Shake Hands or Flee?

By
Ray Dalio hints at the subject of my prior post:

If you think that restructuring the banks is going to get lending going again and you don't restructure the other pieces -- the mortgage piece, the corporate piece, the real-estate piece -- you are wrong, because they need financially sound entities to lend to, and that won't happen until there are restructurings.

On the issue of the banks, ultimately we need banks because to produce credit we have to have banks. A lot of the banks aren't going to have money, and yet we can't just let them go to nothing; we have got to do something.

But the future of banking is going to be very, very different. The regulators have to decide how banks will operate. That means they will have to nationalize some in some form, but they are going to also have to decide who they protect: the bondholders or the depositors?


Ray Dalio is the founder of Bridgewater Associates, one of the largest and most successful hedge funds in the world.  Who will be right? Ray Dalio or Bill Gross?

This article available online at:

http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2009/02/shake-hands-or-flee/449/