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Rt.66
ParticipantNot bad.
I would add:
Throw in trade restructuring. If not then any new version of GM will just suffer the same injustices the current incarnation has.
Japan has managed to lower the value of the Yen vs the Dollar by 12% this year alone. We need some sort of strategy to deal with those types of things.
Healthcare needs to be dealt with too. How can GM ever compete if the Japanese Government pays healthcare for Toyota, Honda, etc. workers? Dito Germany for BMW, Mercedes……
We don’t want GM walking out of the ER nice and healthy only to be hit by the same truck.
Rt.66
ParticipantNot bad.
I would add:
Throw in trade restructuring. If not then any new version of GM will just suffer the same injustices the current incarnation has.
Japan has managed to lower the value of the Yen vs the Dollar by 12% this year alone. We need some sort of strategy to deal with those types of things.
Healthcare needs to be dealt with too. How can GM ever compete if the Japanese Government pays healthcare for Toyota, Honda, etc. workers? Dito Germany for BMW, Mercedes……
We don’t want GM walking out of the ER nice and healthy only to be hit by the same truck.
Rt.66
ParticipantNot bad.
I would add:
Throw in trade restructuring. If not then any new version of GM will just suffer the same injustices the current incarnation has.
Japan has managed to lower the value of the Yen vs the Dollar by 12% this year alone. We need some sort of strategy to deal with those types of things.
Healthcare needs to be dealt with too. How can GM ever compete if the Japanese Government pays healthcare for Toyota, Honda, etc. workers? Dito Germany for BMW, Mercedes……
We don’t want GM walking out of the ER nice and healthy only to be hit by the same truck.
Rt.66
ParticipantNot bad.
I would add:
Throw in trade restructuring. If not then any new version of GM will just suffer the same injustices the current incarnation has.
Japan has managed to lower the value of the Yen vs the Dollar by 12% this year alone. We need some sort of strategy to deal with those types of things.
Healthcare needs to be dealt with too. How can GM ever compete if the Japanese Government pays healthcare for Toyota, Honda, etc. workers? Dito Germany for BMW, Mercedes……
We don’t want GM walking out of the ER nice and healthy only to be hit by the same truck.
Rt.66
ParticipantYou are slipping Macro, that’s too lame to even respond to.
Rt.66
ParticipantYou are slipping Macro, that’s too lame to even respond to.
Rt.66
ParticipantYou are slipping Macro, that’s too lame to even respond to.
Rt.66
ParticipantYou are slipping Macro, that’s too lame to even respond to.
Rt.66
ParticipantYou are slipping Macro, that’s too lame to even respond to.
Rt.66
Participant[quote=Enorah]That is pretty sharp there, Josh, that bit about the lies and fraud.
Venus goes retrograde tomorrow. That may facilitate the light shining on the truth from an astrological perspective. [/quote]
Does that mean we will finally get to see just what is sitting on BofA and Citi’s books?
Iv’e been reading a lot of sources calling for 4000-5000 Dow. That will pretty much put us back to when the stock bubble started.
The best article (along with good charts) that I have seen is here:
http://theautomaticearth.blogspot.com/2009/03/march-2-2009-we-aint-done-yet.html
On the same note:
“The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 281.40 points, or 4.09%, to 6594.44, its lowest close since April 1997. The Nasdaq Composite fell 54.15, or 4.00%, to 1299.59. The broad Standard & Poor’s 500 index shed 30.32, or 4.25%, to 682.55, 56% below its bull-market peak in October 2007. That’s the biggest drop for the market since the 1930s”
Rt.66
Participant[quote=Enorah]That is pretty sharp there, Josh, that bit about the lies and fraud.
Venus goes retrograde tomorrow. That may facilitate the light shining on the truth from an astrological perspective. [/quote]
Does that mean we will finally get to see just what is sitting on BofA and Citi’s books?
Iv’e been reading a lot of sources calling for 4000-5000 Dow. That will pretty much put us back to when the stock bubble started.
The best article (along with good charts) that I have seen is here:
http://theautomaticearth.blogspot.com/2009/03/march-2-2009-we-aint-done-yet.html
On the same note:
“The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 281.40 points, or 4.09%, to 6594.44, its lowest close since April 1997. The Nasdaq Composite fell 54.15, or 4.00%, to 1299.59. The broad Standard & Poor’s 500 index shed 30.32, or 4.25%, to 682.55, 56% below its bull-market peak in October 2007. That’s the biggest drop for the market since the 1930s”
Rt.66
Participant[quote=Enorah]That is pretty sharp there, Josh, that bit about the lies and fraud.
Venus goes retrograde tomorrow. That may facilitate the light shining on the truth from an astrological perspective. [/quote]
Does that mean we will finally get to see just what is sitting on BofA and Citi’s books?
Iv’e been reading a lot of sources calling for 4000-5000 Dow. That will pretty much put us back to when the stock bubble started.
The best article (along with good charts) that I have seen is here:
http://theautomaticearth.blogspot.com/2009/03/march-2-2009-we-aint-done-yet.html
On the same note:
“The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 281.40 points, or 4.09%, to 6594.44, its lowest close since April 1997. The Nasdaq Composite fell 54.15, or 4.00%, to 1299.59. The broad Standard & Poor’s 500 index shed 30.32, or 4.25%, to 682.55, 56% below its bull-market peak in October 2007. That’s the biggest drop for the market since the 1930s”
Rt.66
Participant[quote=Enorah]That is pretty sharp there, Josh, that bit about the lies and fraud.
Venus goes retrograde tomorrow. That may facilitate the light shining on the truth from an astrological perspective. [/quote]
Does that mean we will finally get to see just what is sitting on BofA and Citi’s books?
Iv’e been reading a lot of sources calling for 4000-5000 Dow. That will pretty much put us back to when the stock bubble started.
The best article (along with good charts) that I have seen is here:
http://theautomaticearth.blogspot.com/2009/03/march-2-2009-we-aint-done-yet.html
On the same note:
“The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 281.40 points, or 4.09%, to 6594.44, its lowest close since April 1997. The Nasdaq Composite fell 54.15, or 4.00%, to 1299.59. The broad Standard & Poor’s 500 index shed 30.32, or 4.25%, to 682.55, 56% below its bull-market peak in October 2007. That’s the biggest drop for the market since the 1930s”
Rt.66
Participant[quote=Enorah]That is pretty sharp there, Josh, that bit about the lies and fraud.
Venus goes retrograde tomorrow. That may facilitate the light shining on the truth from an astrological perspective. [/quote]
Does that mean we will finally get to see just what is sitting on BofA and Citi’s books?
Iv’e been reading a lot of sources calling for 4000-5000 Dow. That will pretty much put us back to when the stock bubble started.
The best article (along with good charts) that I have seen is here:
http://theautomaticearth.blogspot.com/2009/03/march-2-2009-we-aint-done-yet.html
On the same note:
“The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 281.40 points, or 4.09%, to 6594.44, its lowest close since April 1997. The Nasdaq Composite fell 54.15, or 4.00%, to 1299.59. The broad Standard & Poor’s 500 index shed 30.32, or 4.25%, to 682.55, 56% below its bull-market peak in October 2007. That’s the biggest drop for the market since the 1930s”
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