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Wall Street Executive: "[I am] worried about a recession, not a normal one, but a very bad one...

Wall Street Executive: "[I am] worried about a recession, not a normal one, but a very bad one, the worst since the 1930s"

 

 

By New York Sun | Business

 

After what Los Angeles money manager Arnold Silver called "a brutal three days," the question is: What now for the market?

A Wall Street superstar this year who runs Balestra Capital Partners, Jim Melcher, says he's "worried about a recession. Not a normal one, but a very bad one. The worst since the 1930s. I expect we'll see clear signs of it in six months with a dramatic slowdown in the gross domestic product."

Balestra Capital, a $350 million New York hedge fund, was up 3% for the past three market sessions, when the Dow Jones Industrials, spearheaded by widespread declines in financial stocks and fears of more billion-dollar-plus asset write-downs, tumbled more than 677 points, or about 4.5%. The Nasdaq fared worse, skidding about 7%, triggered by across-the-board declines in those fast-stepping technology stocks.

 

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Near-panic atmosphere as US Federal Reserve chairman testifies before Congress

NOTE: I am not sure that things are this dire, but this is a very interesting read -- Dr. Lane 
 
By Barry Grey -- http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/nov2007/bern-n09.shtml

Fri, 09 Nov 2007 10:06:00
 
On Thursday, one day after American stock markets plummeted in the face of mounting bank losses, soaring oil prices and record lows for the US dollar, Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke gave a gloomy economic forecast in testimony before Congress’ Joint Economic Committee.
 
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GM loses $39B in 3Q, shares fall

By TOM KRISHER, AP Auto Writer

General Motors Corp. posted a company record $39 billion loss Wednesday for the third quarter, as a charge involving unused tax credits brought an abrupt end to a string of three profitable quarters for the nation's largest automaker.

The loss was one of the biggest quarterly corporate deficits ever, and GM's shares dropped about 4 percent in morning trading.

GM attributed its loss to a $38.6 billion noncash charge largely related to establishing a valuation allowance against accumulated deferred tax credits in the U.S., Canada and Germany, as well as mortgage losses at GM's former financial arm, GMAC Financial Services.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 06 November 2007 21:07 Read more...
 
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