jesi ti u središću?
ja sam 50m od Av. Malla.
Zaprudje
pliplon ne vjerujem ti ja ni tom doktoru,kod mene prolazi samo dr.Oz [smiley]
Ja nam dajem 2 dana ludovanja. Prvi zbog same vijesti, a onda u utorak reakcija na DJIA rast. Od srijede nadalje, ponovno bolesna volatilnost i povratak domaćim temama.
Kakav promašaj, ceo fudbal… [embarass]
Ovo više nema nikakve logike. Vlad, svaka čast, mislio sam da tvoji targeti ispod 3000, više ne dolaze u obzir. Razvoj događaja me je demantirao. Prosipam se pepelom pred svekolikim forumaškim auditorijem.
Jedina pozitivna novost je možebitna činjenica da se Crobi brani, ili ja to samo želim vidjeti.
Premješteno iz teme: Komentari trgovanja na hrvatskom tržištu kapitala
Naši fondovi pažljivo prate ovu debatu:
Jedina pozitivna novost je možebitna činjenica da se Crobi brani, ili ja to samo želim vidjeti.
i meni se tako danas icinilo.
dow – 2,82%
nasdaq – 4,79%
s&p500 – 4,20%
EU refuses bail-out package despite crisis fears
Europe rebuffs calls for fiscal rescue plan as German exports collapse and Nordic central banks firefight liquidity squeeze.
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 10:42AM BST 25 Sep 2008
Comments 48 | Comment on this article
Nordic central banks are firefighting a liquidity squeeze
The Fed has allowed Norway, Denmark and Sweden to draw dollar funds Photo: PA
The European Union no plans “yet” for a rescue package along the lines of the Paulson plan despite severe stress in the region’s banking system and further evidence that the bloc is sliding into a deep and protracted recession.
“The situation we face here in Europe is less acute and member states do not at this point consider that a US style plan is needed,” said Joaquin Almunia, the EU’s economics commissioner, in a tense session at the European Parliament.
“We didn’t have subprime mortgages. We do not have investment banks. In any case, it’s not up to the EU; it’s up to every one of the member states to decide whether they need to launch this kind of fiscal initiative.”
The comments fell far short of reassuring doubters that the EU system has the machinery to tackle a major financial crisis.
Daniel Gross, director of the Centre for European Policy Studies in Brussels, said euro-zone lenders are heavily exposed to the fall-out from the US credit crisis, describing the Paulson plan as a de facto rescue for the Euopean banking system.
It has emerged that French finance minster Christine Lagarde was one of those pleading with US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson last week to bail out AIG, which had insured over $300bn of credit derivatives to European firms.
Mr Gross said Deutsche Bank deploys fifty times leverage and has liabilites of $2,000bn, equivalent to 80pc of Germany’s GDP. Fortis Bank has liabilities of 300pc of Belgian GDP. These dwarf the burden of any US bank on the US government balance sheet. He said EU states do not have the means to bail out these banks. Any rescue would have to come from the European Central Bank, yet it is not allowed to carry out bail-outs under the Maastricht Treaty law.
The picture is clearly going from bad worse across the eurozone and the Nordic region. Germany’s IFO index of business expectations fell to 86.5 in September, the lowest level in fifteen years. “The time has come to cut interest rates,” said Gernot Nerb, the IFO’s chief economist.
“A full-blown recession is looming in the 2009 for the euro area,” said Jacques Cailloux, Europe economist at the Royal Bank of Scotland.
“We think Germany’s economy will contract next year. Foreign manufacturing orders have been falling for eight months in row, which is the longest continuous drop on record. German house prices have fallen 4pc this year, which is surprising for a country that has seen no increase for ten years,” he said.
“The country has a `high-beta’ to the global cycle because of its industrial exports. Given this macro-outlook, we think the ECB should cut rates,” he said.
Spain’s finance minister Pedro Solbes said on Wednesday that his country’s economy may faces outright contraction in the second half of the year, warning that debt arrears had become “very disturbing”.
Even oil-rich Norway is facing strains in its credit system as the mayhem goes global. The Norges Bank joined with the central banks of Sweden, Denmark and Australia in an emergency scheme to draw $30bn of US dollar funds in a swap accord with the Federal Reserve.
jebiga.
najebali smo.
nema bailouta
jebiga.
najebali smo.
nema bailouta
???
……….al će greenspanu ići dobro knjiga: “Propali smo a da nismo bili svjesni kako”
House Rejects Bailout For US Financial Markets
Topics:Henry Paulson | Banking
Sectors:Financial Services | Banks
Companies:Fortis N.V.
By Wire Reports | 29 Sep 2008 | 01:46 PM ET
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The House rejected a $700 billion Wall Street bailout bill Monday that administration officials said was crucial to avoid a broad economic collapse.
Congressional leaders had predicted a close vote. The White House Monday said President Bush strongly supports the legislative.
House Democratic Whip James Clyburn of South Carolina, told Reuters "We have more than half of our caucus that are going to vote for this bill."
He said if half of Democrats voted for it, 100 Republican votes would be necessary to push the legislation to House passage.
Bush argued that jittery U.S. taxpayers will benefit from a number of safeguards that lawmakers wrote into the pending legislation during weekend negotiations on Capitol Hill, including checks and balances on the operation of the program.
The president spoke shortly after two leading players in the Hill bargaining went on television news shows to urge passage, even as both acknowledged the necessity of this action represents a sad day for the nation.
* Cramer: Dow Could Drop to 8000
But the Connecticut senator, chairman of the Banking Committee, also said the bill is not a panacea for all the problems that have bedeviled the U.S. financial markets.
He also said, though, that failure to act would spread the contagion of frozen credit markets even further.
"This is not just about Wall Street," Dodd said. He said that it’s "potentially going to hurt other people across the country."
Sen. Judd Gregg, R-N.H., who represented fellow Republicans in the weekend talks, called it a "tourniquet" for the ailing financial industry and slow-moving economy.
The latest assessments of prospects for passage came as investors worldwide and in early trading in the United States continued to show doubt about whether the bill would go through, much less go a long way toward curing the systemic problems that have unnerved financial markets across the globe for weeks.
"A rescue plan worth $700 billion is simply not enough to overcome the crisis for the foreseeable future. If anything, all the real economy problems will escalate as a result in the foreseeable future," said Carsten Klude, strategist at MM Warburg.
The House was slated to vote later Monday on the deeply unpopular rescue package for the stressed financial industry. Bush on Sunday conceded this was a difficult vote in an election year — and repeated that sentiment in his statement Monday morning.
But he called a vote for the bill "a vote to prevent economic damage" to communities across the country.
He also said the legislation addresses the root cause of the problem — "assets related to home mortgages that have lost value during the housing decline."
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