■フィードバックへのご回答 前回のコラムにたくさんのフィードバックをいただきました。 とてもうれしいコメントをKさんからいただきました。 「第一回から 楽しく読ませて頂いています 今回の大暴落では随分資産の目減りはしましたが、お教えを守って信用取引やレバレッジもしなかったお陰で退場はしなくて済みました」 ひとりでもこのような方がいらっしゃったとわかっただけで大変うれしい思いをしました。 Kさん、ありがとうございました。 また、Sさんからは、以下のコメントをいただきました。 「山本さん、こんにちは。今回は理解するのに難しかったです。それと、山本さんの主張する立場が、どっちつかずな印象で、歯切れが悪く感じました。少し残念です。」 Sさん、すみません。わたしの立場は、「銀行には言いたいことがたくさんあります。でも、銀行は資本主義経済の土台です。銀行システムを危機にさらすのは市民生活にも悪影響を及
Tony Cervone, a spokesman for General Motors, has a warm and friendly way to summarize his ailing company’s ongoing dance with disaster. “The fact is we’re looking at a short-term liquidity crisis that needs a bridge loan,” Mr. Cervone said this weekend to The Detroit Free Press. To him, G.M. is merely in a temporary bind. If the government � that is, taxpayers � were just willing to spot G.M. som
A lot at the Port of Long Beach may be used to park cars.Credit...Jamie Rector for The New York Times LONG BEACH, Calif. � Gleaming new Mercedes cars roll one by one out of a huge container ship here and onto a pier. Ordinarily the cars would be loaded on trucks within hours, destined for dealerships around the country. But these are not ordinary times. For now, the port itself is the destination.
Harsh as it is, a bankruptcy filing has always offered a glimmer of hope for a business hobbled by debt or a downturn. A company could slim down, negotiate manageable payments to workers and suppliers and keep going, preserving jobs. But the credit crisis has trampled on that dream. More companies that file for bankruptcy protection are shutting down, lawyers say, because they cannot obtain enough
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. financial system is stabilizing and the government does not plan to tap the remaining $410 billion of a financial rescue fund unless a further need arises, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson told the Wall Street Journal in an interview published on Tuesday. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson listens during a forum about the global economy at the Wall St. Journal's CEO Cou
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on Tuesday said the unpredictable nature of the current financial crisis meant it was necessary to ensure that financial bailout money was not diverted to other uses. In testimony prepared for delivery to the U.S. House Financial Services Committee, Paulson said the $700-billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, was intended to shore up
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