Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Bernanke just makes me sick….
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January 10, 2008 at 4:46 PM #11459January 10, 2008 at 5:01 PM #133683NeetaTParticipant
The Fed is the one causing inflation and no one else.
January 10, 2008 at 5:01 PM #133976NeetaTParticipantThe Fed is the one causing inflation and no one else.
January 10, 2008 at 5:01 PM #133939NeetaTParticipantThe Fed is the one causing inflation and no one else.
January 10, 2008 at 5:01 PM #133885NeetaTParticipantThe Fed is the one causing inflation and no one else.
January 10, 2008 at 5:01 PM #133874NeetaTParticipantThe Fed is the one causing inflation and no one else.
January 10, 2008 at 5:09 PM #133884GunDoctorParticipantI dont think that he can rescue anything. I think he could move rates to zero and still not get any positive reaction.
The tipping point was reached about 6 months ago when the average american woke up to the fact that housing prices don’t always just go up. The spell is broken. People see that you can very easily lose 300k with the wrong financial decision. Whereas before they thought that they could not lose. You cannot get that type of market sentiment back, ONCE ITS GONE, ITS GONE….
yes humpty dumpty has fallin off the wall and the kings men might as well make some scrambled eggsJanuary 10, 2008 at 5:09 PM #133986GunDoctorParticipantI dont think that he can rescue anything. I think he could move rates to zero and still not get any positive reaction.
The tipping point was reached about 6 months ago when the average american woke up to the fact that housing prices don’t always just go up. The spell is broken. People see that you can very easily lose 300k with the wrong financial decision. Whereas before they thought that they could not lose. You cannot get that type of market sentiment back, ONCE ITS GONE, ITS GONE….
yes humpty dumpty has fallin off the wall and the kings men might as well make some scrambled eggsJanuary 10, 2008 at 5:09 PM #133895GunDoctorParticipantI dont think that he can rescue anything. I think he could move rates to zero and still not get any positive reaction.
The tipping point was reached about 6 months ago when the average american woke up to the fact that housing prices don’t always just go up. The spell is broken. People see that you can very easily lose 300k with the wrong financial decision. Whereas before they thought that they could not lose. You cannot get that type of market sentiment back, ONCE ITS GONE, ITS GONE….
yes humpty dumpty has fallin off the wall and the kings men might as well make some scrambled eggsJanuary 10, 2008 at 5:09 PM #133693GunDoctorParticipantI dont think that he can rescue anything. I think he could move rates to zero and still not get any positive reaction.
The tipping point was reached about 6 months ago when the average american woke up to the fact that housing prices don’t always just go up. The spell is broken. People see that you can very easily lose 300k with the wrong financial decision. Whereas before they thought that they could not lose. You cannot get that type of market sentiment back, ONCE ITS GONE, ITS GONE….
yes humpty dumpty has fallin off the wall and the kings men might as well make some scrambled eggsJanuary 10, 2008 at 5:09 PM #133949GunDoctorParticipantI dont think that he can rescue anything. I think he could move rates to zero and still not get any positive reaction.
The tipping point was reached about 6 months ago when the average american woke up to the fact that housing prices don’t always just go up. The spell is broken. People see that you can very easily lose 300k with the wrong financial decision. Whereas before they thought that they could not lose. You cannot get that type of market sentiment back, ONCE ITS GONE, ITS GONE….
yes humpty dumpty has fallin off the wall and the kings men might as well make some scrambled eggsJanuary 10, 2008 at 5:16 PM #133959NotCrankyParticipantIf it were not for that the system is designed for maximum “buck passing” the Fed would be most responsible for the gigantic housing bubble. As it is, it’s nobodies fault. It never is and neither will inflation or unemployemnt, a depression or anything else. We will hear stuff like the “consumer” overreacted… blah blah blah.
January 10, 2008 at 5:16 PM #133996NotCrankyParticipantIf it were not for that the system is designed for maximum “buck passing” the Fed would be most responsible for the gigantic housing bubble. As it is, it’s nobodies fault. It never is and neither will inflation or unemployemnt, a depression or anything else. We will hear stuff like the “consumer” overreacted… blah blah blah.
January 10, 2008 at 5:16 PM #133702NotCrankyParticipantIf it were not for that the system is designed for maximum “buck passing” the Fed would be most responsible for the gigantic housing bubble. As it is, it’s nobodies fault. It never is and neither will inflation or unemployemnt, a depression or anything else. We will hear stuff like the “consumer” overreacted… blah blah blah.
January 10, 2008 at 5:16 PM #133905NotCrankyParticipantIf it were not for that the system is designed for maximum “buck passing” the Fed would be most responsible for the gigantic housing bubble. As it is, it’s nobodies fault. It never is and neither will inflation or unemployemnt, a depression or anything else. We will hear stuff like the “consumer” overreacted… blah blah blah.
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