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BubblesitterParticipant
There was article couple days ago on T Boone Pickens in the UT.
Didn’t know he lived big chunk of the year in Del Mar.
With all this oil crap going on, definitely some merits to the plan.
http://www.signon.mobi/sdut/db_/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=knzvfo9E&src=cat
BubblesitterParticipantThere was article couple days ago on T Boone Pickens in the UT.
Didn’t know he lived big chunk of the year in Del Mar.
With all this oil crap going on, definitely some merits to the plan.
http://www.signon.mobi/sdut/db_/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=knzvfo9E&src=cat
BubblesitterParticipantThere was article couple days ago on T Boone Pickens in the UT.
Didn’t know he lived big chunk of the year in Del Mar.
With all this oil crap going on, definitely some merits to the plan.
http://www.signon.mobi/sdut/db_/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=knzvfo9E&src=cat
BubblesitterParticipantThere was article couple days ago on T Boone Pickens in the UT.
Didn’t know he lived big chunk of the year in Del Mar.
With all this oil crap going on, definitely some merits to the plan.
http://www.signon.mobi/sdut/db_/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=knzvfo9E&src=cat
BubblesitterParticipantAgree, shaping up to be a wild ride. Hope it is not a repeat of 2008 financial meltdown. I’m betting it’s probably a bad repeat of that 70’s show, perhaps 1979 style stagflation.
Seems like lots of elevated risk put there,e.g. sovereign debt and muni downgrades and defaults, oil, botched Fannie/Freddie reform, etc. Not sure how private industry gonna step in without increasing borrowing costs. Isn’t F&F still funding & backing nearly all mortgages now?
Bubblesitter
BubblesitterParticipantAgree, shaping up to be a wild ride. Hope it is not a repeat of 2008 financial meltdown. I’m betting it’s probably a bad repeat of that 70’s show, perhaps 1979 style stagflation.
Seems like lots of elevated risk put there,e.g. sovereign debt and muni downgrades and defaults, oil, botched Fannie/Freddie reform, etc. Not sure how private industry gonna step in without increasing borrowing costs. Isn’t F&F still funding & backing nearly all mortgages now?
Bubblesitter
BubblesitterParticipantAgree, shaping up to be a wild ride. Hope it is not a repeat of 2008 financial meltdown. I’m betting it’s probably a bad repeat of that 70’s show, perhaps 1979 style stagflation.
Seems like lots of elevated risk put there,e.g. sovereign debt and muni downgrades and defaults, oil, botched Fannie/Freddie reform, etc. Not sure how private industry gonna step in without increasing borrowing costs. Isn’t F&F still funding & backing nearly all mortgages now?
Bubblesitter
BubblesitterParticipantAgree, shaping up to be a wild ride. Hope it is not a repeat of 2008 financial meltdown. I’m betting it’s probably a bad repeat of that 70’s show, perhaps 1979 style stagflation.
Seems like lots of elevated risk put there,e.g. sovereign debt and muni downgrades and defaults, oil, botched Fannie/Freddie reform, etc. Not sure how private industry gonna step in without increasing borrowing costs. Isn’t F&F still funding & backing nearly all mortgages now?
Bubblesitter
BubblesitterParticipantAgree, shaping up to be a wild ride. Hope it is not a repeat of 2008 financial meltdown. I’m betting it’s probably a bad repeat of that 70’s show, perhaps 1979 style stagflation.
Seems like lots of elevated risk put there,e.g. sovereign debt and muni downgrades and defaults, oil, botched Fannie/Freddie reform, etc. Not sure how private industry gonna step in without increasing borrowing costs. Isn’t F&F still funding & backing nearly all mortgages now?
Bubblesitter
BubblesitterParticipantInflation seem to be getting more popular press these days.
Experts seem to like to use the “core” inflation metric that excludes volatile food and energy. Problem is that those 2 are seeing big spikes.
Interesting side effect of high food commodity prices….unrest in emerging markets, particularly in the Mideast. Unrest Driving up oil prices, further driving up food prices as most food needs to go from distant farm to mouth.
BubblesitterParticipantInflation seem to be getting more popular press these days.
Experts seem to like to use the “core” inflation metric that excludes volatile food and energy. Problem is that those 2 are seeing big spikes.
Interesting side effect of high food commodity prices….unrest in emerging markets, particularly in the Mideast. Unrest Driving up oil prices, further driving up food prices as most food needs to go from distant farm to mouth.
BubblesitterParticipantInflation seem to be getting more popular press these days.
Experts seem to like to use the “core” inflation metric that excludes volatile food and energy. Problem is that those 2 are seeing big spikes.
Interesting side effect of high food commodity prices….unrest in emerging markets, particularly in the Mideast. Unrest Driving up oil prices, further driving up food prices as most food needs to go from distant farm to mouth.
BubblesitterParticipantInflation seem to be getting more popular press these days.
Experts seem to like to use the “core” inflation metric that excludes volatile food and energy. Problem is that those 2 are seeing big spikes.
Interesting side effect of high food commodity prices….unrest in emerging markets, particularly in the Mideast. Unrest Driving up oil prices, further driving up food prices as most food needs to go from distant farm to mouth.
BubblesitterParticipantInflation seem to be getting more popular press these days.
Experts seem to like to use the “core” inflation metric that excludes volatile food and energy. Problem is that those 2 are seeing big spikes.
Interesting side effect of high food commodity prices….unrest in emerging markets, particularly in the Mideast. Unrest Driving up oil prices, further driving up food prices as most food needs to go from distant farm to mouth.
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