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Strategies & Market Trends : The Financial Collapse of 2001 Unwinding

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To: Maurice Winn who wrote (2635)6/25/2019 8:06:17 AM
From: robert b furman2 Recommendations

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elmatador
Maurice Winn

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HI Maurice,

With Trillions of Sovereign debt being added by Central Banks - I'd say the negative yields on cash deposited at the bank is finally doing what countries have been accused of doing for years. The bebasing of the fiat money they supposedly are responsible of protecting.

The one sure fired way of getting out of debt is to make the currency worthless - thus easily paid back.

This is one slow "crock" pot, but it destroys money on a relentless daily basis.

Maybe governments should insist on Central banks reducing their "Balance sheets" - I use that term loosely!

Money must once again be made to hold value. Then and only then will it deserve the status of being able to hold a yield.

These boys have mucked up the world's currencies !

This opens up the left to complain about income inequality.

The only yield in town is equities!

If one chooses to spend all that they make vs. save and invest - As an investor I do not feel like the source of the income inequality.

This will not end well even for equities I suspect.

At that point , I wonder if land and physical "things" are the best to hold value.

One needs the cash flow from them (if it exists) to pay the government for the privilege of holding/owning them - (taxes)

What a historical mess !!

If one owns corporate shares - they then are eligible for a portion of that company's cash flow via dividends.

No wonder the market's big cap indices are going to new heights.

Seems like a big global tug of war.

Risk on for yield - risk off for investor sentiment.

Everything else is a loser, as gold breaks out up!

Nice work politicians and Central bankers!!

Bob
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