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Strategies & Market Trends : The coming US dollar crisis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tommaso who wrote (17329)2/5/2009 11:24:25 AM
From: SG1 Recommendation  Respond to of 71407
 
That would be the long term approach for them to do and history, I think, suggests that the Chinese take a long view.

Unlike the U.S.

SG



To: Tommaso who wrote (17329)2/5/2009 11:41:30 AM
From: Real Man  Respond to of 71407
 
Who knows. Chinese economy is tied to ours, so they remain
hostages of their own T-purchases. All I know is
that playing these markets will not be easy this year, as two huge
forces, the financial meltdown and the government, battle each
other in the marketplace. The latter force is obviously not
shy printing, lending, or directly injecting trillions tp
stop unemployment from getting completely out of control.

A somewhat optimistic thought is that the coalition of the
Feds and the world governments wins the battle, and we
proceed working out the imbalances as a function of time
(and some, but not a whole lot of, inflation), rather
than a function of price. The latter is extremely painful.
They may also lose, and then this whole crisis thing will
be worked out now as a function of price.



To: Tommaso who wrote (17329)2/6/2009 5:43:11 PM
From: bull_dozer  Respond to of 71407
 
> I wish there were some way to guess what the Chinese will do with all those Treasuries.

May be they have started buying NGD.. <G>