Enjoy the video below for the entire informative interview with Harry Rady of Rady Asset Management, Barbara Ryan, Deutsche Bank Securities and the CNBC anchor Maria Bartiromo.
Harry Rady of Rady Asset Management discussed his reaction to the recent news that the Obama administration would be softening its approach to health care reform. Appearing on the CNBC Maria Bartiromo’s financial news update on Monday August 17th, Rady explained why he is not really that influenced by the comings and goings of government policy.
Harry Rady presents his opinion below:
“We think that great companies, with strong patent portfolios and great IP will prosper no matter what happens. So we are not trying to predict the winners. We think the “commoditized” service providers, such as the HMOs, the generic drug makers; we think that under any scenario, they get squeezed. But companies that have these positions and these patents, they will do well.”
Follow the link to the Harry Rady’s complete video presentation.
Harry Rady of Rady Asset Management discusses his apprehension concerning the stress tests that government regulators are subjecting financial institutions to during the present economic downturn that the United States is facing at the moment.
Rady’s first concern is that the regulators don’t really have the “big picture” in mind. He believes that the stress tests are too homogeneous and rely too heavily on quantitative metrics.
His other concern is that there is a built in conflict of interest between the regulators, shareholders and management. The job of the regulators is to make sure that the companies stay solvent and that the flow of capital is unobstructed. They are not doing anything to protect the interests of the shareholders.
Listen to the entire interview now.
Rebecca Jarvis of the popular CNBC financial news program “Closing Bell” interviewed Harry Rady of Rady Asset Management located in San Diego, California along with Alex Sanchez, the President of the Florida Banker’s association, on March 3, 2009. In wake of the “economic free fall” the U.S. economy has been experiencing, Harry Rady shares his thoughts on what creative action the U.S. government might take in order to boost the economy and help homeowners maintain economic health and security. Rady suggests in this interview that the U.S. government should initiate a 4% mortgage program which he believes will refinance all these “toxic mortgages” off the balance sheets and put between $2,000 and $4,000 into the hands of every homeowner. In response to Rebecca Jarvis’s question of how this action would help increase cash flow to small business in America, Rady responds that in order to get the economy back on its feet we must begin with the housing industry. Hear and see the interview below.