Comments on: Wall Street's Shadow Market
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
- 60 Minutes seemed to think it was weird that the financial experts goofed; well, there is a reason:
The credit crunch was possible fundamentally because the people making the decisions assumed the housing market was going up monotonically. This explains the willingness to accept the under-rated mortgages.
Due to the phony PUBLISH button, it is clear you really don''t want comments (^_~) You claim to be going to enable it shortly - HA! Even when enabled, you cannot press it fast enough to get accepted (*_*)
If you really wanted our comments, you''d simply accept them in a queue (^_^) - Reply to this comment
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