Anonymous wrote:Looks like Yael stepped down and is leaving
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is so weird.
Why would large banks loan him $12.7B only for him to go into bankruptcy? How did any of this get past the banks’ investment and risk committees?
This makes no sense at all.
I would hope that he personally guaranteed the loan like the bank made me do when I started a small business. But it would not surprise me to find out that the wealthiest man in the world has different requirements than the little guy. In that case, let the banks eat the loss!
This is a very big deal for financial system stability. Will likely introduce cascading losses through the system, which may require Fed intervention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is so weird.
Why would large banks loan him $12.7B only for him to go into bankruptcy? How did any of this get past the banks’ investment and risk committees?
This makes no sense at all.
I would hope that he personally guaranteed the loan like the bank made me do when I started a small business. But it would not surprise me to find out that the wealthiest man in the world has different requirements than the little guy. In that case, let the banks eat the loss!
This is a very big deal for financial system stability. Will likely introduce cascading losses through the system, which may require Fed intervention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is so weird.
Why would large banks loan him $12.7B only for him to go into bankruptcy? How did any of this get past the banks’ investment and risk committees?
This makes no sense at all.
I would hope that he personally guaranteed the loan like the bank made me do when I started a small business. But it would not surprise me to find out that the wealthiest man in the world has different requirements than the little guy. In that case, let the banks eat the loss!
Anonymous wrote:
This is so weird.
Why would large banks loan him $12.7B only for him to go into bankruptcy? How did any of this get past the banks’ investment and risk committees?
This makes no sense at all.
Anonymous wrote:The good news is that as he becomes more unbalanced, his stockpile of billions will drain from his ledger and be returned back to the general economy where it can do some good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's funny that he said today that he wants people to move cash onto Twitter and have Twitter function as a bank, considering some ex-employee or something was savaging Twitter for having deep security flaws just a few weeks ago and he's fired half the staff on top of everything.
I imagine hackers are just salivating at the thought of Twitter bank.
He started Paypal - until he got fired.
He funded the startup that became Paypal. Big difference.