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To: KyrosL who wrote (54896)6/21/2000 8:56:00 PM
From: pater tenebrarum  Respond to of 99985
 
KL, i agree it serves as a counterbalance, but remember, budget surpluses are a lot more fickle than the current rosy prognostications would indicate. just look at what happened to Japan's surplus.
the politicians have already too many little plans cooking i fear...

anyway, can someone point me to a link explaining the Hindenburg signal? the current n/h n/l reminds me of one of its conditions, but i have forgotten the details.

regards,

hb



To: KyrosL who wrote (54896)6/21/2000 9:00:00 PM
From: Les H  Respond to of 99985
 
The money from trade is being recycled here:

comw.org

There's no comparison. $ 130 billion in the latest quarter. At this rate, the net US international investment position may reach -2 trillion by the end of the year according to the above tables. Wasn't that the same thing happening in the 80's --- high trade deficit and artificially low Japanese interest rates? The only difference is the reversal of the private savings and government savings being switched --- rob Peter and Peter's dad to pay the guy in the van down by the river.



To: KyrosL who wrote (54896)6/21/2000 9:03:00 PM
From: Berney  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 99985
 
KyrosL, just so you can watch your surplus each day:

publicdebt.treas.gov

Of course, we know that "they" can measure it to the penny.

A fool and his money ...

The expansion of "money" is the only definition of inflation. All the other BS on this thread regarding oil, real estate, etc. are supply and demand issues. Economics 101.

BWDIK

Berney