An inspiring glimpse of human decency. Awesome to see.
ICYMI | Collision turns into moment of courage for Olympic runners @abbey_dags @NikkiHamblin https://t.co/EKK4aVigHB https://t.co/KsDfexw8J6
— CBC Olympics (@CBCOlympics) August 16, 2016
An inspiring glimpse of human decency. Awesome to see.
ICYMI | Collision turns into moment of courage for Olympic runners @abbey_dags @NikkiHamblin https://t.co/EKK4aVigHB https://t.co/KsDfexw8J6
— CBC Olympics (@CBCOlympics) August 16, 2016
Preet Banerjee is the host of the television series ‘Million Dollar Neighborhood’ on The Oprah Winfrey Network, a personal finance columnist with The Globe and Mail, and author of three personal finance books. He makes some useful comments here on thinking about debt as a loan from our future income. Here is a direct video link.
Banerjee says he is not talking about mortgages or student loans, but if the house goes down in value after buying it, or the education does not end up increasing earning power, the same caveats apply. Same harmful math warns against borrowing to invest in over-valued financial markets…a sales technique recommended by many so called financial ‘advisors’: good for them, typically toxic for the buyer.
The nervous laughter by Dachille in the below clip is uncomfortable and humbled but honest. For finance sponsored television, he makes some surprisingly candid admissions about how central bank policies are gutting the efforts of individual savers, pensions, life insurers and other critical institutions to be self-sustaining. Although many keep hoping that asset managers are magicians (and the least worthy ones talk as if they are) the truth is they are not, and the last 10 years of financial policy madness has been a travesty of the commons. The sum effects are not wealth creating, but anti-wealth: as yields have plunged from 5%+ to less than 2%, cash flows tank and the savings needed to fund future liabilities has risen by 70%. No free lunch and no magic wealth effect. Time to face math.
The idea of central banks creating wealth by boosting asset values through low or even negative interest rates may prove costly for retiring Americans and those saving for their golden years, AIG Chief Investment Officer Doug Dachille told CNBC on Tuesday.
Dachille, head of the insurer’s massive $351 billion investment portfolio, said “all savers” are being negatively affected by easy monetary policies around the globe.
“All this reduction in interest rates, while it’s certainly been good for the appreciation of the asset side of everybody’s balance sheet, unfortunately it’s increased the value of the liability side of the balance sheet,” he said on “Squawk Box.” Here is a direct video link.