Insidious impetus.... IDS World Markets Mon 15th March 10
#3
Posted 14 March 2010 - 07:44 PM
#5
Posted 15 March 2010 - 01:09 AM
"Ferdy-bee-bee-dee-ferbs."
Subscribe & Earn Karma Miles with Every Visit!
Rule #5 Professional Exemption.
Blind Follower, Just Think Positive Hyperinflation, I Get Paid 500 Quadrillion Dollars/Hour at 1000% Interest/Hour Compounding Forever Each Mouse Click Religion.
"I too observe 'flation.'"
I love you, TASR!
YOU MAKE KITTY SCARED
Tops Take Time
Postulate A Free Lunch Economy
Anyone, now, who is not genuinely afraid is a moran.
[T]housands of empty stucco crapboxes vacated after being circle-jerk sham-traded among corrupt borkers, uppraisers and loan officers from 100K up to 800K, then "nopay-walkaway" (with dirty loan cash in pockets)
Guess again, girlfriend.
Or, $2.7 million every effing day since the effing pinball machine.
Permabear Hysterian
#7
Posted 15 March 2010 - 01:49 AM
Looks like the green might be over in the short term. All Ords followed Asia down to close -0.7% with every sector in the red except IT which closed flat. REITS -1.3% had the biggest fall followed by Gold -1.2%.
Over in Asia indices are currently China -1.2%, Honkers -0.9%, India -0.6% and Nikkers flat.
On to UK/Europe:
Footsie
DAX
CAC 40
#8
Posted 15 March 2010 - 03:48 AM
fresh new bear market lows dead ahead
1/3 of Dow 30 likely to be fullzeroed before this Greatest Depression is over
households are broke and busted, with no real hope, only cruel false hope
Honk if you're paying my pension. Honk like a turkey for me. That's my good little taxpayer, oh yeah!
chop chop chop chop, DoubleDip chop chop, DoubleDip DoubleDip DoubleDip, chop chop
24/7 free world-class education for everyone anywhere...public schools are obsolete and unneeded, shut 'em all down
#10
Posted 15 March 2010 - 06:47 AM
http://www.youtube.c...h?v=hfvJOL1gpic
a la lehman hahahaha
http://macro-man.blo...3/repo-105.html
#11
Posted 15 March 2010 - 07:19 AM
March 15 (Bloomberg) -- European finance ministers will work on still-secret plans to help Greece overcome its debt crisis today, while counting on the country’s belt-tightening steps to make a bailout unnecessary.
Investors doubted that Greece will tame Europe’s largest deficit on its own, and that contributed to pushing down German bonds last week amid concern that Europe’s largest economy will bear the bulk of the costs of a future rescue package.
Ten-year German bond yields rose to a two-week high of 3.18 percent on March 11 partly on concern Germany will have to lead a bailout, estimated by the Sunday Telegraph at 25 billion euros or more. The yield fell 2 basis points today to 3.14 percent. Greek bonds rallied on expectations of European aid, with 10- year yields falling 7 basis points to 6.14 percent, the lowest since March 8.
#12
Posted 15 March 2010 - 07:21 AM
March 15 (Bloomberg) -- European employment fell for a sixth quarter in the three months through December as manufacturers and builders continued to cut jobs.
Payrolls in the 16-member euro region dropped a seasonally adjusted 0.2 percent from the third quarter, when they declined 0.5 percent, the European Union statistics office in Luxembourg said today. From a year earlier, payrolls declined 2 percent.
#13
Posted 15 March 2010 - 07:34 AM
"For the private sector, too, inflation would be a mixed blessing. Take Britain, which might seem a likely candidate for inflation: its government sets the central bank’s inflation target and it has issued lots of long-term bonds (see left-hand chart). Alongside a rapid build-up of debt by some households there has been an increase in cash deposits by others (see right-hand chart). Using inflation to transfer wealth from savers to debtors may help boost spending. But there are limits to how much you can do this in a country such as Britain (or Ireland or Spain), where both saving and mortgages are linked to short-term interest rates. Inflation would over time reduce the real burden of debt but would raise interest costs more quickly. Nor would it be politically popular: savers tend to be older and the old vote more often."

http://www.economist...ory_id=15663312
#14
Posted 15 March 2010 - 07:44 AM
swordfish, on 14 March 2010 - 02:54 PM, said:
Is China's Politburo spoiling for a showdown with America?
The long-simmering clash between the world's two great powers is coming to a head, with dangerous implications for the international system.
China has succumbed to hubris. It has mistaken the soft diplomacy of Barack Obama for weakness, mistaken the US credit crisis for decline, and mistaken its own mercantilist bubble for ascendancy. There are echoes of Anglo-German spats before the First World War, when Wilhelmine Berlin so badly misjudged the strategic balance of power and over-played its hand.
http://www.telegraph...th-America.html
The article writer sounds like a warmonger compared to most of the comments that actually bring insight on the delicate US/China balance.
#15
Posted 15 March 2010 - 07:50 AM
Taking On China
Published: March 14, 2010
Tensions are rising over Chinese economic policy, and rightly so: China’s policy of keeping its currency, the renminbi, undervalued has become a significant drag on global economic recovery. Something must be done.
http://www.nytimes.c.../15krugman.html
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