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Strategies & Market Trends : Waiting for the big Kahuna -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tommaso who wrote (25374)8/27/1998 4:38:00 PM
From: yard_man  Respond to of 94695
 
Or get short on a bounce!



To: Tommaso who wrote (25374)8/27/1998 7:12:00 PM
From: James F. Hopkins  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 94695
 
Tommaso; How do you make any sense of that report, and how much
do you think we can trust it ?
Personally there are not a lot of government reports I do
trust any more. They have been telling us for how long us there is
no inflation or that it's under control, while medical cost , rents and taxes have gone up. They talk about a budget surplus and how
to spend it..where is the surplus if the national debt has gone,
and it has. I don't see how on one hand you can increased debt,
and still claim to have a surplus.
I suppose the figures have meaning as people do go by them, but
what that will produce is confusion in the longer term.
Perhaps we do need to go down and get in the same boat with the
Russians, then people might look at this hegemonic control the
bankers and wall street have over the government. As I doubt any
change can be brought about as long as middle class Americans
feel comfortable.
Jim



To: Tommaso who wrote (25374)8/27/1998 8:27:00 PM
From: N  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 94695
 
Tommaso, how do you reach this conclusion from these data?

Looks to me M2 and M3 perking along..

Nancy



To: Tommaso who wrote (25374)8/28/1998 4:42:00 PM
From: Roderick Ciferri  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 94695
 
Thanks for the figures....It certainly looks like the money supply is contracting according to the governments numbers....Yet, check this out:

biz.yahoo.com

The guy from Brown Brothers Harriman is saying just the opposite, that there is good expansion in the money supply!

I think once the money supply starts contracting, then the markets are gonna have no way of coming back.....at some point there may be no more margin, no more buying power...

Rod