Every deal is a regulated deal. Regulators will tell you how to take your money home.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
We need financial regulation that allows businesses and the banks they use to have access to the tools that help keep prices of consumer goods - like groceries and home heating oil - steady, while ensuring that the taxpayers are never again on the hook for the types of wild bets that helped crash the economy in 2008.
If we want our regulators to do better, we have to embrace a simple idea: regulation isn't an obstacle to thriving free markets; it's a vital part of them.
If you're going to live in the house make it your goal to just pay off your mortgage.
Generally I'm against regulation.
When the government runs out of lenders, it can do something that households are forbidden to do: print money.
The financial system has to be regulated, we have to end with the tax havens, and it's necessary that the central banks in the world should control a little bit the banks' financing because they cannot bypass a certain range of leverage.
A consumer-finance agency is a good thing, but it would do well to teach consumers a simple lesson: if you don't understand the deal you're making, don't make it.
Well, I just bought a massive bank and I've moved into it on my own.
The best way to make a good deal is to have the ability to walk away from it.
All the Federal Reserve can do is make loans against collateral.