Autorius | Žinutė |
2016-02-28 20:11 #466704 | |
Po to stebimes ko Lietuvos juru laivininkyste uzsilenke.
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2016-02-28 22:13 #466719 | |
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/feb/28/mervyn-king-new-financial-crisis-is-certain-without-reform-of-banks
Another financial crisis is “certain” and will come sooner rather than later, the former Bank of England governor has warned. He added that global central banks were caught in a “prisoner’s dilemma” - unable to raise interest rates for fear of stifling the economic recovery, the newspaper reported. Spending imbalances both within and between countries led to the crisis in 2008 and he believes a current disequilibrium will lead to the next. To solve the problem, Lord King suggests raising productivity and boldly reforming the banking system. He said: “Only a fundamental rethink of how we, as a society, organise our system of money and banking will prevent a repetition of the crisis that we experienced in 2008.” |
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2016-02-29 11:25 #466748 1 | |
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/02/27/warren-buffett-quit-your-crying-the-us-is-fine.html
It's an election year, and candidates can't stop speaking about our country's problems (which, of course, only they can solve). As a result of this negative drumbeat, many Americans now believe that their children will not live as well as they themselves do," Buffett wrote in Berkshire's annual letter. "That view is dead wrong: The babies being born in America today are the luckiest crop in history," declared Buffett, one of the world's wealthiest men with an estimated net worth in excess of $60 billion. Buffett highlighted data that showed U.S. per capita growth is six times higher currently than it was in 1930, the year of his birth. Those gains are the byproduct of productivity and efficient work, he said. "U.S. citizens are not intrinsically more intelligent today, nor do they work harder than did Americans in 1930. Rather, they work far more efficiently and thereby produce far more," Buffett added. "This all-powerful trend is certain to continue: America's economic magic remains alive and well." For 240 years it's been a terrible mistake to bet against America, and now is no time to start," the billionaire wrote. America's golden goose of commerce and innovation will continue to lay more and larger eggs. America's social security promises will be honored and perhaps made more generous," he said. "And, yes, America's kids will live far better than their parents did." |
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2016-03-06 14:31 #467661 | |
GERMAN BANKS TOLD TO START HOARDING CASH
German newspaper Der Spiegel reported yesterday that the Bavarian Banking Association has recommended that its member banks start stockpiling PHYSICAL CASH. This is officially an all-out revolution of the financial system where banks are now actively rebelling against the central bank. There’s just one teensy tiny problem: there simply is not enough physical cash in the entire financial system to support even a tiny fraction of the demand. Total bank deposits exceed trillions of euros. Physical cash constitutes just a small percentage of that sum. So if German banks do start hoarding physical currency, there won’t be any left in the financial system.This will force the ECB to choose between two options: 1) Support this rebellion and authorize the issuance of more physical cash; or 2) Impose capital controls. Given that just two weeks ago the President of the ECB spoke about the possibility of banning some higher denomination cash notes, it’s not hard to figure out what’s going to happen next. |
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2016-03-06 14:50 #467670 1 | |
Governments Have Begun Moving to Ban Physical Cash
The Central Banks hate physical cash. So much so they there will likely try to ban it in the near future. You see, almost all of the “wealth” in the financial system is digital in nature. The total currency (actual cash in the form of bills and coins) in the US financial system is a little over $1.36 trillion. When you include digital money sitting in short-term accounts and long-term accounts then you’re talking about roughly $10 trillion in “money” in the financial system. In contrast, the money in the US stock market (equity shares in publicly traded companies) is over $20 trillion in size. The US bond market (money that has been lent to corporations, municipal Governments, State Governments, and the Federal Government) is almost twice this at $38 trillion. Total Credit Market Instruments (mortgages, collateralized debt obligations, junk bonds, commercial paper and other digitally-based “money” that is based on debt) is even larger $58.7 trillion. Unregulated over the counter derivatives traded between the big banks and corporations is north of $220 trillion. When looking over these data points, the first thing that jumps out at the viewer is that the vast bulk of “money” in the system is in the form of digital loans or credit (non-physical debt). Put another way, actual physical money or cash (as in bills or coins you can hold in your hand) comprises less than 1% of the “money” in the financial system. As far as the Central Banks are concerned, this is a good thing because if investors/depositors were ever to try and convert even a small portion of this “wealth” into actual physical bills, the system would implode (there simply is not enough actual cash). If you think this sounds like some kind of conspiracy theory, consider that France just banned any transaction over €1,000 Euros from using physical cash. Spain has already banned transactions over €2,500. Uruguay has banned transactions over $5,000. And on and on. Taigi isbuozinimas arteja... |
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2016-03-07 06:15 #467757 | |
Kodėl obama pražilo
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2016-03-07 17:05 #467821 | |
Dar nepervadinot temos Infliacine Hyperinfliacija? Na, gal kitais metais ekonomika geriau infliuos?
if you fail to plan, you plan to fail
The Undercover Economist |
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2016-03-07 17:08 #467822 | |
Parshiukas [2016-03-06 12:50]: [url=http://gainspainscapital.com/2015/10/08/governments-have-begun-moving-to-ban-physical-cash/]Governments Have Begun If you think this sounds like some kind of conspiracy theory, consider that France just banned any transaction over €1,000 Euros from using physical cash. Spain has already banned transactions over €2,500. Uruguay has banned transactions over $5,000. And on and on. Taigi isbuozinimas arteja... Cia tai geras! Niekada negalvojau, kad tai susije su cash trukumu sistemoje. Aciu, galvoj nusvito! if you fail to plan, you plan to fail
The Undercover Economist |
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2016-03-07 22:26 #467846 | |
Primityviai tai butu:cash trukumas sistemoje del nepakankamo vartojimo ,esant gamybos perprodukcijai.....-defliacija.
Reikejo pervardinti sia tema i STATUS QUO tada kai prasidejo fed pinigu iliejimai....Taip ji turetu vadintis ir dabar.Reiktu dziaugtis VISIEMS ,jei pavyktu sis eksperimentas .... Jei pinigu pritruks pervardinsim i DEFLATIONARY CRASH(ko ir tikejosi jos autorius,paveiktas propagandos),o jei vengdami CrASH fed neapskaiciuos teks pervardinti HIPERINFLIACINE ????? :-) Redaguota: Inteligent (2016-03-08 00:07 ) |
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2016-03-08 12:50 #467885 | |
V. Vasiliauskas: bankų klientų laukia dvi naujovės
LB siūlomo krepšelio sudėtis turėtų būti pakankama visiems būtiniems mokėjimams ir skatinti mokėjimus negrynais pinigais. LB nurodo, kad pagrindinė sąskaita turėtų sumažinti įprastų operacijų įkainius, padidinti elektroninių mokėjimo priemonių populiarumą, padidinti įkainių skaidrumą, palyginamumą ir konkurenciją. kazko nesuprantu, negi taip bijo kad dauguma pareikalaus casho, o jo bankai neturi? Tai gal del to auksas pakilo? Sąžinė - ne šių laikų dimensija" - V.Vasiliauskas 2012 m Suvarys visus i bankus ir su neigiamom palukanu normom nusavins pinigus pamazu, bei grazinkit paskolas anksciau laiko, kol nepradejo printint... Ar mūsų indėliai kaip duoklė jau nusavinti ir išnaudoti gelbėti bankinei sistemai vakaruose? |
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2016-03-09 09:11 #467997 | |
Nors sklando gandai, ir netgi kai kurie matę popierius (!) sako, jog Wall Street serves society Įdomu būtų pažiūrėt kiek jie atnešė pelno į šalies skrynią bei kiek bendrai WS "paprašė" už savo "paslaugas". |
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2016-03-20 21:54 #469410 1 | |
Foreign governments dump U.S. debt at record rate
In a bid to raise cash, foreign central banks and government institutions sold $57.2 billion of U.S. Treasury debt and other notes in January, according to figures released on Tuesday. That is up from $48 billion in December and the highest monthly tally on record going back to 1978. It's part of a broader trend that gathered steam last year when central banks sold a record $225 billion of U.S. debt. So what are foreign central bankers doing with these piles of cash? They're mostly using the funds to stimulate their own economies as the global growth slowdown and crash in oil prices continue to take their toll. Second, foreign central bankers in Europe, Japan and elsewhere are experimenting with negative interest rates to stimulate their sluggish economies. This phenomenon has the side effect of pulling down rates for U.S. debt. Plus it makes U.S. debt more attractive as an investment. Did central bankers make a secret deal to drive markets? Rumors are flourishing that global policy makers made a secret deal at the G-20 meeting in Shanghai late last month. This “Shanghai Accord” to weaken the greenback was aimed at calming the financial markets, which had gotten off to an awful start to the new year, according to the chatter. To any conspiracy theorists, it’s all become quite clear,” said Chris Weston, chief market strategist at IG, in a note Friday. “There is a global coordinated central bank effort to weaken the [dollar] in play, which in turn has led to a massive de-risking in equity and credit markets.” Since the G20 meeting in Shanghai there have been many red flags,” noted Weston. “Whether it’s the [People’s Bank of China] easing the Reserve Ratio Requirements (RRR) by 50 basis points, the [Reserve Bank of New Zealand] cutting its cash rate by 25 basis points (very much out of consensus), or the ECB moving to a focus on credit markets and going significantly above and beyond expectations.” Plus, there is something of a precedent: The Plaza Accord. In 1985, the finance ministers from the U.S., France, West Germany, Japan and the U.K. made a deal to jointly guide the dollar lower against the yen and the German mark. The action was meant to help jump-start the U.S. economy by reversing an extended run-up by the greenback. Taigi pasaulyje pinigai elektroniniai pagrinde. Casho truksta. 80 proc pasaulio paskolu bakse. Jei baksas kils toliau, amen akciju rinkoms, kur warguoliu pencijos sudetos. Taip pat uzsilenks daug uzsienio imoniu. Taip pat nt skolininku. Be to, usa dabar reikia eksporto augimo, silpno bakso reik. Uzsinio valstybes traukia is treasuries pinigus, doleris turi brangt. To neturi vykt. Jei neturi, reiskia nafta, auksas up. |
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2016-03-27 12:57 #469989 | |
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-03-26/japans-finance-minister-accidentally-reveals-how-it-all-ends-war
While this all started with a currency "war," it seems - according to a stunningly candid transcript of Japan's finance minister's conversation with none other than Paul Krugman - that the real endgame here is actual war. Aso remarked that "a similar [deflationary mindset] had occurred in the US in the 1930s. What solved the question? War! Because World War II had occurred during the 1940s and that became the solution for the United States. [We] have to switch [the Japanese] mindset... we are looking for the trigger." Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been the most hawkishly militaristic PM of a generation, shifting from the passive society to an aggressor, beginning around 2013. This has only been emboldened by rising nationalism and escalatuing tensions in the South China Sea. The record high earnings have been generated by the Japanese companies but they would not spend in the capital investment. There are lots of earnings at hand on the part of the corporate in Japan. It should be used for wage hike or dividend payment or the capital investment, but they are not doing that. They are just holding onto their cash and deposits. Reserved earnings have kept going up. A similar situation had occurred in the US in the 1930’s. What solved the question? War! Because World War II had occurred during the 1940’s and that became the solution for the United States. So, let’s look at the entrepreneurs in Japan. They are stuck with the deflationary mindset. They have to switch their mindset and should start making capital investments. We are looking for the trigger. That is the utmost concern. |
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2016-03-29 04:54 #470052 | |
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3512644/Japan-suffers-geriatric-crime-wave-Elderly-turn-shoplifting-locked-cared-for.html
The number of elderly Japanese people turning to crime so that they can live for free in prison is soaring, according to a new study. Around 35 per cent of shoplifting offences in Japan are carried out by people over the age of 60, crime figures show. This has risen from 20.4 per cent in 2005. Japan's strict judiciary system meaning even the theft of a sandwich can land a person in prison for two years - poorer seniors don't have to do much to earn themselves a stay behind bars, where food, accommodation and healthcare is free. A prisoner in the UK gets the following free: TV; Dental treatment; food; medication; heating and utilities; good food and legal advice. Pensioners have to pay their utility bills, dental treatment, council tax, maybe their rent too, and some have to choose between heating and eating. Bottom line: If you're on your own and over 70, you're probably better off in prison than a £1,000 a week nursing home!! Lietuvoje irgi kalejimai perpildyti... |
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2016-03-29 10:09 #470064 | |
Parshiukas a tai čia pateisina visokius filmus apie diedukus - bandytus ir bako plėšikus?
Tipo, apiplėšiam baką ir nusiperkam privatų senatvės išlaikymą, o jei nepasiseks - sėdame už amžiną valstybės išlaikymą. 1. Godumą gydyk target`u, kvailumą - stop loss`u!
2. Konservai - tai toks blogas maisto pakaitalas. 3. Darbas durnių myli - WORK SMARTER, NOT HARDER! 4. Pem` štukų vagnorkių! 5. Mudu su Izabele... 6. Laukinis kapitalizmas nustekeno žmogiškąjį kapitalą. 7. Prie Niksono |
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2016-03-29 11:42 #470090 1 1 | |
http://www.infowars.com/23-percent-of-americans-in-their-prime-working-years-are-unemployed/
Did you know that when you take the number of working age Americans that are officially unemployed (8.2 million) and add that number to the number of working age Americans that are considered to be “not in the labor force” (94.3 million), that gives us a grand total of 102.5 million working age Americans that do not have a job right now? For both men and women in their prime working years, the inactivity rate is even higher than it was during the last recession and is hovering near the all-time record. All of these people neither have a job nor are they looking for one. No, the truth is that the middle class in America is steadily eroding and poverty is absolutely exploding. Credit card debt has soared to a new record high, and 48 percent of all U.S. adults under the age of 30 believe that “the American Dream is dead”. |
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2016-03-29 22:28 #470142 1 2 | |
Parshiukas [2016-03-29 11:42]: ">http://www.infowars. Vėl cituoji smurtautojo pseudoprofesoriaus saitą? Vaikus gatvėje tas senis žaloja, o jo saitas dar gyvas...Ir kiaulių jį cituojančių yra.... Parshiukas 1[2016-03-11 02:27]:the currency has lost 350% of its value,
augissss 2020-05-03 13:07As jau senas ir suvaikejas,todel skaiciuoju kitaip |
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2016-03-30 08:33 #470148 2 | |
Tai kad nereikia ir Infowars'ų. Užtenka pasižiūrėt kokio lygio darbeliai buvo sukurti per tą laiką... Absoliuti dauguma low-wage + ne pilno etato. Būtent dėl to McDonaldse dirbantys universitetų absolventai (nes nėra adekvataus darbo) yra dirbantys skurdžiai, katrie gauna iš valstybės kompensaciją, kad nenumirt overpriced šaly, kur visi įstatymai remia tiktai porą procentų populiacijos.
Elementaru Tas, kas anksčiau buvo laikoma sezoniniu darbu studentams ir mokiniams, dabar laikoma elitiniu darbu žmonėms su aukštuoju, kurie perkopė jau savo 40-metį... O W.Buffetai ir panaši chebra stebisi - ko čia visi nepatenkinti, gi viskas auga. Atlyginimai neaugs niekada, nes nėra ir negali būti tam pagrindo. Čia kad nesusikurtumėt iliuzijų, kad jūsų vaikai gyvens geriau. Jei ir gyvens - tai tikrai ne tokiam ekonomikos modely, tad... Tik-tak. Lauksim kol jaunimo nervai pradės siautėt. http://lenta.ru/news/2016/03/29/consumption/ - nieko naujo šiam sviete. |
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2016-03-30 10:28 #470159 | |
pala pala, Bufetas neseniai sake kad si amerikos vaiku karta gyvens geriausiai is visu buvusiu, nes ju produktyvumas didziausias...
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2016-03-30 10:37 #470163 | |
A, nu tikrai. |