68Camaro wrote:The Roberts summary is well done. Hard to capture it all, but he does enough. His "solution" however, only affects one of the issues. Even if the derivative risk disappeared we'd still be screwed, just one less potential direction for the black swan to fly in from.
SoFa wrote:I don't understand why nobody can give a time frame for it.
Mossy wrote:"On paper", the US is in much better shape than Europe. I'm wondering if the US powers that be are just better at cooking the books, or what?
Jonflyfish wrote:Mossy wrote:"On paper", the US is in much better shape than Europe. I'm wondering if the US powers that be are just better at cooking the books, or what?
The US is the most transparent.
neilgin1 wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:Mossy wrote:"On paper", the US is in much better shape than Europe. I'm wondering if the US powers that be are just better at cooking the books, or what?
The US is the most transparent.
please tell me, you do not REALLY believe this! and i retort without rancor or ill will, just stunned.
so stunned, i dont even know how to counter this, only with a question; have you ever spent any time in the US intel community?...or maybe say the sprawling military-banking-petrol-prison complex?....and i'm not wearing any alcoa products on my head, trust me when i tell you that.
"transparent"?...oh Jonny, the river of sewage is deep and wide. Tragically, we are in much worse shape than Europe, we just have some very lethal legions that can do the grab. Just pray that this whole new "news cycle" on Syria doesnt play out like it looks likes going to, the Russians and Chinese are now meeting in the Middle Kingdom,and they're prepping to draw a line in the sand. Never underestimate your adversary, its a classic war gaming mistake.
Brother, as God is my witness, i'm not trying to "troll" you, but NOTHING is "transparent" these days, and i most certainly welcome disagreement, thats called discussion, which is good. neil
just as a side bar, i was flipping bids into buy rolls last night, wasnt ramping and rip roaring, but i was bidding strong, and didnt get a thing, which was fine, shows me underlying strength...its there in the PM's, have a good Sunday, and make sure to re-hydrate, thats why they made gatorade.
Hawkeye wrote:Interesting article. The "s" seems to be accelerating toward the fan.
neilgin1 wrote:Hawkeye wrote:Interesting article. The "s" seems to be accelerating toward the fan.
yeh, sure does.....but i'll tell ya, of all the looming clouds, the one that has my attention is Fukushima...the Japs DO NOT have a handle on that thing at all, and with their "don't lose face" mindset, they are not copping to the truth, nor asking for any meaningful assistance.
that one right there, makes everything else pale in consideration.
Jonflyfish wrote:Perhaps gloom and doom is the way, but not today. The markets are orderly. The can has effectively been kicked down the road which is not good for JWR et al who need people to click some ads and load up on gas masks, bunkers and AK-47's NOW! There are almost as many false prophets now as there are fortune tellers
Just goes to show that people will find articles and blogs to support whatever their views are. Nobody is wrong and nobody is accountable.
Cheers!
Z00 wrote:What I am curious about is how many people expect that said "reset" is inevitable and what are their plans to get through it, should it occur. Also at what level of progression do you percieve this reset to be at?
inflationhawk wrote:Yes and that's why I don't see any major run up in gold or silver. The euro crisis has to play out. As long as the euro is in crisis, we will easily be able to fund our deficit because everyone will want the dollar and flock to us treasuries. Because gold is priced in dollars I think that limits major upside to gold. It could still rise, just slowly. But, if the euro crisis abates through introduction of euro bonds, euro depository insurance, or even in the extreme case a new EU governing body that centralizes power, then the bond vigilantes might find a new target (hopefully japan before the US with their 200%+ debt to GDP ratio). Only when the US becomes the focus of the bond vigilantes will gold start rising more rapidly...how fast? You tell me.
SoFa wrote:I don't understand why nobody can give a time frame for it.
Z00 wrote:What I am curious about is how many people expect that said "reset" is inevitable and what are their plans to get through it, should it occur. Also at what level of progression do you percieve this reset to be at?
inflationhawk wrote:Yes and that's why I don't see any major run up in gold or silver. The euro crisis has to play out. As long as the euro is in crisis, we will easily be able to fund our deficit because everyone will want the dollar and flock to us treasuries. Because gold is priced in dollars I think that limits major upside to gold. It could still rise, just slowly. But, if the euro crisis abates through introduction of euro bonds, euro depository insurance, or even in the extreme case a new EU governing body that centralizes power, then the bond vigilantes might find a new target (hopefully japan before the US with their 200%+ debt to GDP ratio). Only when the US becomes the focus of the bond vigilantes will gold start rising more rapidly...how fast? You tell me.
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