$30.1 trillion in stock market valuation was wiped out last year – Journal of a Plague Year: Faith in Markets Cracks Under Losses:
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Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., with assets of $639 billion, filed the largest bankruptcy in U.S. history on Sept. 15. Its creditors may have lost as much $75 billion, the firm’s chief restructuring officer said.
Bear Stearns Cos. was taken over by JPMorgan Chase & Co. in March after a funding crisis triggered by losses from subprime- mortgage investments. Merrill Lynch & Co., facing a crisis of its own, sold itself to Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America Corp. And the last two major investment banks, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley, converted to bank holding companies and got capital injections from the U.S. government.
2008 was quite a memorable year in the markets. What the markets will do this year is hard to know. But the economy is likely to be very weak. Job losses will increase. If we are lucky the economy will be picking up by the end of the year. A huge problem is we have been living well beyond our means for decades. And now we are selling out even more of our children and grandchildren’s future to pay for the extravagance of those last few decades. How costly our credit-card-like financing of government bailouts is going to be is the most important issue I believe.
There is nothing wrong with spending money you saved for a raining day when that day comes. There is a big problem (for your future) taking our more credit cards to spend money you didn’t bother to save. You might have to do so, but the costs you are heaping on your future is very high (and for the economy overall many of those costs will be borne by children not yet born).
Related: The Economy is in Serious Trouble – Crisis May Push USA Federal Deficit to Above $1 Trillion for 2009 – What Should You Do With Your Government “Stimulus” Check? – Over 500,000 Jobs Disappeared in November