Znaju, znaju kolega Lampadina Ameri gdje bi, ali ne ide, ne ide, a oni bi htjeli, ali isto tako znaju gdje sigurno idu … [bye]
Premješteno iz teme: Komentari trgovanja na hrvatskom tržištu kapitala
EU poludila
Premješteno iz teme: Komentari trgovanja na hrvatskom tržištu kapitala
EU poludila
u prosjeku otšli 2% + .bilo je i za očekivat pa cijeli tijedan su konstantn otonuli.
Ma ljudi ne berite brigu … samo ravno direkt u shoping !!! [thumbsup] Evo coek kaze da djiha ide na 12000!! I to minimum 12000 !!
The Dow could reach 12,000 by March as “gloom and doom” creeps out of the market, Ben Lichtenstein, President of Tradersaudio.com, said on "Squawk Box."
“The fundamentals aren’t necessarily stacking up, but again I’m still really looking at 12,000.” Lichtenstein said. “I don’t know if we’re going to hold these levels, I don’t think we’re going to see all times highs necessarily, again the fundamentals are still very negative, but if we can start to turn this around a little bit, the stock market is going to roar right through some of those levels. Again, 9,500 is a major speed bump right now, get above that 12,000 is eminent.”
Although there is a bit of sideways trading currently going on in the market, 10,000 in the Dow is not far off, Lichtenstein said.
“I just feel like a lot of gloom and doom is out of the market right now,” he said. “When everybody is holding onto the 8,000 and below, you defiantly have to take the other side.”
Zimbabwe unveils $100 trillion banknote
HARARE (AFP) – "Zimbabwe unveiled a 100 trillion dollar note Friday in the latest grim measure of its staggering economic collapse, heightening the urgency of a new round of unity talks set for next week.
The new 100,000,000,000,000 Zim-dollar bill would have been worth about 300 US dollars (225 euros) at Thursday’s exchange rate on the informal market, where most currency trading now takes place, but the value of the local currency erodes dramatically every day.
The move came just one week after the bank released a series of billion-dollar notes, which already are not worth enough for workers to withdraw their monthly salaries.
Inflation was last reported at 231 million percent in July, but the Washington think-tank Cato Institute has estimated it now at 89.7 sextillion percent — a figure expressed with 21 zeroes"
To mi se čini kao prilično visoka inflacija
[bye]
E sad smo počeli i Zimbabve izvlačiti [lol] . Ajde već jednom nešto nadrukajte pošteno jer mi keš gubi na vrijednosti već duže vremena, htio bih ga potrošiti ali što jeftinije……….
2009. godine kriza je gotova. Tako su 2008. govorili forumaši. Preveliki je red da nabrajam.
Disaster In Jobs Accelerates In 2009
Vaš link
E sad smo počeli i Zimbabve izvlačiti [lol] . Ajde već jednom nešto nadrukajte pošteno jer mi keš gubi na vrijednosti već duže vremena, htio bih ga potrošiti ali što jeftinije……….
A čujte kolega samo je pitanje vremena kad će se ta hiperinflacija iz Zimbabvea preliti na ostale afričke zemlje,a onda i na Europsku Uniju.
Pa,od Afrike do recimo Španjolske ima manje od sat vremena vožnje brodom.
Nije to tako daleko kako ljudi misle.
A znamo svi da se u brodu svašta može prevesti neopaženo.
A dok carina i policija reagiraju, onda je već kasno
Zimbabwe unveils $100 trillion banknote
HARARE (AFP) – "Zimbabwe unveiled a 100 trillion dollar note Friday in the latest grim measure of its staggering economic collapse, heightening the urgency of a new round of unity talks set for next week.
The new 100,000,000,000,000 Zim-dollar bill would have been worth about 300 US dollars (225 euros) at Thursday’s exchange rate on the informal market, where most currency trading now takes place, but the value of the local currency erodes dramatically every day.
The move came just one week after the bank released a series of billion-dollar notes, which already are not worth enough for workers to withdraw their monthly salaries.
Inflation was last reported at 231 million percent in July, but the Washington think-tank Cato Institute has estimated it now at 89.7 sextillion percent — a figure expressed with 21 zeroes"
To mi se čini kao prilično visoka inflacija
[bye]
To mi se čini prilično stara informacija. Jučer u podne već bilo.
First bank failures of ’09
"The financial crisis has claimed its first two banks in 2009 at an approximate cost to the FDIC of more than $200 million.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced Friday that the National Bank of Commerce in Berkeley, Ill., and Bank of Clark County in Vancouver, Wash., had been shuttered."
Britain readies bank rescue package
"Banks must reveal the true scale of their bad assets to help revive frozen global credit markets, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on Saturday as officials met bank chiefs to thrash out a new rescue package.
His government is expected to announce new measures early next week to boost bank lending in an attempt to help Britain avoid a painful, deep recession.
Despite a multi-billion pound bank bailout last year and a series of record rate cuts, banks remain unwilling to increase lending as they try to boost their coffers and avoid risk."
Bank bailout: Get ready for next phase
"It’s back to square one.
The deepening financial crisis, which is undermining the government’s rescue efforts so far, is prompting federal officials to revisit its original bailout measures. These include taking toxic assets off institutions’ balance sheets by moving them into a so-called "bad bank", according to published reports.
Paulson also talked of having the Federal Reserve expand a program to back consumer credit, scheduled to begin next month, and of letting the Fed accept riskier assets, such as commercial mortgage-backed securities. Also, the government could expand its backstop of bank assets as it did for Bank of America, as well as Citigroup"
Zvuči poznato?
NE BOJTE SE!!!!
Nećete ni osjetiti kad vas pogodi
[bye]
Not Even Bailout Funds Can Burnish Banks’ Image
Topics:Economy (U.S.) | Economy (Global) | Stock Market | Banking
Sectors:Financial Services | Banks
Companies:JPMorgan Chase and Co | HSBC Holdings, plc. | Citigroup Inc | Bank of America Corp
By: Jeff Cox, CNBC.com | 17 Jan 2009 | 10:32 AM ET
Text Size
Not even a fresh influx of government money could reverse investor sentiment regarding the banking industry.
While news that Bank of America [BAC 7.18 -1.14 (-13.7%) ] was getting $20 billion in bailout funding to prop up its balance sheet initially cheered investors, the mood quickly turned as it became apparent that it might not be enough.
And BofA’s troubles were merely reflecting the rest of the sector’s woes. European bank Barclays [BCS 7.25 -1.15 (-13.69%) ] lost about a third of its stock value, HSBC [HBC 39.95 -0.38 (-0.94%) ] continued to come under pressure, and Citigroup [C 3.50 -0.33 (-8.62%) ] continued its slide even as the company desperately sought to assure the market that it was adjusting its model to meet future needs.
"People are afraid to trust anything," says Kathy Boyle, president of Chapin Hill Advisors in New York. "You’ve got a lot of issues here that aren’t going away quickly and they’re going to have to absorbed quickly. That’s going to translate into losses for these institutions."
Like many other financial advisers, Boyle is steering her clients mostly clear of banks, except for a play on the ProShares Ultra Financials [UYG 3.84 -0.13 (-3.27%) ] exchange-traded fund. The ETF is diversified enough to mitigate risk and also plays double any moves higher in the Dow Jones U.S. Financials Index.
Otherwise, the banks are being treated as taboo.
From an investors standpoint, there will be little incentive to jump back into the stocks of the nation’s big banks.
"I don’t know where the end is going to be," Boyle says. "I don’t know where it’s going to turn around, but it’s going to take a long time before these banks turn profitable again. You’re going to see more mergers and more creative efforts to try to stir business up."
While some analysts were taking a wait-and-see approach on BofA’s problems, investors are dumping the stock in droves.
Unless the pendulum swings quickly, earnings could well be a precursor to a blistering round of bank closings.