility for the the travesty of poor performance, and saving "hail Mary's" seldom come to the rescue.

Magic Wands for Fixing Ships?: Congress treats their check book privileges like a magic wand. No market responsibility, just demagoguery in hopes the market "responds." A billion here, a billion there in magic; but please no "responsibility." Wish I could wave financial "fix it wands" over the manuscripts my reviewers give "10's" to, but the market decision-makers (publishers) decide aren't quite worthy of the next 6 figure advance. If I goof in any given area of performance I don't have them to bail me out, nor do I want them to. I am “fixing” my ship in every port of call, before the next storm or dangerous tides. How? By editing my behaviors, and constant production of new value. Downturns are "my turn" to assess, fix, and course correct. This has been my constant focus for five years of writing against the currents. High quality products now appear to be gaining momentum and increased worth to buyers as a result.

Why? Struggle-inspired solutions... Patching the hole isn't the answer. Re-fitting the ship is. Perhaps the Wall Street paper manipulators should take struggle as a learning opportunity to improve future performance. Will the government let them? Ah well...who am I to lecture the financial genius dressed in degrees from Princeton, Yale, Harvard, et al, who created the mess they are eager for me to help clean up? Bet they won't have to "chip in" to save their sinking ship. Watch carefully, as they quietly row safely away from the Titantic...

"God help us all if this bailout fails.” Quote, Warren Buffet Sept. 25th 2008. One of the richest men to have ever lived on the planet owns Berkshire Hathaway, whose 'Class A' shares are valued at $143,000 per share. Yes, you read that right. What does this mean? The guy understands values. He’s smart. He’s patient. He follows the rules of investing. He buys real value and doesn’t invest in overinflated, hyped properties or worthless paper. He just personally “rescued” Goldman Sachs by buying a significant stake for 5 BILLION cash. (Seems the old axiom, “Buy when blood is running in the streets…” holds true. Buffett just made $783,000,000 in one day on that investment plus locked in guarantees on stock purchases for five years at fire-sale rates.)

Marketplace Rescue: "Mr. Buffet, excuse me? ‘God help us?’ You are suggesting we 'bailout' this disaster created by greed merchants? You’ll walk away with sweet deals either way. The market always corrects itself. You know that. Worried your $143,000 per share might take a hit? So, are you worried about us little guys too, or want us little guys to collectively offer 700 BILLION dollars to prop up financial industry big guys so that us little guys don’t feel so much pain?"

“God help 'US'?” I respect the talent of Mr. Buffett; his professional calculated risk taking. But isn't his asking us, the little guy to insure Wall Street through a taxpayer 'bailout" a mitigation for his risk? Sure, it really is about jobs and the loss of them and our income. We get the "big picture." We know it may result in tough times for the average guy...

IDEA and CONGRATULATIONS! What an opportunity. How many times does bargain-basement stock day opportunities come along in a life-time? Why don’t you put some buddies together and purchase Wall Street instead of asking us to? You guys take the risk and reward! It's a world economy. Take control and be men! Imagine what you could control...and the power! There have to be a few more billionaires milling around smelling the blood and with your combined skills, willing to take a risk.

If you lose then pull out your AARP discount card like the rest of us and tighten belts. A little painful to contemplate? You ever play football?

GOD HELP US... God will help us when we learn integrity, grit, values, and honor. I understand real bailouts. I've done it. Left school and my dreams; paid for by the US Army, to stand with struggling parents in their recession-hit business 6 days a week for four years in my prime education years. Learned alot about real economy, the marketplace, and from suffering, Mr. Buffett...

SO... Should I insure your investments for my own good? Congress and President Bush think so.

Real bailouts come from people working shoulder to shoulder with respect for each's value, through tough times, and not capitalizing on their positions of trust hurting the shareholders of a common dream. God help us, indeed, to learn and not ask for dollars from heaven to rain on the results of poor choices, or greed, power-mongering, and mis-management of resources he already gave us!

Financial Value and bureaucrats: “Value” means an increase from a subjective monetary worth to an objective point of view governed by what the market says something I produce is worth. If government sets the value, rescues my dream, the market goes away. It (the marketplace) doesn’t want to pay for a product where price is determined through bureaucrats. (Socialism)

Government “Public Servants” to the rescue: “Hey public servants… thanks for being ‘on time.’ Thanks for seeing the early warning signs of this problem and rescuing us as the ship sinks! All you wizards at “serving the people” are doing just that; “serving” us up on a ‘golden platter’ filled with financial parachutes for those who failed shareholders through fraud, deceit, and incompetence.

Punish Theft: I’m not sure I can improve on those two words. This much is true. Theft of value, real money, and trust of shareholders was a combination of greed, manufacturing bogus values, and incompetence. Will it go unpunished?

Who gets punished: Some of us little people are not stupid. We chose our common everyday lifestyles and who we are, often because we don’t want to live a life of lies, false pretense, and thievery. Seems like the guilty get “life rafts,” freeing them to sail away from the sinking ship with government help to some eternal pina colada party while we the shareholders of our government and national interest find the hole, fix the hole, and sail their ship to port.

These rantings feel really good. I encourage everyone to write to get their anger out, and if you do, share with others. If you've read this far, you and I share something in common; an understanding of what the word "value" really means.

“Thanks Coach Paris, Mears, Cratty, Mieke. ‘No pain no gain…’ You taught us average boys well. We’ll get through this.”

Finally leave it to "the Gipper" to make sense: RONALD REAGAN

“Government's view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it. Governments tend not to solve problems, only to rearrange them.”

MORE COMING SOON... JMP www.jmpratt.com and www.powerthink.com.

1 comment:

Larry McGarr said...

I don't know about those companies that financed buyers with no down payments and no proof of income. Those guys should go to jail. But I had a home foreclosed on by Litton Loan Servicing back in 2006, even though I had an offer on my house that would have paid the principal off.

Litton Loan is one of those companies that assumes mortgages. I financed a loan through Crown Bank. They were a great company to deal with. But in less than two years, my loan had been sold to Citibank and it was serviced by Litton Loan. From the beginning I started having problems. I had mailed a payment to Crown just one day before receiving notice that my loan had been sold. Litton claimed Crown never sent them the money. I couldn't double up on payments, so every payment I made was late.

I would send a payment in plenty of time to arrive before the due date, but Litton Loan would hold my check for three weeks before depositing it, thus I was hit with more late fees. Before I knew it I was thousands of dollars behind, even though I never missed a payment. In an effort to just get out of the mess and avoid foreclosure, I put the house on the market. I had one offer that would have paid off the principal, but Litton wanted their 'fees' and refused to accept the offer. They ended up taking the house in foreclosure and selling it for less than what I was offered, leaving me with lousy credit.

Something needs to be done about these leeches who manipulate and rip off home buyers. How many people lost their homes due to circumstances like mine? Forget about not having a means of paying for a house; what about being legally robbed and defamed just so the tax payers could bail out companies that have no incentive to work with the buyer?

Rather than give billions of dollars to banks; why doesn't Congress pay off the homes of those in foreclosure, thus saving both the home and paying off the banks? Why do the banks get a bail out and keep the houses they've foreclosed on? Why should they be allowed to resell something they didn't lose money on? I'd rather help a desperate homeowner than pay Litton Loan's customer no-service representatives and executives.

Tax payers need to file a class action suit against all of the CEOs who made millions scamming average Americans. We should take their homes and give them to people who are homeless because of their greed. I'm ticked off. Ronald Reagan was right, the biggest lie today is when someone says "I'm from the government and I'm here to help you."