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Strategies & Market Trends : The Residential Real Estate Crash Index -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DebtBomb who wrote (224269)10/9/2009 4:34:06 PM
From: LTK007Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 306849
 
Economic forecast:i highly recommend this excerpt from today's TSR(The Spear Report).Max
(edit: i posted this yesterday, i can't recommend a post more strongly----it got 1 recommendation.Why? There is an extreme polarization now, we have LOONEY like Acuthan V recovery jerkos , that will abide for nothing else, or we have those salivating to short, that WANT only to hear this rally is SATAN and short now, there are so few PRAGMATIST, that see this rally for what it is but accept it, but also see where it will end over the horizon--- as such they are ignored.)

This post has TEETH, all are welcome to IGNORE!

***********************************************************
<<Meanwhile, HSBC is predicting that traditional global capital flow
dynamics will turn inside out from what we have known since
World War II. Uh oh. For the last two decades, cash rich emerging
economies exported their capital to the U.S., which was used to fund
growth and speculation, especially in the mortgage market.
According to HSBC's CEO Stephen Green, that era is over.

HSBC believes that a moribund securitization market (where
investors purchase mortgages using cheap capital) will prevent a
grassroots recovery in the Western banking sector. Instead,
securitization and other long-term debt instruments denominated in local currencies
will flourish in the Eastern markets, drawing global capital like a
magnet. We see this as a secular process, lasting through the 21st
century.

According to the chief economist for Natixis, one of the 20 largest
fund managers in the world, the geopolitical shift in growth, trade
and capital flows poses a "terrible threat" for the U.S. and Europe.

No kidding. We saw the writing on the wall about 18 months ago and
have been pointing it out repeatedly since then.

This turning inside-out
of global capital flows is the underlying reason we think
the Dow is headed significantly lower over the next few decades, as
the Western indices experience a post-bubble secular bear.

Remember, strengthening local currencies will further weaken the
dollar, boosting the prices of dollar-denominated commodities and
gold. For the long run, consider holding foreign stocks, resource stocks and gold-
related plays.

Despite our dour long-term prognosis for the S&P 500 and the Dow,
the current rally from the March lows could last through the end of
the year and into early 2010, before this American Airlines flight
starts its final descent.>> TSR excerpt 10/8/2009



To: DebtBomb who wrote (224269)10/9/2009 6:23:49 PM
From: Giordano BrunoRead Replies (3) | Respond to of 306849
 
Yeah right, bloomberg.com