looser a možda i 30%..nikad se nezna…samo petak je daleko nemoj se zaletiti…pusti rađe da ti fondovi prodaju…
u čet je glasovanje…stoga ima vremena
opa danas je glasovanje…nisam znao..evo baš pričaju na cnbc da ima nekih promjena i da je odluka da će se glasovati u 7 pm po USA vremenu…
opa nekome se žuri…
Kao što sam jutros napisao SEC i FASB spremaju novu legislativu kojom bi se olabavili okovi toksične imovine banaka.
SEC issues fair-value accounting guidance
The Securities and Exchange Commission, in junction with the Financial Accounting Standards Board, issued guidelines under "fair value" accounting rules for financial firms trying to peg the value of hard-to-trade assets on their balance sheets…..
looser a možda i 30%..nikad se nezna…samo petak je daleko nemoj se zaletiti…pusti rađe da ti fondovi prodaju…
u čet je glasovanje…stoga ima vremena
APSOLUTNO, savršen stav, vrlo mudro i odmjereno, bolje je propustiti 10% eventualne zarade, na polazeći vlak se lako ukrca, nego riskirati 30% gubitka.
Kao što sam jutros napisao SEC i FASB spremaju novu legislativu kojom bi se olabavili okovi toksične imovine banaka.
SEC issues fair-value accounting guidance
The Securities and Exchange Commission, in junction with the Financial Accounting Standards Board, issued guidelines under "fair value" accounting rules for financial firms trying to peg the value of hard-to-trade assets on their balance sheets…..
Dozvolite da se obratim.
Trikovi rade samo ako onaj tko ih gleda nezna u čemu je trik. Ovdje svi znaju u čemu je trik. Kako će nam to pomoći onda? Bojim se nikako.
Kao što sam jutros napisao SEC i FASB spremaju novu legislativu kojom bi se olabavili okovi toksične imovine banaka.
SEC issues fair-value accounting guidance
The Securities and Exchange Commission, in junction with the Financial Accounting Standards Board, issued guidelines under "fair value" accounting rules for financial firms trying to peg the value of hard-to-trade assets on their balance sheets…..
i kako će im to pomoći? bojim se nikako…nije više problem u iskazivanju vrijednosti ABSa…problem je u njihovom financiranju!
problem fair valuea i mark to myth je i doveo do ove zbrke, ali ne treba ga sada rušiti…jer što znaći da će netko sada knjižiti po drugoj metodologiji kad svi znaju koliko to vrijedi…jako malo
evo kolege u americi komentiraju sadašnji spread na MBSu
bid 21 cent za dolar
ask 60 centi za dolar [thumbsup]
pročitajte malo komentare na ovaj link koji ste postali…ameri shvaćaju dubinu problema daleko bolje od vas…
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,3682745,00.html?maca=kro-rss-cro-all-1479-rdf
Meni je problem itekako jasan, a to što ti želiš oponirati zdravom razumu to je tvoj problem. Ako su Ameri shvatili da je jedan od ključnih problema FASB 157 rule i njegova interpretacija u praksi onda oponiranje takvom stavu je na rubu pameti. To je samo jedna od mjera i ona mora biti donesena jer na taj način će se otvoriti mogućnost određivanja realne cijene takve imovine, a to je ono što treba Paulsonu i Kongresu. Ne fire sale cijena koja je dno dna.
I glede uzroka ove krize oni sežu 10-tak godina unatrag kada su centralne banke svijeta, Kina, Japan i EU intervencijama određivale cijenu dolara koja je pogodovala njihovim gospodarstvima. Zaheb je nastao kada su tako stečena sredstva plasirali ponovno u USA gospodarstvo, tj u vrijedonosne papire u USA jer su prinosi bili vrlo visoki. Rat i ulaganja u USA stvorili se veliki pritisak na slabljenje dolara, a arapi su hedžali naftom svoje SWFove i to je kraj priče.
Japan Firms Pessimistic for First Time in 5 Years
Topics:Trade | Inflation | Economy (Global) | Japan
By Reuters | 30 Sep 2008 | 08:57 PM ET
Business sentiment at big Japanese manufacturers turned negative for the first time in five years, a closely watch Bank of Japan survey showed, as the world’s No.2 economy headed towards recession amid a global slowdown and financial market turmoil.
CNBC.com
Underlining growing uncertainty over the outlook, the central bank’s tankan quarterly corporate survey also showed big manufacturers expect conditions to worsen in the fourth quarter.
The tankan came on top of a recent set of weak reports including exports and industrial output, while a political row over a $700 billion U.S. bailout for Wall Street prompted more concerns about the outlook for Japan’s export-reliant economy.
"Export-reliant sectors were particularly hit. External factors such as weak exports and the global financial market turmoil are hurting Japan’s economy," said Takahide Kiuchi, chief economist at Nomura Securities. "We might see Japan’s economy worsen further towards the end of this year."
Financial markets showed little reaction as they expected a poor reading, while the Nikkei 225 Average [JP;N225 11368.26 108.40 (+0.96%)] climbed 1.2 percent after a Wall Street surge prompted by hopes that Washington will revive a plan to stabilize the U.S. financial sector after its earlier defeat on Capitol Hill.
The headline index for big manufacturers’ sentiment stood at minus 3, down from plus 5 in the previous survey in June and below the median market forecast for minus 2.
It was down for the fourth straight quarter and the lowest since June 2003.
The index for December was seen at minus 4, suggesting firms expect conditions to worsen over the next three months.
The index, taken from a survey of 10,488 firms from Aug. 27 to Sept. 30, is made up from the percentage of firms reporting a favorable business environment minus those reporting unfavorable conditions.
Capex Growth Slows
While sky-high energy and commodity costs and slowing growth at home and overseas are squeezing profit margins, big firms expect their capital spending to rise 1.7 percent in the year to next March, lagging a 2.4 percent rise forecast three months ago and also below a 2.5 percent rise expected by economists.
Companies tend to be cautious on capital spending — a key engine for Japan’s growth — at the start of the business year and gradually revise up their plans as the year progresses.
The tankan, a word meaning short-term economic outlook, also showed big firms cut their profit forecasts for the current fiscal year, expecting their recurring profits to fall 9.4 percent, compared to their forecast of a 7 percent fall in June.
The sentiment index for big service-sector firms stood at plus 1, down from plus 10 three months ago and below economists’ forecast of plus 5. The big non-manufacturers also expect conditions to worsen over the next three months.
Illustrating financial market turmoil, the sentiment index at financial institutions fell to its lowest since the comparable data started in December 2003.
The government has effectively acknowledged that Japan is in recession, ending a growth cycle that began in early 2002.
While uncertainty over the outlook persists, markets expect the Bank of Japan to stick to its neutral stance on policy and keep interest rates intact at 0.5 percent for some time.
Copyright 2008 Reuters