Archive for November, 2008

Nov 27 2008

Retrieved European Trip Blog

Published by Forager under travel

Four years ago’s trip to Europe … blogged on BlogSpot. Tried to consolidate to here.

WordPress has a wonderful Import feature that can “suck” the old contents and comments in without any problem. Also added some pictures to some entries after uploading them online.

Don’t know whether Google will index newly added old entries? This one is an additional handle then. Here it is, our 2004 European Trip blogs, dated 2004.08, 09 and 10.

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Nov 26 2008

Black Comedy in Its Truest Sense

Published by Forager under to be refined

Came upon the news that some convicted British terrorists took comedy writing class in jail. They were about to do a standup show b/f it was called back by the Justice Minister.

I thought about mass forwarding this story but thought the better of it. I love black comedy b/c I am afraid of the “blackness” (fear, death, etc.) and black comedy allows me to be able to laugh at it. It is likely that fans of black comedy are either atheists or very secular, like me.

Anyway, go back to Zia Ul Haq’s sketches, some of them are really funny:

That bag of peanuts is so small, you are starving when you start hijacking

I am so fat–suicide vest won’t zip

My Jihadi Mom–”Why are you still alive?”

Ramadan? More like Ramadon’t

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Nov 26 2008

The Citi Bailout: What Does It Mean

Published by Forager under economy

The news of the Citi bailout came with a pretty detailed term sheet. The center piece of the deal is that Citi will take on the first batch of sure losses. After that, the U.S. will absorb additional potential losses up to $250B. In return for this guarantee, Citi agrees to pay a quarterly premium of $0.4B.

So at what point does this deal makes sense for tax payers? I did some basic math trying to find out.

The calculation is more difficult than I thought because the 8% is not compounded return! To proximate, let’s say it is.  The result: if time horizon is set to 3 years, the threshold is 22% (or, as long as those assets don’t lose that much, the bailout was worth it). If it is 5 years, it is 25%. 10 years, 31%. (The numbers: $306B, $29B citi’s share, 10-90 split after that, excluding $15B from TARP and FDIC (considered pre-allocated), 2% T Bill/risk-free rate, $20B PV/Investment, 4 payments a year, 8% int. rate)

In short, the deal does NOT look like a sure winner in the short term (again, I was compounding the 8% where I shouldn’t)

However, since the public has become a vested partner in the deal, then what prevents the government to artificially inflate the assets’ value? It is a scary thought, since the government–and ONLY the government–has the power to do so (through monetary policy or its equivalent). Especially now people are talking about “forgetting the deficit”, where is the sanity check except real inflation?

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