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To: Les H who wrote (199841)10/24/2002 12:33:03 AM
From: Gut Trader  Respond to of 436258
 
Island economies are ponderous until they decide to enter the thunderdome.



To: Les H who wrote (199841)10/24/2002 3:45:24 AM
From: Dr. Jeff  Respond to of 436258
 
Man are things F*cked up in Japan, of course they are here too; but jeez! Some of the headlines would be funny if they weren't true and so sad. I scrolled the list of other headlines in the left column of the link from your post and here they are:


Jilted man sets woman ablaze
before torching self

3 Chinese men busted for gunning
down gangster

Explosion destroys condom vending
machine

Dentist watched wife die after his
mom bashed her

Court blames swindled father over
school entry scam

Fumbling flasher fails after
exposing license plate

Dad stabs teen-age son after
argument

Box of police uniforms missing
after falling off truck

Professor loses 'honorable' title
over sex with teen

Man busted for fatally abusing
girlfriend's daughter

Families of abduction victims ask
gov't to rescue children

Cop rapes 79-y.o. woman

Man who drove without license in
private car park wins appeal

Police bust notorious '3-minute'
burglar gang

Man stabbed while dumping trash

Perverts pinched for patronizing
prepubescent prostitutes

Schoolgirl 'prostitutes' blackmail
john

Middle-aged teacher busted for
schoolgirl sex



To: Les H who wrote (199841)10/24/2002 2:00:28 PM
From: Thomas M.  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 436258
 
Deflation, Of Which There Is None

Accompanying the recent plunge to new lows in Treasury yields was stunning news about the boom-era crop of junk bonds. No less than 40% of the speculative-grade debt issued between the start of 1997 and the end of 1999 has already gone into default, according to Fitch Ratings. Michael Lewitt, longtime investor in the junk market (he is general counsel and chief operating officer of Harch Capital Management, Boca Raton, Fla.), predicts that the ultimate rate of default will top 60%. In the three years ended in 1999, more than $100 billion of junk was sold. The United States has been, is now and will likely remain a nation of debtors. It's in the national DNA. At the latest reading, i.e., the second quarter's, it took $2.90 of incremental total borrowing to achieve $1 in GDP growth--a post-1958 record. To a debtor, nothing is so inconvenient as a rise in the value of the money he or she has contracted to repay. In their role as consumers, Americans naturally want a dollar that buys more and more. Yet, in their capacity as debtors, the same Americans prefer a dollar that buys less and less. If the troubles of the corporate bond market are a reliable indicator, the debtors' needs are becoming paramount. Following is an exploration of deflation, a monetary phenomenon not only inconvenient but also improbable (and to date, invisible). It is an overblown worry, in our opinion. The risks it poses to invested capital are lower by far than those presented by the tiny government bond yields that resurface during periodic deflation scares.

grantspub.com