Posts Tagged ‘Economy’
The Money Experiment - Day 2 - Bank Fees
Written by praveen on November 14, 2008 – 8:20 amI’d disclosed my bank balance in my previous post and as you could see, my financial future wasn’t looking too bright! In fact, that was the very reason I started this experiment. Today, like everyday of the past week, I happened to check my bank balance again. What do I see? My bank has charged me a service fee of 3 dollars further reducing my balance down to 95.06. I’m just waiting for that one unknown transaction to happen that will put my balance in the negative. Add to it a $39 over-the-limit fee, twice! Tomorrow is Friday and hopefully my paycheck arrives. I’m a contractor, so I mess up my timesheets and my paycheck doesn’t show! That is what happened the past couple of weeks.
Coming back to bank fees, I still have a hard time comprehending the fact that a bank actually charges you money to keep your money in their bank. Isn’t it supposed to work the other way round? Guess banks have a lot of homework to do, if you think about all the financial diarrhea we’re going through. Anyways, that is an altogether different post right there.
Let’s just hope that my paycheck shows tomorrow.
Tags: Economy, The Money Experiment
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The Money Experiment - Day 2 - Gas Prices
Written by praveen on November 14, 2008 – 7:42 amThis is getting really exciting. I had never thought I’d go as far as the second day but hey it’s working and I ain’t complaining as long as I’m saving some moolah.
Thanks to the dropping gas prices recently, we all have been having a sigh of relief at the pump. Remember, just last month we were paying like $4 for a gallon of gas? Our gas bill alone was running up to almost $400 per month. Why not? Some bigshot decided to have 2 SUVs right before the prices went north. Anyways, long story short. Like I’d mentioned in my previous writeup, I logged onto www.gasbuddy.com this morning and started looking for cheap gas in my area. The cheapest that I found was for 2.09. I was pretty surprised since in most parts of South Austin, it has been as low as 1.89 for the past couple of days. With no other choice left, I go to the gas station and I find it’s dropped to 2.01. Sweet deal. After a long long time, I have been able to fill up my tank for less than 30 bucks. What a great feeling!
This morning while driving to work, I saw it was further down to 1.91! With crude hitting almost two year lows, I think we should be seeing 1.50 pretty soon. Let’s just hope it happens and stays that way for some time at least
Tags: Economy
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Fed is refusing to disclose recipients
Written by praveen on November 11, 2008 – 6:10 pmDon’t the taxpayers have the right to know where their money is being spent? The Fed’s excuse ‘The information is too scary for the citizens’. What BS!

Apparently Bernanke, that wonderful bipartisan soul who is so competent and wonderful that everyone in the village thinks Obama should leave him in charge is refusing to identify who got almost 2 trillion dollars of Fed cash. Bloomberg News is suing to find out. Personally I really, really, really want to know. What exactly is Bernanke hiding? Who got the money he doesn’t want us to know got the money?
This is money that was loaned in exchange for “collateral”, by which we mean “trash no one else but the Fed would buy for anything but cents on the dollar”. Barney Frank, embarrassing himself yet again, claims the Fed should keep its clap shut because if people know how bad it is, well, there might be a run. I think Barney’s missing the point, as long as people don’t know how bad it is, they won’t trust anyone who might be borrowing large amounts of money from the Fed with crap collateral, because they don’t know how bad it is and they suspect it’s really really really bad. As in 10 cents on the dollar bad.
More to the point, that 2 trillion is taxpayer money, and taxpayers have a right to know what sweetheart deals Bernanke’s been giving out, and who’s been getting what. This whole “this information is too scary for citizens to know” schtick is so Bush regime. I thought we were moving into a new era of openness? Perhaps Barney should get with the program?
As for Bernanke, this is yet another reason why Bernanke, a central banker so incompetent he lost complete control of LIBOR, his most basic job, should lose his position. Sure, his mandate runs for another year, but if Obama asks him to step down, I can’t imagine he wouldn’t. The idea that a central bank that has screwed up as badly as the Fed has under both Greenspan and Bernanke is so much better off independent than with the public having some control is ridiculous and fundamentally anti-democratic. Central bank independence has just led to a huge financial bubble and economic collapse, while Bernanke and Greenspan both acted as if they were virtual dictators.
Bernanke needs to go, and either before or after he goes, the Fed needs to come clean about who it has given 2 trillion in loans to, and what the collateral is.
Tags: Democracy, Economy
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ITunes now the larget music retailer in the US
Written by praveen on April 4, 2008 – 5:19 pmNow this is huge. ITunes finally surpasses Walmart as the biggest music retailer in the United States. They have sold a whopping 4 billion songs since 2003. Though I am not a big fan of Apple’s business models where they very well could charge you even for calling out their name too loud and I have never owned an Apple product (ok, but for this one :D), I must say this is a major breakthrough for the company. All said and done, I must admit, they are a hip company with really hip products and a lot of people love them which is what matters to me. How you ask? Well look here. I have invested heavily in this money minting company. I’ve managed to develop some nerves of steel with the stock’s journey from 200 all the way down to 115 and back up to 150+ now. Just because I believe the iPhone is going to be the next iPod or even better. In fact, there have been a few signs in that directions lately (iPhones running out of stock!).
Coming back to Apple, due credit, I must say, should go to Steve Jobs for turning around an underdog into one of the coolest companies in American history. Some analysts predict that Apple might turn out to be the first trillion dollar company in the world. Now that might be a stretch and could take quite a while too, but I’d not be surprised if they come up with the next killer product that might change the fortunes of the company overnight. They might already have?
Here is the ITunes news link
Tags: Economy
Posted in Economy, Tech | No Comments »


