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" ... A third point that I find puzzling is that Greece, a nation that openly used the swaps market to mask the scale of its debt when it looked to join the Euro. Then gorged itself on cheap debt when the market was good, was shielded from the winds of financial reality when the liquidity dried up via bailout funding and now is rewarded even more through the fruits of the financial risk taken by the ECB. ... "
" ... And in Kuroda’s case, that’s turned into a poisoned chalice. On his watch since 2013, Kuroda, without the possible exception of America’s Jerome Powell, did more than any monetary official in modern history to stabilize growth. He cornered the bond market, gorged on corporate debt, commandeered the stock market by hoarding exchange-traded funds and bought up every financial asset within reach. ... "
" ... Digital media, especially the kind sold through programmatic channels, was highly addictive for marketers. After all, there was no other place that you could get 1) “scale” — large quantities of ad impressions to buy, 2) “cost efficiency” - low CPM prices that were possible only from fake sites using fake traffic, and 3) “performance” - the appearance of better engagement due to bots clicking on the ads. Marketers gorged themselves on this “triple scoop” of digital ad ice cream for the last 10 years, since programmatic took off; they couldn’t kick this habit. Until now. ... "
" ... Now, suppose the Fed is not able to lend the money because everyone who is eligible has already borrowed as much as they can. In 2020, ”zombie” companies have gorged themselves on record amounts of debt that the Fed and buyers from around the world have bought. With no business, and no income, they can still walk into the Fed and ask for more loans. Reminds me of the housing market bubble of 2007-2008 when folks with no income, no balance sheet, and no job could get “no-doc”, “NINJA” ( "no income, job or asset verification") loans for buying second and third flippers. ... "
" ... Via generous state film subsidies, movies like The Fighter, The Town and The Social Network (which were shot in one of the states most obsessed with chasing Hollywood gold, Massachusetts) and Black Swan (New York, which commits $350 million in incentives to film production, by far the most of any state) gorged themselves on public money. ... "