Yoyogi Posted July 13, 2011 Posted July 13, 2011 Ali, zar je Japan toliko los?Opet bili "strucnjaci" i njihovi dijagrami na FoxNews?Kazu, 30% muskaraca pri samozadovoljavanju simulira orgazam. Svasta korisno sa tog izvora moze da se sazna, cak i dijagramima prikazano.
расејан Posted July 15, 2011 Posted July 15, 2011 Како то раде мајстори и не обазиру се на кризу (осим да виде да ли добро напредује). In 1987, Edmund de Rothschild creates the World Conservation Bank which is designed to transfer debts from third world countries to this bank, and in return those countries would give land to this bank. The idea is for the IMF to create more and more SDR’s backed by nothing, in order for struggling nations to borrow them. These nations will then gradually come under the control of the IMF as they struggle to pay the interest, and have to borrow more and more. The IMF will then decide which nations can borrow more and which will starve. They can also use this as leverage to take state owned assets like utilities as payment against the debt until they eventually own the nation states. What is the GEF?The Global Environment Facility (GEF) unites 179 member governments — in partnership with international institutions, NGOs, and the private sector — to address global environmental issues. Established in 1991, the GEF is today the largest funder of projects to improve the global environment. The GEF has allocated $8.8 billion, supplemented by more than $38.7 billion in cofinancing, for more than 2,400 projects in more than 165 developing countries. The GEF partnership includes 10 agencies: 1. the UN Development Programme (David Rothschild consultant/Nigeria); 2. the UN Environment Programme (UNEP); 3. the World Bank; 4. the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (A Rockefeller-partner organisation) ; 5. the UN Industrial Development Organization; 6. the African Development Bank; 7. the Asian Development Bank; 8. the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development; 9. the Inter-American Development Bank (David Rothschild consultant); 10. and the International Fund for Agricultural Development.Лако се да изгуглати докле је Србија заглибила у ово.
расејан Posted August 1, 2011 Posted August 1, 2011 Неко се сетио да примети слона у соби: Peter Bernholz, the leading expert on hyperinflation, states unequivocally that “hyperinflation is caused by government budget deficits.” This year’s U.S. budget deficit will end up being $1.5 trillion, an amount never before seen in history.Since the Federal Reserve’s creation in 1913, the dollar has lost 95% of its purchasing power. Our government leaders clearly don’t know how – or don’t wish – to keep the currency strong
Muwan Posted August 5, 2011 Posted August 5, 2011 Crni petak vol. 2Asian stock markets have slumped on Friday, extending a global equity sell-off after Wall Street had its worst day in more than two years.Japan's main index fell 3.4%, South Korea's lost 3%, Australia's dipped 3.9% and Hong Kong's shed 4.4%.On Thursday, shares in the US and Europe tumbled on fears about the strength of the US economic recovery and the eurozone debt crisis.Analysts warned that global markets may remain volatile in the coming weeks."Fear is the major theme," David Cohen of Action Economics told the BBC. "People were cautiously optimistic that we would get back on track in the second half of the year. But with the US recovery stalling and the possible repercussions for the global economy, stock markets have been under pressure for a while."The sell-off in global equities has hit investors hard. Over the past nine trading sessions, the US S&P 500 stock index has lost $1.37tn (£843.6bn) from its total market value. In Europe, the UK's FTSE has seen £160.9bn ($261bn) wiped off its market value. In Germany, the Dax has shed 85.5bn euros (£74.2bn; $120.5bn), with France's Cac losing 13.6bn euros.Falls across sectors Early trading in Asia on Friday saw a broad sell-off of equities from across industries.Carmakers and manufacturers, which get a large chunk of their revenue from exports to the US and Europe, led declines with Sony shedding 4.9% and Toyota down 3.8%.Commodity firms were also under pressure and helped push China's Shanghai Composite Index 2.3% lower. The biggest producers of copper and aluminium, Jiangxi Copper and Aluminum Corporation of China, fell more than 3%. In Australia, the world's biggest mining company BHP Billiton slid 4%, while rival Rio Tinto dropped more than 5%.Banks and real estate firms did not escape the negative mood, with HSBC down more than 4% in Hong Kong, and Industrial & Commercial Bank of China and China Vanke down some 3%. The price of oil also dropped in New York. US light crude for September delivery fell 1% to $85.75 a barrel, extending Thursday's 6% tumble.Even gold prices fell, bucking a trend that had seen investors flock to the metal, viewing it as a less risky asset and helping push prices to record levels. Gold dropped $3.71 an ounce to $1,644.19 on Friday, after setting a new record of $1,681 an ounce on Thursday. 'Out of tools' Throughout 2011, global markets have been trying to absorb and process a number of significant shocks. The first of half of the year saw a deadly earthquake and tsunami strike Japan, hurting the world's third-biggest economy just as it looked as if growth was picking up. At the same time, there was a spike in oil prices caused by the political unrest in North Africa and the Middle East. Bubbling away in the background the whole time were the growing debt problems in the US and the eurozone. The biggest problem facing investors is that they are running out of places to put their money However, despite these issues, analysts say many investors were optimistic that underlying global growth would be helped along by expansion in China and Asia's other fast-growing nations. That optimism seems to have dissipated in recent weeks as policymakers' failure to deal with the global fiscal problems was compounded by some weak economic data out of the US. Also, the efforts of governments and central banks to instill stability into the markets seem to have fallen short of their goal. On Thursday, in a move that many analysts called a short-term fix, Japan intervened in the currency market in an attempt to weaken the strong yen and buy some succour for exporters. Action Economics' Mr Cohen said people were losing hope that lawmakers would be able to get growth back on track."There is an underlying fear that central banks don't have any more tools," he said. Spreading problem On Thursday in the US, the Dow Jones index had its worst day since December 2008, closing down 512.76 points, or 4.3%, at 11,383.68. Wall Street's other leading indexes also slid, with the S&P 500 index falling 4.8% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq more than 5% lower.Earlier in the day, Europe had been been under heavy selling pressure, with its main indexes losing more than 3%. This came after European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso warned that the region's sovereign debt crisis was spreading, sparking fears that Italy and Spain might become engulfed in the problems.London's FTSE 100 index and Frankfurt's Dax had their worst day this year on Thursday, closing almost 3.5% lower. "People are throwing in the towel because they can't find relief on any front," said Milton Ezrati, market strategist at Lord Abbett. Guardian, juče: World stock markets in turmoilAlmost £50bn wiped off leading British shares and huge sell-off on Wall Street amid economic fears Thursday 4 August 2011 21.36 BST Almost £50bn was wiped off the value of Britain's 100 biggest companies on a day of global stock market mayhem triggered by a deepening of the eurozone crisis and fears for the US economy.After a day of massive stock market falls in Europe and the US of a kind not seen since the depths of the last economic downturn, traders said the atmosphere was reminiscent of the banking crisis of October 2008. Wall Street endured one of its worst days since the height of that crisis, with the Dow Jones Industrial Index closing more than 500 points or 4.3% lower at 11,383 in heavy volume, as it resumed a two-week streak interrupted only briefly on Wednesday. It was the biggest single-day loss since 2008."For many traders this week has felt like the start of the banking crisis in 2008, which would go some way to explaining the panic selling we have seen today," said Will Hedden, sales trader at IG Index.The fall on Wall Street is expected to cause further falls in the FTSE 100 index of leading shares on Friday, after the index fell to its lowest close, 5393.14, since September 2010 yesterday. The futures market was predicting a further 100 point fall.Rumours were swirling around the City that hedge funds were being forced to sell assets such as gold in order to cover deepening losses on other investments. This led to a surprise 1% drop in gold, which in recent weeks had hit record highs of more than £1,000 an ounce as a safe haven bet in the eurozone and US debt crisis. Brent crude fell 5% to $107 a barrel amid signs of slowdown in the west's economies.Anxiety over the debt crisis in the eurozone, and increasingly in Italy, set the tone for nervous trading during the London morning, but the pace of the decline accelerated as Wall Street opened sharply lower. By early afternoon in New York the Dow Jones had declined by 400 points.Despite this week's 11th-hour agreement to raise the US debt ceiling, Wall Street is increasingly anxious over the health of the world's biggest economy. A major test comes on Friday with the release of US employment data giving the latest health check of an economy which barely grew in the first half of the year.The 191.27 point drop in FTSE 100 index represented a 3.43% slump – the index's biggest daily fall in percentage terms, and the biggest points fall, since March 2009.Banks were particularly hard hit, with falls in the bailed-out Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland leaving taxpayers nursing £28bn of losses. There were big falls by other FTSE 100 firms.The index of leading shares has now shed 422 points this week, wiping £110bn off its value. It is down 11% since April's peak. The continued weakness in the UK economy ensured the Bank of England kept interest rates at their record low of 0.5% for the 29th successive month.The president of the European commission, José Manuel Barroso, fuelled anxiety about the eurozone debt crisis by berating European leaders about the speed at which they were responding to the debt crisis, barely a fortnight after congratulating them about their latest deal to rescue Greece."We are no longer managing a crisis just in the euro area periphery," he said. "Euro area financial stability must be safeguarded." He urged European leaders to review "all elements" of the €440bn (£382bn) European financial stability facility and its €500bn replacement, the European stability mechanism.The European Central Bank gave signals it was ready to resume buying bonds of troubled eurozone countries. Dealers said the central bank had been buying Portuguese and Irish bonds – but not those of Italy and Spain, where borrowing costs have shot to euro era highs and are now the new focus of the markets.Jamie Dannhauser, economist at Lombard Street Research, said the ECB was "still in cloud cuckoo land"."The overriding impression one gets of the ECB is of an organisation unwilling to accept the reality that faces the eurozone. In contrast to other major central banks, the ECB has recently been making hawkish noises – at least, that is, until now."Despite the ECB intervention, continental European markets suffered heavy losses. Germany's Dax closed 3.5% lower and the French CAC dropped 4%, while the euro fell sharply against other currencies, losing nearly 1.5 cents against the US dollar, to $1.4170.The Bank of Japan had sparked frenzied action on the foreign exchanges after intervening to drive down the value of the yen, which has been strong against the dollar.Bond yields – interest rates – in Italy remained stuck above the critical level of 6% while Italian shares plunged amid confusion about the moves in the main stock market index which was experiencing pricing difficulties.Amid the rout, it emerged that police acting on orders from the prosecutors of Trani, a port on Italy's Adriatic coast, had raided the Milan offices of the rating agencies, Moody's and Standard & Poor's, as part of continuing investigations into their role in recent financial turmoil. The chief prosecutor in Trani told Reuters that his office was checking to see whether the ratings agencies "respect regulations".The £1.4bn loser Ivan Glasenberg, chief executive of the commodity trading group Glencore, has emerged as one of the biggest losers of thecurrent stock market sell-off – at least on paper.When Glencore floated on the London stock market in May, the 54-year-old South African's personal stake was worth £5.76bn.But, by the time the market closed on Thursday, it was valued at £4.31bn – a loss of £130m a week.When it listed, Glencore was valued at about £37bn – bigger than Tesco and nearly twice the size of insurer Prudential – and the float catapulted Glasenberg into the list of the world's richest 100 people. Since then the shares have fallen 25% from 530p to 396.35p on Thursday night.The Glencore listing created a huge amount of interest as the company was immediately thrust into the FTSE 100 index of leading shares and, from there, it automatically became a key holding in many people's pension funds.The float also generated massive rewards for a group of faceless traders who had spent much of their careers operating in almost total obscurity.Apart from Glasenberg, four other Glencore billionaires emerged after the company went public: Daniel Maté and Telis Mistakidis, whose fortunes are now worth about £1.7bn each; as well as Tor Peterson and Alex Beard, whose stakes are both currently valued at around £1.5bn.Glasenberg, who has spent his entire career at Glencore, was hired by the company's founder Marc Rich, the controversial trader best known for being charged by US authorities with trading with Iran, fleeing to Switzerland and then being pardoned by Bill Clinton on the president's last day in the White House. Rich left Glencore in the mid-1990s when Glasenberg and others took control.
Muwan Posted August 5, 2011 Posted August 5, 2011 Očekivano, raspad se nastavlja u Evropi a videćemo kako će Dow proći do kraja dana. FTSE 100 drops more than 3.4% amid financial turmoilFriday 5 August 2011 09.22 BSTNervous investors dump stocks as fears about the strength of the US economy and European debt crisis grip markets. Turmoil in the global financial markets continued on Friday when the FTSE 100 dropped more than 3.4% at the open as nervous investors dumped stocks amid fears about the strength of the US economy and the ability of European governments to contain the debt crisis.The blue chip index was trading more than 170 points lower at 5,200 in early trading – an even larger downward lurch than had been expected following the dramatic 500 point fall on Wall Street and big falls in Asian stock markets overnight.The Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 4.3%, one of its biggest ever falls, sparking a 3.7% slide in Japan's Nikkei and a 5% drop in Hong Kong's Hang Seng.The FTSE 100 is on track for a third consecutive triple-digit close. The last time there was a sequence of large falls was in September 2008 in the aftermath of the collapse of Lehman Brothers.Bank shares were particularly hard hit. Bailed-out Royal Bank of Scotland – which reported a first-half loss of £794m – and Lloyds Banking Group were down 10% in early trading, as was Barclays, which was the largest faller by 9am.Dealers were braced for volatile trading ahead of US unemployment data at 1.30pm London time, which is a key barometer of the health of a US economy that is barely showing signs of growth. They also want more action from European leaders to contain the debt crisis that has spread from Greece, Ireland and Portugal to the larger economies of Spain and Italy.Bond yields – or interest rates – in Spain and Italy remained above the critical 6% levels, with Italy 10-year yields at 6.3% and Spain at 6.4%. Levels above 7% have forced Greece, Ireland and Portugal to seek bailouts from the European Union and International Monetary Fund.In contrast, the yield on UK government bonds, known as gilts, fell to record lows.In Italy, shares in Intesa Sanpaolo and UniCredit were suspended after falling quickly at the open and have already slumped to levels last seen during the 2008 banking crisis because of fears about their exposure to their own government's debt. Britanske Top100 su ukupno izgubile više od 50 milijardi Sterlinga na vrednosti (za sada).
Eraserhead Posted August 6, 2011 Posted August 6, 2011 Ode AAA na AA+ po S&P prvi put u istoriji. Reason
Аврам Гојић Posted August 6, 2011 Posted August 6, 2011 oni su na tripl ej bili ponosni kao mi na Novaka. ovo ce imati gadan fallout
rajka Posted August 6, 2011 Posted August 6, 2011 oni su na tripl ej bili ponosni kao mi na Novaka. ovo ce imati gadan fallouta da ne kazem sto ce ponovo morati da se stampaju svi udzbenici iz ekonomije, u kojima su treasuries sinonim za risk-free securities :D
Anduril Posted August 7, 2011 Posted August 7, 2011 a da ne kazem sto ce ponovo morati da se stampaju svi udzbenici iz ekonomije, u kojima su treasuries sinonim za risk-free securities :DI to ne samo ta sekcija udzbenika. Potpuno je ocigledno da se citav mejnstrim makroekonomskih skola koje su dominirale poslednjih decenija ne mogu nazvati egzaktnom naukom jer se radi pre svega o politickim instrumentima a ne naucnicima koji priznaju svoje greske, pogresne teorije i predvidjanja pa krecu u reviziju i preispitivanje. Ekonomija je bila i ostala pre svega sociolosko-politicka dizciplina a citava ekonometrijska magla sluzi pre svega da bi sakrila tu cinjenicu.
Zabalujev Posted August 7, 2011 Posted August 7, 2011 Reason I eagerly look forward to this being blamed on libertariansŠto uopšte nije teško, s obzirom da nema ko se nije izjasnio makar jednom kao libertarijanac u toj US of A.
Roger Sanchez Posted August 7, 2011 Posted August 7, 2011 Vidio malo prije carinu Greenspana na RTVSlo kako lakonski objašnjava američkom puku da USA može otplatiti bilo kakav dug - ako ništa drugo, pokrenu Topčider™ i eto novaca!
balu Posted August 8, 2011 Posted August 8, 2011 Situacija je perpendikularna. Tipovao sam da ce ovi procenjivaci da snize rejting US of A na AAA- kad oni se usudise da im daju AA+. Medjutim kad citate obrazlozenje nista vam nije jasno. Te kratkorocno, te dugorocno, te za vracanje dugova, te idi mi-dodji mi, dodjes mi, dodjem ti, pominje se i neko A-1+ pa cak i dalje AAA. Uglavnom okruglo pa na cose.Medjutim sustina je da se priznaje da je US$ nacet. Vise i zvanicno dolar i te amerikanske 'artije nisu neprikosnovene. Za sada su se Kitajci, Niponci i Englezi (imaju najvise tih artija po prosecnoj glavi) izvukli, ali sada ce dobro da razmisle da li da kupuju joste tih 'artija ili da prodavaju ovo sto imaju.Elem u svetu se pojavila i nova grupa zemalja, koje su uvredljivo nazvali PIGS (Portugalija, Italija, Grcka i Spanija), naklonjenih bankrotu. Sve evropski juznjaci. Irsku su nesto preskocili, ne uklapa im se u akronim (bilo bi PIIGS), a i nisu juznjaci. Dodali bi oni i Cipar al' opet kvari skracenicu. Znaci Svinje su isto tako veliki problem. Niko za sada ne ubraja tu UK of GB & NI, a i oni su vidjeni za bankrot. Znaju angli&sasi kako da zabasure stvar.Evo im ga stanje za 2010 u US$ prema Cijinoj Svetskoj Knjizi Fakata (World Fact Book):BND . . . . . . . . 2 172 000 000 000 000Javni Dug . . . . 76,5% BND-aInostrani Dug . 8 981 000 000 000 000 (cetiri puta veci od BND!?!)Godisnji Saldo . . . . . -40 340 000 000Duzni su i ruzni. Cetiri puta vise nego sto im je Bruto Nacionalni Dohodak, a nigde se ne spominje da su tropa. Jesu ljisice ti angli&sasi. Treba ih se cuvati.
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