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January 10, 2009 at 1:41 PM #327339January 10, 2009 at 2:53 PM #326831XBoxBoyParticipant
[quote=peterb]The govt’s going to have to spend at least $20T to hurt the US$. [/quote]
Care to explain where you got the $20T figure from and what your thinking is on this topic?
XBoxBoy
January 10, 2009 at 2:53 PM #327169XBoxBoyParticipant[quote=peterb]The govt’s going to have to spend at least $20T to hurt the US$. [/quote]
Care to explain where you got the $20T figure from and what your thinking is on this topic?
XBoxBoy
January 10, 2009 at 2:53 PM #327242XBoxBoyParticipant[quote=peterb]The govt’s going to have to spend at least $20T to hurt the US$. [/quote]
Care to explain where you got the $20T figure from and what your thinking is on this topic?
XBoxBoy
January 10, 2009 at 2:53 PM #327261XBoxBoyParticipant[quote=peterb]The govt’s going to have to spend at least $20T to hurt the US$. [/quote]
Care to explain where you got the $20T figure from and what your thinking is on this topic?
XBoxBoy
January 10, 2009 at 2:53 PM #327344XBoxBoyParticipant[quote=peterb]The govt’s going to have to spend at least $20T to hurt the US$. [/quote]
Care to explain where you got the $20T figure from and what your thinking is on this topic?
XBoxBoy
January 10, 2009 at 5:29 PM #32685134f3f3fParticipantI don’t see how you can predict what currencies are going to do. The dollar could go either way, or even stay where it is. The recession has a global dimension so everyone suffers, and it stands to reason the more you are tied into it, the more you will possibly suffer. Chile seems to be the only country [that says] it can ride this one out.
The only businesses which seem to be profiting are bailiffs. Having said that, stories in the foreign press refer to an erosion in confidence in the US’s ability to keep its own house on order. Can’t for the life of me think why? I doubt that lack of confidence would manifest itself into anything tangible, especially in these turbulent times, but it may further down the road. Defiance seems to have already entered into the ring, with Lloyds TSB –a highly respected UK bank– which was deliberately concealing the origin of funds transfers (to the US) from countries blacklisted by the US.
Wall Street has blotted its copy-book. For a lot of people, doing everything just to protect what assets are still in tact is probably the most sensible strategy. I don’t know if a little prayer will help. Perhaps we should ask Bush that one.
January 10, 2009 at 5:29 PM #32718934f3f3fParticipantI don’t see how you can predict what currencies are going to do. The dollar could go either way, or even stay where it is. The recession has a global dimension so everyone suffers, and it stands to reason the more you are tied into it, the more you will possibly suffer. Chile seems to be the only country [that says] it can ride this one out.
The only businesses which seem to be profiting are bailiffs. Having said that, stories in the foreign press refer to an erosion in confidence in the US’s ability to keep its own house on order. Can’t for the life of me think why? I doubt that lack of confidence would manifest itself into anything tangible, especially in these turbulent times, but it may further down the road. Defiance seems to have already entered into the ring, with Lloyds TSB –a highly respected UK bank– which was deliberately concealing the origin of funds transfers (to the US) from countries blacklisted by the US.
Wall Street has blotted its copy-book. For a lot of people, doing everything just to protect what assets are still in tact is probably the most sensible strategy. I don’t know if a little prayer will help. Perhaps we should ask Bush that one.
January 10, 2009 at 5:29 PM #32726234f3f3fParticipantI don’t see how you can predict what currencies are going to do. The dollar could go either way, or even stay where it is. The recession has a global dimension so everyone suffers, and it stands to reason the more you are tied into it, the more you will possibly suffer. Chile seems to be the only country [that says] it can ride this one out.
The only businesses which seem to be profiting are bailiffs. Having said that, stories in the foreign press refer to an erosion in confidence in the US’s ability to keep its own house on order. Can’t for the life of me think why? I doubt that lack of confidence would manifest itself into anything tangible, especially in these turbulent times, but it may further down the road. Defiance seems to have already entered into the ring, with Lloyds TSB –a highly respected UK bank– which was deliberately concealing the origin of funds transfers (to the US) from countries blacklisted by the US.
Wall Street has blotted its copy-book. For a lot of people, doing everything just to protect what assets are still in tact is probably the most sensible strategy. I don’t know if a little prayer will help. Perhaps we should ask Bush that one.
January 10, 2009 at 5:29 PM #32728134f3f3fParticipantI don’t see how you can predict what currencies are going to do. The dollar could go either way, or even stay where it is. The recession has a global dimension so everyone suffers, and it stands to reason the more you are tied into it, the more you will possibly suffer. Chile seems to be the only country [that says] it can ride this one out.
The only businesses which seem to be profiting are bailiffs. Having said that, stories in the foreign press refer to an erosion in confidence in the US’s ability to keep its own house on order. Can’t for the life of me think why? I doubt that lack of confidence would manifest itself into anything tangible, especially in these turbulent times, but it may further down the road. Defiance seems to have already entered into the ring, with Lloyds TSB –a highly respected UK bank– which was deliberately concealing the origin of funds transfers (to the US) from countries blacklisted by the US.
Wall Street has blotted its copy-book. For a lot of people, doing everything just to protect what assets are still in tact is probably the most sensible strategy. I don’t know if a little prayer will help. Perhaps we should ask Bush that one.
January 10, 2009 at 5:29 PM #32736434f3f3fParticipantI don’t see how you can predict what currencies are going to do. The dollar could go either way, or even stay where it is. The recession has a global dimension so everyone suffers, and it stands to reason the more you are tied into it, the more you will possibly suffer. Chile seems to be the only country [that says] it can ride this one out.
The only businesses which seem to be profiting are bailiffs. Having said that, stories in the foreign press refer to an erosion in confidence in the US’s ability to keep its own house on order. Can’t for the life of me think why? I doubt that lack of confidence would manifest itself into anything tangible, especially in these turbulent times, but it may further down the road. Defiance seems to have already entered into the ring, with Lloyds TSB –a highly respected UK bank– which was deliberately concealing the origin of funds transfers (to the US) from countries blacklisted by the US.
Wall Street has blotted its copy-book. For a lot of people, doing everything just to protect what assets are still in tact is probably the most sensible strategy. I don’t know if a little prayer will help. Perhaps we should ask Bush that one.
January 10, 2009 at 10:48 PM #3269164plexownerParticipant“The best way to track the PPT is actually to watch the premium between the cash and the futures in the S&P at certain times during the day, mostly 10, 10:30, and 11 am and noonish PST, so 4 specific times. When it expands indicating a buy program at those times, you can easily get on that train for a good run. This can also be large institutions and not the PPT. It is most often the PPT on the late day saves on downward moves. Most people don’t trade intraday, but for those that do, this is one way to follow the insiders.”
Thanks for the tip, Chris
I use Tradestation to trade – I’m looking at @SP.P for the CME pit prices and $SPX.X for the CBOE index – will I be able to see what you are referring to with these symbols? – can you point me at some dates to look at?
January 10, 2009 at 10:48 PM #3272554plexownerParticipant“The best way to track the PPT is actually to watch the premium between the cash and the futures in the S&P at certain times during the day, mostly 10, 10:30, and 11 am and noonish PST, so 4 specific times. When it expands indicating a buy program at those times, you can easily get on that train for a good run. This can also be large institutions and not the PPT. It is most often the PPT on the late day saves on downward moves. Most people don’t trade intraday, but for those that do, this is one way to follow the insiders.”
Thanks for the tip, Chris
I use Tradestation to trade – I’m looking at @SP.P for the CME pit prices and $SPX.X for the CBOE index – will I be able to see what you are referring to with these symbols? – can you point me at some dates to look at?
January 10, 2009 at 10:48 PM #3273274plexownerParticipant“The best way to track the PPT is actually to watch the premium between the cash and the futures in the S&P at certain times during the day, mostly 10, 10:30, and 11 am and noonish PST, so 4 specific times. When it expands indicating a buy program at those times, you can easily get on that train for a good run. This can also be large institutions and not the PPT. It is most often the PPT on the late day saves on downward moves. Most people don’t trade intraday, but for those that do, this is one way to follow the insiders.”
Thanks for the tip, Chris
I use Tradestation to trade – I’m looking at @SP.P for the CME pit prices and $SPX.X for the CBOE index – will I be able to see what you are referring to with these symbols? – can you point me at some dates to look at?
January 10, 2009 at 10:48 PM #3273464plexownerParticipant“The best way to track the PPT is actually to watch the premium between the cash and the futures in the S&P at certain times during the day, mostly 10, 10:30, and 11 am and noonish PST, so 4 specific times. When it expands indicating a buy program at those times, you can easily get on that train for a good run. This can also be large institutions and not the PPT. It is most often the PPT on the late day saves on downward moves. Most people don’t trade intraday, but for those that do, this is one way to follow the insiders.”
Thanks for the tip, Chris
I use Tradestation to trade – I’m looking at @SP.P for the CME pit prices and $SPX.X for the CBOE index – will I be able to see what you are referring to with these symbols? – can you point me at some dates to look at?
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