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To: MythMan who wrote (404357)5/7/2010 6:34:38 PM
From: Box-By-The-Riviera™3 Recommendations  Respond to of 436258
 
true.

but now everybody owe's everybody in every possible way.

eventually, there will be a Lamma Island Woods conference, where everybody puts their invoices on the table, and all get traded out.

that:

or war.

china leads by the way.

its a bifurcated game:

inflationary scare is market positive

deflationary scare is market negative

but only nominally speaking.

total measure of success so far however is against gold and precious metals. the only standard that sticks out consistently.

if you can't beat gold, you should buy it. simple math.

mr. copper of the unprescious metals is also upset.

yada yada yada yada, with variations until the final act.

all this dollar strength is going to lose the edge for all those multinationals everyone said to buy. very bearish. just on a currency exchange accounting basis alone.

aside from the issue of perfection and the touting of future navs.

brokers are now coming up with their own silly idea of a discount for home buyers. complete bullshit of course and their math is not the same as the governments math when it goes into the end result. truely another episode of DUMBFUCKISTAN.



To: MythMan who wrote (404357)5/7/2010 6:42:01 PM
From: Box-By-The-Riviera™  Respond to of 436258
 
look at this moron's fix. this would hurt exactly the people who got hurt. he obviously has no iota of an idea of how things work. kinda reminds me of mish.

The robo-market blew a fuse and must be re-wired, Colin Barr writes. Among the suggestions for minimizing abusive automated trading: widen out bid-ask spreads, slap a fee on traders who cancel trades, and change the practice of paying traders for providing liquidity. "We need to get all these fast-trading jokers out of here."