لم اكتب يوما موضوعا عن مؤشر الداو لعدم قتاعتي بهذا الربط اللحظي مع اسواقنا التعيسة
على العموم امريكا الليلة مع موعد مع اهم بيانات وهي نسبة البطالة
لو جاءت أفقية او اقل من التوقعات بقليل يومكم اخضر يا اهل الداو
المضحك ان هنالك مؤشرات اخرى وهي اس ااند بي والنازدك وتمثل جزء رئيسي من الاقتصاد
سالني صديق النازدك نازل وايد
اجبته
ما عليك جماعتنا ما يعرفوا غير الداو
غلى الاقل للان
العقار والذهب الملاذ الأمن أن شاء الله
QE 2
Jim Grant, one of the most respected voices in the financial industry, joins Zero Hedge and others, who see that the only choice the Federal Reserve has now that the temporary and shallow reprieve from the clutches of the deflationary depression is over, is to print more money in the form of another iteration of QE. Whether this will be another $2.5 trillion, like last time, which was the price of an 18 month delay of the inevitable, or a $5 trillion concerted global effort, as Ambrose Evans-Pritchard believes, is irrelevant: the only option the central printers, pardon, bankers, have left is to flood the market with yet more worthless paper (keep an eye out on the doubling in the price of gold the second QE2 is publicly announced, which will also double as the obituary for all fiat paper). In an interview with Bloomberg TV, Grant says that the first order of business tomorrow when the Fed’s new additions officially join their new groupthink perpetuating employer will be “to try once more to print enough dollars to make something happen in the U.S. economy.” The ever-sarcastic Grant manages to completely skewer Janet Yellen, Steve Diamond and Sarah Bloom Raskin, to ridicule the Fed’s 100% track record of not only focusing on the wrong thing time after time, but getting the response consistently wrong with 100% precision, and also manages to makes fun of the Fed’s credentialed WSJ lackeys, who courtesy of the Fed’s “editorial” control over the reporting process, get a direct line into leakable Fed strategy
حد يقولنا شو أنعكاسه أذا تم أعتماد QE
أيامنا خضرا أن شاء الله
حد يعرف شو qe
Economy Loses 95,000 Jobs in September., Worse Than Expected; Unemployment Rate Holds at 9.6%- Bloomberg