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


To: maceng2 who wrote (177462)8/29/2021 5:09:22 PM
From: sense1 Recommendation

Recommended By
rack15

  Respond to of 217591
 
...over the last 45 years, the UK government seems to have drifted further away from the electorate, hence my enquiry.

Or, one might note... more or less ongoing since Magna Carta ?

American's... perhaps best seen as erstwhile British subjects... as expats who've unfortunately gone native ?

The division, as aired in Commons at the time, was not deeply ideological in its origins... but driven ONLY by the refusal of the crown to acknowledge American's equal status as subjects ? With a less myopic leadership... the insanity of King George III perhaps a perfect mirror for Americans today... the world might have been a very different place than it is ? I would posit that George III's natural (?) limitations were less an influence on the continuity of British domestic and imperial rule than Biden's are proving already.

But, the British Empire still lives ? It perhaps matters far less to the average British subject living in the U.K. now, in its current form, than it did in days past... For Americans it is occasionally jarring to observe it emerge, as it has recently in Trudeau's slavish obeisances...

Elizabeth... and then... the abyss ?

The parallel to Biden... in the dullard that is Charles... the weight un-borne already crushing him ?

If bankers were a more nostaligic lot... perhaps a somewhat more well groomed U.K. would be set to become the 51st state... or, the 51st, 52nd, and 53rd... and... hmmm... yeah... no... that probably won't work... without creating quite a few more independent countries... not that there's anything wrong with that.

Instead... they seek a "return" to a world ruled by Florence... only, one without borders... as if the lines in the sand are what define the lines in our differences... making them easy to abolish in function and obviate in import of what they represent ?

So, really... it is only borders that prevent socialism from "being all it can be" ? LOL!!!



To: maceng2 who wrote (177462)8/29/2021 6:58:46 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
maceng2

  Respond to of 217591
 
Am going to watch the drama you cited ... the opening looks very good, and the price is right



... shall re-watch















And a reminder to self

MIT crypto Message 33242021

BBC

youtube.com

bbc.co.uk

Afghanistan & Vietnam & China

Message 33446213

Message 33461666

Bre-X

youtu.be

youtu.be

Crusade Message 32730734

France Message 33456728

Jeeves Message 33452334

Theranos Message 33435321



To: maceng2 who wrote (177462)8/29/2021 7:05:09 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217591
 
watch & brief, re crypto

bloomberg.com

Hottest Crypto Coins Are Now the Bitcoin and Ether Alternatives
Vildana Hajric
30 August 2021, 00:07 GMT+8
FOMO remains alive and well in the cryptocurrency world, with lesser-known tokens outperforming again in the wake of recent rallies staged by industry leaders Bitcoin and Ether.

Cardano has doubled this month, becoming the third-largest digital asset. Binance Coin is also up. A token named Avalanche has tripled in August. Meanwhile, prices for digital photos of rocks with laser eyes and cartoon depictions of cute animals are going gangbusters, sometimes quadrupling in a matter of days.

Among analysts and investors, there’s little consensus as to what’s driving the frenzy. Some posit that speculators are moving from the mainstays to newer, more exciting offshoots, as they often do after big runs. Others see a world awash in cash and ultra-low rates, which ultimately pushes investors toward ever-wonkier assets.

“There’s no doubt that there’s a lot of excitement in crypto,” said Yoni Assia, founder and chief executive of online exchange eToro. “You can definitely see it within the numbers in the industry, whether it’s looking at total volumes or looking at growth of companies,” he said, adding that “we’ve seen a lot of exuberance in the market.”



Credit: Coinmarketcap.com

Assia calls it a “generational buying moment” and cites a confluence of events, including rock-bottom interest rates worldwide, as well as massive fiscal stimulus efforts that delivered checks to many people during the pandemic.

Some of that money has gone toward cryptocurrencies and related assets, such as stocks of digital miners. About 15% of Americans who received the first two stimulus checks invested part or all of the money, and about half of this group invested specifically in cryptocurrencies, according to a survey of more than 1,000 U.S. adults conducted by The Harris Poll for Yahoo Finance.

At the same time, inflation has materialized as economies reopen, playing into the warnings from some crypto faithful of pending hyperinflation. Put all that together and it’s “leading a lot of people to look for various types of investments,” Assia said.

A recent survey by eToro found that roughly a quarter of the 6,000 investors queried own crypto, a number that increases to nearly 50% for the younger cohort. The company also found that the average investor was set to increase their crypto allocation in the coming months and that interest in alternatives to Bitcoin and Ether, or altcoins, is “significant.”

Meanwhile, downloads for crypto trading apps are rising -- Coinbase Global Inc. ranked 11th among finance apps in Apple’s iPhone downloads, according to App Annie, a mobile data and analytics provider. It averaged 23rd within its category last August. Digital exchanges Kraken, Voyager and Crypto.com have also advanced in the ranks.

NFTs Take on Digitally Exclusive ‘Flex’ Status for Collectors

Sales on non-fungible tokens reached an all-time high on August 6, with investors looking to the digital collectibles as the hot new status symbol. Bloomberg’s Vildana Hajric explains.

Source: Bloomberg

Read more: NFTs Supplant Rolexes and Lambos as the New Digital Savvy ‘Flex’

“With all of this money floating around, we should not be surprised that there are people paying exorbitant amounts of money for digital pet rocks and an endless amount of other digital assets that can be easily created,” said Michael O’Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading.

The space is dominated by younger generations, he said, and all they know is a Federal Reserve that’s been almost-perpetually accomodative. Take that, alongside a gridlocked government, and it’s no surprise many have gravitated toward the crypto space, he said.

Since July, assets under management for digital-asset investment products rose more than 57% to roughly $55 billion. Average daily aggregate trading volumes increased more than 46% to $544 million, the biggest month-over-month rise since May, according to data-tracker CryptoCompare.

A lot of the attention’s been placed on altcoins such as Cardano, Avalanche and the meme mainstay Dogecoin. Meantime, an index tracking some of the largest decentralized finance protocols and apps -- the Bloomberg Galaxy DeFi Index -- is up about 45% since the start of July.

“There’s generally been pretty positive crypto sentiment recently: NFTs have helped lead the revival, and the crash from May is further in the rearview mirror,” said Sam Bankman-Fried, chief executive officer of crypto exchange FTX.

And then there are the blockchains looking to compete with Ethereum. Avi Felman, co-portfolio manager at BlockTower Capital, said now that Ethereum’s recent network upgrade is done, speculators are turning their attention toward rival blockchains and their tokens.

Meanwhile, the U.S. equity markets seem to post records daily. Meme stocks are going bonkers too. Jason Urban, co-head of Galaxy Digital Trading, said when the market’s in a such a risk-on mood, crypto can only benefit.

In the four years ending in 2019, correlations between Bitcoin and daily returns for the S&P 500 were generally small, according to Wei Liang at DBS in Singapore. But starting last year, that changed. Amid the pandemic, Bitcoin and U.S. stocks have fallen and rebounded jointly, he said.

“Lately, you see people are concerned about inflation, people are concerned about money supply -- because of that, historically, people always said buy stocks as a hedge against inflation,” Urban said. Now, he added, it’s crypto as well.

Before it's here, it's on the Bloomberg Terminal.
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To: maceng2 who wrote (177462)8/29/2021 8:36:11 PM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
ggersh

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217591
 
the drama did manage to tie some loose ends together for me in a bow

I remember BCCI bank

here be the movie loosely based on the bank

the full movie


the trailer


when the global bank went belly-up, and its HK branch, supposedly separately capitalised was still operating on Friday, the HK govt, then under UK, mumbled something about BCCI HK shall remain open.

'They' did not lie. The bank opened Saturday, for a moment, allowing HK government to withdraw its money, and then closed, forever.

This is why we like physical gold in hot hands.

As to the documentary, it is good, but I can imagine it having been funded JPM, peeved that City of London competition is still standing

at 38 min mark Chase Manhattan Bank spelt out, and now part of JPM


So, other videos that seems to shed more light. I simply went w/ the flow and kept mining for videos that shall be my background listen
















To: maceng2 who wrote (177462)8/30/2021 5:04:44 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217591
 
Re the video, it reminds me what someone once told me of how the royal family and its friends machinated rule of law to perpetuate selves and camouflage all by voting

I am agnostic