Bankruptcy blog

June 13, 2008

Scrooge McDuck and Money

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 5:10 am

Scrooge McDuck and Money is a short animated cartoon made by Walt Disney Studios in 1967. In this cartoon, Scrooge McDuck tries to teach his grandnephews Huey, Dewey and Louie how to save money. This is known to be Scrooge McDuck’s first animated appearance, apart from a brief cameo appearance on the Mickey Mouse Club television series. In this story, Scrooge says the money inside his Money Bin is only a percentage of his fortune but, in all stories where he loses all the money inside it, he claims to be ruined.

May 16, 2008

Money for Nothing (film)

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — admin @ 9:25 pm


Overview

Filmed in Pittsburgh, the movie centers around John Cusack as Joey Coyle, an unemployed South Philadelphia longshoreman who finds $1.2 million dollars in the middle of the street after it falls out of the back of an armored car. He proceeds to go on a spending spree, attempts to launder it through the local Mafia and is then arrested while attempting to flee the country.


External links

April 7, 2008

Sanwa Money

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 3:45 pm

Sanwa Money (hangul:산와머니) is a capital money and bank company. hearquatered in Seoul, Korea. established 1999. it is similar in Hyundai Capital and Samsung Capital, Lotte Capital, Shinhan Capital.


See also

  • Economy of South Korea
  • Money


External link and Reference

  • Sanwa Money Homepage (in Korean)

February 25, 2008

Hush money

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 11:02 pm

Hush money is an informal term for financial incentives or rewards offered in exchange for not divulging information.

Hush money is different than blackmail, which is a type of threat made by someone who has compromising information about someone else. In the case of hush money the person who does not want the information divulged approaches the person who knows it.

Hush money can be offered for both criminal and non-criminal reasons, though the term is used more often in criminal situations, or in a derogatory sense.

Some notable examples:

Michael Jackson was alleged to give some of his accusers hush money in exchange for keeping their accusations private.

Richard Nixon aides were convicted of giving hush money to burglars involved in the Watergate scandal.

Jessica Hahn was given $265,000 in hush money so she wouldn’t reveal that Jim Bakker had raped her.

Some characterize out of court settlements such as those made in the Roman Catholic sex abuse cases as a type of hush money.

Hush Money is also the title of:

  • a 1921 silent film
  • a 1931 comedy/drama featuring Joan Bennett, Myrna Loy, and George Raft
  • a 1999 mystery novel by Robert B. Parker.

February 20, 2008

Credit money

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 1:40 am

Credit money is any claim against a physical or legal person that can be used for the purchase of goods and servicesMises, Ludwig von. The Theory of Money and Credit. Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund, Inc.. 1981, trans. H. E. Batson, 1981. [Online] available from http://www.econlib.org/library/mises/msT1.html; accessed 9 May 2007; Internet. Chapter I, section 3, paragraph 25.. Examples of credit money include bank deposits and credit card loans.

During the Crusades in Europe, precious goods would be entrusted to the Roman Catholic Church’s Knights Templar, who effectively created a system of modern credit accounts. Over time this system grew into the credit money that we know today, where banks create money by approving loans - although the risk and reserve policies of each national central bank set a limit on this.

Sometimes, as in the United States during the Great Depression, trust in bank policies drops very low, and there is the risk of a bank run without government or other intervention. In the United States, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was created in 1933 to prevent bank insolvency from affecting depositors.


See also

  • Debt-based monetary system
  • Debt money
  • Commodity money
  • Credit
  • Credit creation
  • Fiat money
  • Representative money
  • The Theory of Money and Credit by Ludwig von Mises


References


External links

  • Extract from The Theory of Money and Credit, by Ludwig von Mises
  • The (Not So) Poor Knights of the Temple

February 3, 2008

Money flow

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 4:30 am

Money flow in technical analysis is typical price multiplied by volume, a kind of approximation to the dollar value of a day’s trading.

Money flow index (MFI) is an oscillator calculated over an N-day period, ranging from 0 to 100, showing money flow on up days as a percentage of the total of up and down days.

The calculations are as follows. The typical price for each day is the average of high, low and close,

<math>typical\ price = {high + low + close \over 3}</math>

Money flow is the product of typical price and the volume on that day.

<math>money\ flow = typical\ price \times volume</math>

Totals of the money flow amounts over the given N days are then formed. Positive money flow is the total for those days where the typical price is higher than the previous day’s typical price, and negative money flow where below. (If typical price is unchanged then that day is discarded.) A money ratio is then formed

<math>money\ ratio = { positive\ money\ flow \over negative\ money\ flow }</math>

From which a money flow index ranging from 0 to 100 is formed,

<math>MFI = 100 - {100 \over 1 + money\ ratio}</math>

This can be expressed equivalently as follows. This form makes it clearer how the MFI is a percentage,

<math>MFI = 100 \times { positive\ money\ flow \over positive\ money flow + negative\ money\ flow }</math>

MFI is used as an oscillator. A value of 80 is generally considered overbought, or a value of 20 oversold. Divergences between MFI and price action are also considered significant, for instance if price makes a new rally high but the MFI high is less than its previous high then that may indicate a weak advance, likely to reverse.

It will be noted the MFI is constructed in a similar fashion to the relative strength index. Both look at up days against total up plus down days, but the scale, ie. what is accumulated on those days, is volume (or dollar volume approximation rather) for the MFI, as opposed to price change amounts for the RSI.

It’s important to be clear about what “money flow” means. It refers to dollar volume, ie. the total value of shares traded. Sometimes finance commentators speak of money “flowing into” a stock, but that expression only refers to the enthusiasm of buyers (obviously there’s never any net money in or out, because for every buyer there’s a seller of the same amount).

For the purposes of the MFI, “money flow”, ie. dollar volume, on an up day is taken to represent the enthusiastism of buyers, and on a down day to represent the enthusiasm of sellers. An excessive proportion in one direction or the other is interpreted as an extreme, likely to result in a price reversal.


Similar indicators

Other Price × Volume indicators:

  • On-balance Volume
  • Price and Volume Trend
  • Accumulation/distribution index


See also

  • Dimensional analysis - explains why volume and price are multiplied (not divided) in such indicators

January 31, 2008

M4 money supply

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 9:52 am

With reference to the UK economy, M4 is a definition of the money supply denoting Broad Money, a wide definition of the volume of sterling in the economy, encompassing notes and coin as well as money held in bank accounts. The measure is equivalent to the US M3 (see Money supply for US definitions).

M4 = M0 + UK residents’ bank deposits + deposits made by the private sector

Where M0 (Narrow Money) denotes the total of notes and coin in circulation in the economy plus commercial banks’ deposits at the Bank of England.

There are several different definitions of money supply to reflect the differing stores of money. Due to the nature of bank deposits, especially time-restricted savings account deposits, the M4 represents the most illiquid measure of money. M0, by contrast, is the most liquid measure of the money supply.


See also

  • Money supply
  • The Bank of England website

January 16, 2008

High-powered money

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 3:35 am

High-powered money is a macroeconomic term referring to the monetary base — that is, to highly liquid money such as currency and deposits held in demand accounts such as checking accounts. In the United States, this concept of money is often referred to as M1.

The monetary base is typically controlled by the institution in a country that controls monetary policy. This is usually either the finance ministry or the central bank. These institutions print currency and release it into the economy, or withdraw it from the economy, through open market transactions (i.e., the buying and selling of government bonds). These institutions also typically have the ability to influence banking activities by manipulating interest rates and changing bank reserve requirements (how much money banks must keep on hand instead of loaning out to borrowers).

The monetary base is called high-powered because the magnitude of changes in monetary base can be greatly magnified by the money multiplier. That is, a small change in the monetary base can result in a large change in the overall money supply. As an example, a $1 billion increase in monetary base may lead to a $10 billion increase in the money supply because of money multiplier effects.

January 14, 2008

Hard money

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 6:33 am

Hard money can refer to:

  • Hard money donations to candidates for political office
  • Hard money currency policies
  • Hard money loans

December 24, 2007

The Best of Eddie Money

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 4:02 pm

The Best of Eddie Money is a greatest hits album by Eddie Money, released in 2001 (see 2001 in music).


Track listing

  1. “Two Tickets to Paradise” (Money) – 3:58
  2. “Shakin’” (Carter, Money, Myers) – 3:09
  3. “Take Me Home Tonight” (Leeson, Vale) – 3:32
  4. “Wanna Be a Rock ‘N’ Roll Star” (Money, Solberg) – 4:01
  5. “Walk on Water’” (Harms) – 4:40
  6. “Running Back” (Bryan) – 4:00
  7. “Think I’m in Love” (Money, Oda) – 3:10
  8. “Maybe I’m a Fool” (Chiate, Garrett, Money, Taylor) – 3:07
  9. “Rock and Roll the Place” [live] (Lyon, Money) – 3:06
  10. “Baby Hold On” (Lyon, Money) – 3:32
  11. “We Should Be Sleeping” (Burns, Lowry, Money, Thompson) – 4:02
  12. “Trinidad” (Douglass, Money, Turner) – 5:08
  13. “I Wanna Go Back” (Byrom, Chuncey, Walker) – 3:55
  14. “No Control” [live] (Carter, Guitierrez, Money) – 4:15
  15. “Where’s the Party?” (Carter, Money) – 3:55
  16. “Peace in Our Time” (Hill, Sinfield) – 5:02

December 7, 2007

Hush money

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , — admin @ 11:35 am

Hush money is an informal term for financial incentives or rewards offered in exchange for not divulging information.

Hush money is different than blackmail, which is a type of threat made by someone who has compromising information about someone else. In the case of hush money the person who does not want the information divulged approaches the person who knows it.

Hush money can be offered for both criminal and non-criminal reasons, though the term is used more often in criminal situations, or in a derogatory sense.

Some notable examples:

Michael Jackson was alleged to give some of his accusers hush money in exchange for keeping their accusations private.

Richard Nixon aides were convicted of giving hush money to burglars involved in the Watergate scandal.

Jessica Hahn was given $265,000 in hush money so she wouldn’t reveal that Jim Bakker had raped her.

Some characterize out of court settlements such as those made in the Roman Catholic sex abuse cases as a type of hush money.

Hush Money is also the title of:

  • a 1921 silent film
  • a 1931 comedy/drama featuring Joan Bennett, Myrna Loy, and George Raft
  • a 1999 mystery novel by Robert B. Parker.

November 23, 2007

Money (KMFDM song)

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , — admin @ 8:42 am

Money” is a KMFDM song. It was released as a single prior to the release of their fifth album, Money, in 1992.


Track listing

  1. “Money (Radio Mix)” – 3:55
  2. “Bargeld (Radio Mix)” – 4:03
  3. “Money (Cover Charge Mix)” – 6:38
  4. “Bargeld (Rubber Club Dub)” – 4:30
  5. “Money (Metal Mix)” – 6:00
  6. “Bargeld (Jezebeelzebuttfunk Mix)” – 5:46
  7. “Money (Death Before Taxes Mix)” – 3:07


Personnel

  • Sascha Konietzko – vocals, programming
  • Günter Schulz – guitar

March 29, 2007

World Money Fair

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: — admin @ 4:25 am

The World Money Fair is an international bourse of coins. A bourse is where dealers, collectors and the public buy, sell and trade coins.

In 1970 A. M Beck founded in Munich the “Organisation of European Coins-Bourses”, “Organisation Europäischer Münzen-Börsen” (OEMB) in German. He had the idea to build up a stronger market for the collecting of coins.

Two years later the organisation organized in Basel the first international bourse of coins. During the time it was developed to the “World Money Fair”. Today more than 40 nations are members of this organisation. In 2006, the bourse is at the first time in Berlin. At the start the German Secretary of State Karl Diller presented the new German 2 Euro Coin. It shows the Holstentor of Lübeck.

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