From: J Sent: Thu, November 4, 2010 10:34:07 AM Subject: Re: Observations - Week of November 1
let us wait to see how qe2 affects china and rewards hong kong
attached latest fat dragon
also, given qe2 should sink usd and boost non-usd, combatants euro, yen, yuan, etc should be launching qe2-a, b, c, etc, so as to set up team usa to launch qe3
we are blessed
From: L Sent: Thu, November 4, 2010 9:32:57 AM Subject: RE: Observations - Week of November 1
Just when u thought things couldn’t get any weirder… bambi is already out defending QE2 and admits to targeting stock prices
washingtonpost.com
From: J Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 2010 7:21 PM Subject: Re: Observations - Week of November 1 i treat the to fro up down zigs zags of gold and silver and their derived schemas (gld, slv, gdx, gdxj, paas, during american trading hours, and hsbc certificate gold and nanyang commercial's certificate gold, silver and platinum) like brook would fish in colorado stream. once on hook, properly done up with options, let them flip and flop, exhausting themselves, reel them in, gut and fillet, bread and fry, and use the leftover excess and surplus leftover to exchange for solid gold, the ozs that never go away, forever.
bernanke is most kind to provide such no-lose fishing proposition.
From: W Sent: Thu, November 4, 2010 7:36:10 AM Subject: RE: Observations - Week of November 1
Let’s give credit, where credit is due and name QE2 – “gold bunker2-99” in honor of jay.
Gold and silver sold off by 3.7% before the fed announcement and I was so excited my heart literally raced as I hit the buy button.
Mannah from Bernanke.. thank you. Thank you . thank you.
From: S Sent: Wednesday, November 03, 2010 2:54 PM Subject: Re: Observations - Week of November 1
I've decided to rename QE2 Ben Bernanke's Excellent Adventure, so if anyone wants to use that term, that's okay, but you owe me a dollar in royalties
Here's some early non-US commentary on his $600 billion thing -- I'm sure Bennie thinks he's oh-so-clever with this bond-buying stuff, but in essence he's writing checks to himself, and like an amateur alchemists randomly mixing things together, he has no farking idea what kind of unintended consequences he's unleashing at the same time --
theglobeandmail.com
"Some studies suggest that a drop in the 10-year Treasury yield is equivalent to a drop three times the size in the Fed funds rate," he said. "Thus, by lowering longer-term Treasury yields through purchases the FOMC can circumvent the inconvenient zero boundary of interest rates." |