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#1 |
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Guam
Posts: 188
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The last fed funds rate cut was lucky #13 on June 25, 2003. That was the last US fed funds cut which ended a two and one half year period of rates cuts post Equity Market collapse. (bubble bursting).
Here we go again, just four years later with a CDO bubble burst illness. Everyone needs the trauma steroid monetary treatment. 1) Wall Street firms (Bankers/Brokers/Hedge Funds) need it bad 2) mortgage borrowers need it 3) Re-fi folks need it 4) real estate sales demand it 5) auto makers need credit to sell 6) Flat panel DTV makers need credit to sell Rates did NOT cause the problem---fraud and deceptive selling did, but monetary policy will be the primary reaction/intervention. Like chemo therapy is for all Cancer. |
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#2 |
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Community Team
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: at the bar
Posts: 12,306
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US rates will go down, I agree.
Bernie has no other choice. European rates will increase and/or remain static. Inflationary pressure here in euroland is growing and there is no appetite for inflation. There's even less appetite to bail out the banks. Bet Bernie would prefer to have these problems, instead of the janitor duties to Mr.Greenspans incontinent financial pants. Bank of England though is in the cleft stick. House/mortgage market is beginning to stall - but inflation is a worry. Mervyn King is undecided. If he goes either route, he gets flack.
__________________
.."But finally the last thing I’ll say to the people who don’t believe in cycling, the cynics and the sceptics. I'm sorry for you. I’m sorry that you can’t dream big. [I]I'm sorry you don't believe in miracles. You should believe in these athletes, and you should believe in these people. I'll be a fan of the Tour de France for as long as I live. And there are no secrets" - this is a hard sporting event and hard work wins it - Armstrong 2005 TDF morelike hypocrisy. |
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#3 |
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Guam
Posts: 188
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Lim: Never look into the rear view mirror for future course changes and we're all in this global financial mess together. Money center banks know no borders anymore, nor do Swiss or Cayman secrecy rules. The future of residential real estate is a pain cave. Deflation is the next shoe to drop.
Inflation is something to worry about in a full employment wonderland. Going forward, England & Europe will have unemployment issues and deflation. All central bankers will meet secretly and hold hands. Rate cutting will be measured and uniform, but the direction will be straight downward. Everyone will climb on board. (The USA cannot sell Treasury Bills, Notes & Bonds w/o European support) Wall Street & the US fiscal deficit must and will be rescued. Main street will follow--some of them anyway. This squabble will be resolved before the UCI/ASO food fights. Just as I predicted the ubiquitous nature of doping in pro cycling, I have now correctly telegraphed the global recession of 2008-2009. The good news for SUV owners is that the blood-for-oil program will result in lower prices at the pump and heating oil for those trapped in a Winter chill. Last edited by Hein-Verbruggen : 29-08.-2007 at 09:13 AM. |
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#4 | ||||
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Community Team
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: at the bar
Posts: 12,306
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Quote:
Hein mate. Stop spoofing. I suggested to you yesterday that you need to familiarise yourself with economic policy. It's patently obvious that either you haven't got a clue - or you're trying to wing it. I suggest that you familiarise yourself with Euroland economic indicies before spouting your usual guff. Euroland unemployment is at 6.9% - an historical low. Gross domestic and gross national product in Euroland is growing. ECB interest rates have been rising since late 2005 and are forecast to continue to rise or remain static until mid-2007, at least. Inflation however is also rising. If you took the time to read the statements of the ECB's monetary policy statements, following their monthly meeting for the past 18 months, instead of posing here, you'd see that inflation is the ECB's primary concern in a resurgent Euroland economy. Quote:
Hein mate - England/Euroland don't have unemployment issues and deflation. Stop putting out disinformation here. Your information is inaccurate. Read the ECB's monetary policy's statement and read the BoE monetary policy statements. Quote:
..............yeah right. Quote:
You're a fantasist. Yesterday, you said that all rates were being cut now. When challenged you then amended your proposition to "(rates) cutting will commence during the next twelve months" Now you've changed tack to suggest that recession will commence 2008-2009. The old scatter gun approach. Hoping that something, somewhere, sticks. Bit of advice : read the reports of the central banks of England and Euroland.
__________________
.."But finally the last thing I’ll say to the people who don’t believe in cycling, the cynics and the sceptics. I'm sorry for you. I’m sorry that you can’t dream big. [I]I'm sorry you don't believe in miracles. You should believe in these athletes, and you should believe in these people. I'll be a fan of the Tour de France for as long as I live. And there are no secrets" - this is a hard sporting event and hard work wins it - Armstrong 2005 TDF morelike hypocrisy. |
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#5 |
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Guam
Posts: 188
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Your problem is that your are trapped by an acute lack of experience in such matters, and a huge ego. There is so much you do not understand.
I do suffer from that problem as I have a long background steeped in Grand Cayman finances & Edge Act banking matters. No backtracking by me, the R/E market top was July 5, 2005. The economic metrics will show a recession (negative growth in 2008/2009) Lagging indictators mask the present recession. Many folks are already in free fall NOW. Monetary stimulous (performance doping) is all that can be managed by central bankers. Much like a WADA, but with a printing press and media megaphone. Trash talking and steroids exemptions. They have NO regulatory authority in a financial system that risk dumps outside of regulators radar screens (hedge funds, CDOs, Grand Cayman are all exempt) Central Bankers cannot stop fraud on Wall Street or at a mortgage origination or a pump and dump stock scheme, nor can they practice it. But they can add or subtract velocity and trash talk confidence into a marketplace. Smoke and mirrors AND inflationary stimuli can work--in the short term. That's where we are---early in a global recession. Central banks will all lower rates because they have NO other political action. You probably are blissfully unawre that Miami Office of KPMG entered into a plea deal with the US DOJ and agrred to pay a $600 MILLION fine and not take on any new clients for 24 months--for hedge fund leveraged income tax evasion. That is a current case of financial fraud by a Big Eight (3 & 4) CPA firm. Imagine if DOJ & IRS audited each office? New York, Chicago, SF, LA? Thanks for coming. Last edited by Hein-Verbruggen : 29-08.-2007 at 09:52 AM. |
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#6 | |||
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Community Team
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: at the bar
Posts: 12,306
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Quote:
hein mate - you've posted information throughout which is factually and totally incorrect. It's you who has both no experience and no idea of what you're talking about. Quote:
You suffer from the problem of being completely unaware of the economic indicies - which make your various pronouncements here appear ill informed and inaccurate. Grand Cayman finances - have nothing whatsoever got to do with central bank economic policy. Read the monetary policy statements of the BoE and ECB. Quote:
You're a fantasist, hein
__________________
.."But finally the last thing I’ll say to the people who don’t believe in cycling, the cynics and the sceptics. I'm sorry for you. I’m sorry that you can’t dream big. [I]I'm sorry you don't believe in miracles. You should believe in these athletes, and you should believe in these people. I'll be a fan of the Tour de France for as long as I live. And there are no secrets" - this is a hard sporting event and hard work wins it - Armstrong 2005 TDF morelike hypocrisy. |
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#7 |
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Guam
Posts: 188
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Too much school mythology, not enough back alley crime fighting.
Maybe an afternoon at GE Capital can help you get it? Or even a morning at a Nike swoosh sneaker store. Hedge Funds and off-shore banking are essential to financial fraud and evasion. Always has, always will be. Try injecting Deca w/o a syringe. You can't. Even the tax-exempt Vatican banks off shore. |
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#8 | |
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Community Team
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: at the bar
Posts: 12,306
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Quote:
Hein : GE Capital, Nike, Banco Ambrosiano, Grand Cayman............ They've nothing to do with central bank interest rates or monetary policy statements. Nor do they have anything to do with imaginary deflation and fantasist unemployment. Or economic recessions. Why the mendacity, Hein? Confronted with the facts - you revert to type. Try to stick with the subject matter.
__________________
.."But finally the last thing I’ll say to the people who don’t believe in cycling, the cynics and the sceptics. I'm sorry for you. I’m sorry that you can’t dream big. [I]I'm sorry you don't believe in miracles. You should believe in these athletes, and you should believe in these people. I'll be a fan of the Tour de France for as long as I live. And there are no secrets" - this is a hard sporting event and hard work wins it - Armstrong 2005 TDF morelike hypocrisy. |
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#9 |
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Guam
Posts: 188
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Lim:
I am puzzled. Do you have any idea who drives the order (buy/sell) trade tickets at all major bank-brokerages and Mother Merrill, JP Morgan, HSBC, Bear Stearn, Tailwind Capital, Goldman Sachs and then through the settlement skim exchanges NYSE, NASD etc....? I have people at most of these places and the MININUM estimate is 55%. Certainly, greater than half of all trading buiness is performed with hedge fund clients. Nobody really knows the actual mix---but unregulated 'secrective & private' Hedge Funds drive all capital marketplaces now---that is no great secret. Interest rate policies DID NOT INVENT cheating/gaming/off-shore leverage. Your message seems to be cut from 30 year old methods/policies. That Big Banks control the world. They do so today, only via their cozy relationships with their hedge fund partners. It is a now much less than 100% control. Presenty we have a huge financial crisis. The Big Banks lent money to the hedge funds--many of whom are now having to unwind CDOs & Treasuries to feed the redemption window calls. The big banks have a strained relationship with their evil creations. All of this with a blood-for-oil petro-based economy. It was working so very well until the CDO underwriting problem reared up. That's why any solution will involve off-shore accounts, secrecy, secret hedge fund agreements and very little to no oversight. Last edited by Hein-Verbruggen : 29-08.-2007 at 10:22 AM. |
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#10 | |||
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Community Team
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: at the bar
Posts: 12,306
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Quote:
None of which has any bearing on interest rate policy as set by the various central banks, Hein. Goldman Sachs, Bear Stearn : they've no input to the setting of interest rates by the ECB, Fed, BoE. Quote:
I never suggested that interest rate policies did invent cheating etc. I suggested that low interest rates were the catalyst - the first step in the supply chain if you will - promoting reckless lending to people who were never in a position to repay those loans. And the security for those loans was offset by using instruments such as CDO's being transacted in the financial markets. CDO's nominal value is predicated upon the loan being repaid. If interest rates were had been kept at a realistic level - cheap credit/dodgy loans would not have been widespread and loans/CDO's would never have been issued. Quote:
Yes, the hedge funds do have a problem. And yes, the banking system has a problem because banks are not prepared to loan money to other banks - because visibility as to the extent of who's holding what worthless paper is opaque to say the least. But let's be clear : interest rates policy in Euroland and Britain is set in the context of inflation these days. At the time of writing, Europe and britain have set their interest rate policy on the basis that the respective economies are performing well and that the only real threat to these economies is inflation. You appear to have a fundamental misunderstanding, hein. If what is going on in the financial markets was of concern either in Euroland or britain - the BoE wouldn't have increased the inter-bank rate for liquidity given to banks who are struggling, above the general interest rate. Mervyn King would have dropped the overall interest rate. The ECB would have dropped it's rate as well. Neither institution did and all indications show that the recent round of interest rate policy (increases/static) will continue. The US on the other hand has a different set of problems : to sustain it's economic performance requires the Fed to drop rates to hold off what many consider to be a real threat of recesssion. That's why the Fed dropped it's rate a few days ago.
__________________
.."But finally the last thing I’ll say to the people who don’t believe in cycling, the cynics and the sceptics. I'm sorry for you. I’m sorry that you can’t dream big. [I]I'm sorry you don't believe in miracles. You should believe in these athletes, and you should believe in these people. I'll be a fan of the Tour de France for as long as I live. And there are no secrets" - this is a hard sporting event and hard work wins it - Armstrong 2005 TDF morelike hypocrisy. |
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#11 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: You are here => X
Posts: 8,119
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Heiny-Ferbuggerin....
Equity markets going up despite blood already on Wall and Main Street. Go figure?? Please keep up unsolicited bearish prognostications. Together with nervousness on the street and market resilience....a great buy-indicator for those with enough experience to notice it. What , your recession now out to 2008-2009. Mmmm.... Remember book "The Great Depression of 1990". Sold alot of copies. Easy to sell gloom amd doom talk. Its everybody's fear and everyone wants to be warned about it before its happening. And me thinks the year 2000 top in the US equities makets (principally the technology stuffed NASDAQ which is still about 50% below its high in that year) may have had something to do with the domino collapse of the smoke and mirrors internet boom. Which oddly lends some model creedence to your "It ain't over yet" call. I'm still keepin' an eye on the real estate sector to see if this thing's going to play out regional or national. And by the way, as Lim has pointed out, the days of the US market sneezin' and the world catches a cold my friend are over. The US economy will still be strong but it is in decline compared/relative to the rest of the world's markets. |
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#12 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Guam
Posts: 188
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Stay tuned. The mark to market pricing of credit paper will be a big surprise for Q3, September 30, 2008. Risk dumping is NOT good for transparency nor confidence. More brutal unwinding over the next year and years.
We have a Global Market put, a margin call on the world credit markets. Whatever USA economy does---the world will follow. USA gets the flu, Europe goes into coma. We won WWII and rule Wall Street. The USA comsumes most of all foreign wares. Nobody does anything without the USA blood-for-Oil-wars, credit consumption or CDO spinning. Rates will fall. No doubt whatsoever. 1) Discount rate will be dropped into alignment with fed finds rate. 2) Both rates will be slashed over the coming year 3) 2008 recession will moderated as a resut of central bank policies in all countries, Wall Street & main street will get busy again. 4) low rates provide the steroid & trauma care needed to counter the fraud. 5) real estate valuation will decline, excess inventory and no more Liar Loans 6) enjoy your dreams of independence Cranky Quote:
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#13 | ||||
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: You are here => X
Posts: 8,119
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2) Only if signs of stagflation or deflation across all areas of the economy start occurring (not just property). Only if there is a massive slowdown in the economy. Since the stock and bond markets have been leading indicators of every recession since Adam, we'll need to see a little more market hiccupping before the media doomsday hype equates with what the markets are saying. 3)So we've gone from a "Global Meltdown of historic proportions not seen since 1980" a week ago to now your predicting a moderated recession, with Wall and Main Streets getting busy again, due to those bastards at the Fed who are steroiding the problem with money. Don't sound so dissappointed that you won't get to see your financial armageddon Heiny. Your personal neuroses are hard to hide from discerning observers. But then you could always change your username again if you're not happy with what's on record. 4) Interest rate manipulation (more limited in power than most people would believe) is the Fed's only real way of dampening the effects of sudden jolts upward or downward in the economy. 5)That's the real risk here, as previously stated IMO. But the more I hear your rambling, the more I want to be long stocks and property (though added property exposure can wait). 6) No dreaming Heiny, I'll leave that to you. Financial independence is current though nothing is guaranteed. Last edited by Crankyfeet : 06-09.-2007 at 10:20 AM. |
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#14 |
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Banned
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Guam
Posts: 188
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ECB is today signaling a rate reduction. (by foregoing the 4.0 to 4.25 adjustment) Their next move will be downward.
As I predicted last week. Your delusion is my validation. Much like all Jan Ulrich fans. |
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#15 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: You are here => X
Posts: 8,119
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Quote:
Ironically, one sage whom I respect, the Sage of Omaha, Warren Buffett, never once in his 60 years of market success ever concerned himself with macroeconomics or what the daily market news was spewing out at any given moment. And he was long the market through nearly every recession that I am aware of save cashing up a fair amount in 1973. So is it a Global Meltdown of Historic Proportions or a moderate recession with everyone on the Street getting busy again next year. Which is it? Seems to me you've softened a bit in the space of four days. |
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