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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Golconda who wrote (59936)1/14/2010 6:53:28 AM
From: westpacific  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218481
 
China will collapse...

It is in the charts; Broadening Megaphone Tops complete in both the Shanghai and Hong Kong Indexes...

Been losing a lot of sleep for months on end over the China charts; they are disturbing!

And it is nearer than I think many could comprehend.

Hong Kong HSI projecting 5500.

Me thinks also that the coming Capital Flight and monetary inflation due to that collapse could take the US into the 15000 area...after an initial fall.

If the entire system does not seize up!

West



To: Golconda who wrote (59936)1/14/2010 7:12:32 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 218481
 
macro-minded soros setting up fund office on freedom hkg, to invest in capitalist china and help kindred spirits de-camp tyranny usa

micro-minutia brained chanos shorting china index (only thing liquid enough to short)

good luck to them both



To: Golconda who wrote (59936)1/15/2010 7:44:48 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 218481
 
just in in-tray

John Greenwood gave a presentation at an Invesco luncheon today, which attracted about 100 people. Highlights are as follows:

(1) Government bond yields and commodity prices will fall later this year amid continued low inflation and sub-par growth in developed economies for 2010

--- Balance sheet repair in US and UK has just begun

--- Previous balance sheet recessions always led to low inflation (e.g., Japan in 90s, UK in 80s)

--- Low money and credit growth due to weak private sector demand for credit (household de-leveraging is a slow process)

--- Sub-par GDP growth of around 1%-3% for US, EU, Japan, UK, Canada and Australia in 2010

(2) Warned of significant inflation risk in China for 2010

--- A surge in money growth (e.g., M2 grew around 30%) will eventually lead to high inflation

--- China's real GDP is expected to grow 9.4% this year

(3) Solid growth for Asia in 2010, but still weaker than 2007

--- Emerging economies have been recovered quickly as they have not been burdened with debt

--- But the growth pace this year will be weaker than that in 2007 (before the crisis) as Western countries are mostly recovering slowly




To: Golconda who wrote (59936)1/17/2010 4:55:16 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 218481
 
China stands and moves atop hard work. Their problem is how fathers pass wealth to offsprings.

The father must provide a good head start and better future to the offspring. In the Chinese culture the kids take care of the parents. Parents -while actively economic- boost the kids capabilities so they will take that old age burden successfuly.

Therefore today´s parents want to provide a business to their kids and engage in lots of enterprises. That creates a huge competition of fathers creating companies for their kids.

All that hard work and all those fathers are moving China ahead.

Now Chanos and all those finance guys, they do not know what is an economy that moves on top of hard work. well, if they worked hard they would not be in fiance and spotting Enron wayo. And we know Enron, WCOM with Arhtur Andersen cooking their books, were not hard work but wayos, plain and simple.

Although C2 things they were some unlawfull Latinos.

Not knowing what is a real economy makes hard for those people to use the money the investors put for them to manage.

It is that ignorance of what a real economy is that provide Madoff with the billions to fleece the investors.