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Strategies & Market Trends : John Pitera's Market Laboratory -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Pitera who wrote (18196)5/11/2016 6:03:11 AM
From: 3bar1 Recommendation

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Hawkmoon

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
John given Keen is right that high private debt to GDP is the sign of a top is it likely the US $ is trying to get up off the mat ?

He says there are 20 country's in the zone or on the edge China , US , UK , Japan worst cases . Follow ons Canada , Australia , South Korea , Belgium , Netherlands , Switzerland , Thailand , Singapore , Malaysia ,Hong Kong .

Would look to ECRI data for confirmation but we have to be close ? Or is there something else that you are looking at ?



To: John Pitera who wrote (18196)5/11/2016 7:45:43 AM
From: The Ox  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 33421
 
Goldman Sachs called the greenback's bottom (again), stating it "remains dollar bullish and thinks the trajectory is higher from here." The U.S. Dollar Index -0.2% to 94.05, easing back from Tuesday's two-week high of 94.15.



To: John Pitera who wrote (18196)5/12/2016 8:08:32 AM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 33421
 
John
I watched an interview on PBS last night where a US
spokesman was selling Panic if Britain leaves the European Union.
He could not articulate any damage from Britain Leaving.

He said the US first call in an international crisis would always be to Britain..
even if they left the Euro union....

This is a total bad joke on all of the people of Europe and
the US as being run by the same outraged owners of the world
as the freaked out Republican establishment.

This is exactly what we need if we want to protect the US economy.

Making the US like a dilapidated India infrastructure does us no favors.

=====================

Reuters

Wednesday 28 October 2015 19.55 EDTLast modified on Saturday 7 May 201610.47 EDT

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The United States is not keen on pursuing a separate free trade deal with Britain if it leaves the European Union, the US trade representative, Michael Froman, said – the first public comments from a senior US official on the matter.

Voters are due to decide by the end of 2017 whether the UK should remain in the EU, and opinion polls show rising support for leaving the bloc.


Cameron tells anti-EU campaigners: 'Norway option' won't work for Britain


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Froman’s comments on Wednesday undermine a key economic argument deployed by proponents of exit, who say Britain would prosper on its own and be able to secure bilateral free trade agreements (FTAs) with trading partners.