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February 24, 2009 at 6:20 PM in reply to: Is anything made in the U.S.A. anymore? You’d be surprised #354430February 24, 2009 at 6:20 PM in reply to: Is anything made in the U.S.A. anymore? You’d be surprised #354562
peterb
ParticipantI think McDonald’s makes their burgers here as well. Honda and Toyota makes some cars here, too. It aint all bad.
February 24, 2009 at 6:20 PM in reply to: Is anything made in the U.S.A. anymore? You’d be surprised #354591peterb
ParticipantI think McDonald’s makes their burgers here as well. Honda and Toyota makes some cars here, too. It aint all bad.
February 24, 2009 at 6:20 PM in reply to: Is anything made in the U.S.A. anymore? You’d be surprised #354698peterb
ParticipantI think McDonald’s makes their burgers here as well. Honda and Toyota makes some cars here, too. It aint all bad.
peterb
ParticipantGold does well when there’s instability in the world and in the markets. Ultimate safe haven, no counter-party risk, money.
But if you look at the record, gold has a very, very long history of maintaining its purchasing power. While fiat currency has just the opposite history.Lack of visibility and instability are now the norm in all the markets. I’ve been saying this for months on this site, the US$ and gold are the places to be in the next year or two.
peterb
ParticipantGold does well when there’s instability in the world and in the markets. Ultimate safe haven, no counter-party risk, money.
But if you look at the record, gold has a very, very long history of maintaining its purchasing power. While fiat currency has just the opposite history.Lack of visibility and instability are now the norm in all the markets. I’ve been saying this for months on this site, the US$ and gold are the places to be in the next year or two.
peterb
ParticipantGold does well when there’s instability in the world and in the markets. Ultimate safe haven, no counter-party risk, money.
But if you look at the record, gold has a very, very long history of maintaining its purchasing power. While fiat currency has just the opposite history.Lack of visibility and instability are now the norm in all the markets. I’ve been saying this for months on this site, the US$ and gold are the places to be in the next year or two.
peterb
ParticipantGold does well when there’s instability in the world and in the markets. Ultimate safe haven, no counter-party risk, money.
But if you look at the record, gold has a very, very long history of maintaining its purchasing power. While fiat currency has just the opposite history.Lack of visibility and instability are now the norm in all the markets. I’ve been saying this for months on this site, the US$ and gold are the places to be in the next year or two.
peterb
ParticipantGold does well when there’s instability in the world and in the markets. Ultimate safe haven, no counter-party risk, money.
But if you look at the record, gold has a very, very long history of maintaining its purchasing power. While fiat currency has just the opposite history.Lack of visibility and instability are now the norm in all the markets. I’ve been saying this for months on this site, the US$ and gold are the places to be in the next year or two.
peterb
ParticipantInflation’s a long way off. Unemployment creeping towards 10% in CA, and that’s closer to 15% if you think the U-6 is more accurate. The derivatives market is a house of cards as well. This means there’s far less US$ to go around than previouly thought. That’s deflation. Dont look now, but the US$ is gaining strenght against about every other asset on the planet. This will continue until unemployment gets down to about 7%. And even then, it may drag on for quite a while as stagnation.
peterb
ParticipantInflation’s a long way off. Unemployment creeping towards 10% in CA, and that’s closer to 15% if you think the U-6 is more accurate. The derivatives market is a house of cards as well. This means there’s far less US$ to go around than previouly thought. That’s deflation. Dont look now, but the US$ is gaining strenght against about every other asset on the planet. This will continue until unemployment gets down to about 7%. And even then, it may drag on for quite a while as stagnation.
peterb
ParticipantInflation’s a long way off. Unemployment creeping towards 10% in CA, and that’s closer to 15% if you think the U-6 is more accurate. The derivatives market is a house of cards as well. This means there’s far less US$ to go around than previouly thought. That’s deflation. Dont look now, but the US$ is gaining strenght against about every other asset on the planet. This will continue until unemployment gets down to about 7%. And even then, it may drag on for quite a while as stagnation.
peterb
ParticipantInflation’s a long way off. Unemployment creeping towards 10% in CA, and that’s closer to 15% if you think the U-6 is more accurate. The derivatives market is a house of cards as well. This means there’s far less US$ to go around than previouly thought. That’s deflation. Dont look now, but the US$ is gaining strenght against about every other asset on the planet. This will continue until unemployment gets down to about 7%. And even then, it may drag on for quite a while as stagnation.
peterb
ParticipantInflation’s a long way off. Unemployment creeping towards 10% in CA, and that’s closer to 15% if you think the U-6 is more accurate. The derivatives market is a house of cards as well. This means there’s far less US$ to go around than previouly thought. That’s deflation. Dont look now, but the US$ is gaining strenght against about every other asset on the planet. This will continue until unemployment gets down to about 7%. And even then, it may drag on for quite a while as stagnation.
February 24, 2009 at 12:52 PM in reply to: Need advice: Doing business with potential partner #354005peterb
ParticipantNetMeeting and a telephone. Going in-person is so “last economy”!!
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