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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Nov 25, 2011 15:11:03 GMT -5
DJI 01:03pm EST 11,231.94 -25.61 -0.23% LIKE WHY DID THEY EVEN BOTHER?
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Nov 28, 2011 11:45:29 GMT -5
If your celebrating Christmas without a tree, put this website on your computer and you'll have red & green light 'flashing'. What a wonder to see. Watching a million fly by about every 40 seconds. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++== www.usdebtclock.org/~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Nov 29, 2011 16:18:35 GMT -5
=Watch the market - you might want to go here!=
Palladium Bullion
One of the platinum group metals, palladium is used extensively as an industrial catalyst and is a key component in the manufacturing of automotive catalytic converters. Palladium is also essential in the jewelry industry...and is one of the three most used metals (along with nickel and silver) which can be alloyed with gold to produce "white gold." It is also used in dentistry, watch making, and in the production of surgical instruments and electrical contacts. Today 11/30/11 Palladium
613.00
$28.00 increase I'm watdhing it close, "R" "U"?
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Nov 30, 2011 16:59:59 GMT -5
^DJI 04:07pm EST 12,045.68 +490.05 I really hope I'm wrong, but I see the market loosing this gain by Friday. At most, it's a temporary fix to a major problem which will decrease the value of our dollar even more than it is already. How can that be good for the market, I couldn't tell you! 12/2/11 OK> 'i' was wrong - let's see where it is @ the end of the year or before because of this last world bailout deal. No wonder other countries hate 'us' they think we're all made out of money*** if they only knew! I guess compared to them "WE" are, 'i' reckon...
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Post by LuLu on Dec 5, 2011 2:09:52 GMT -5
Oh heck they just keep printing up more in case we run out. Now it seem they did that a few years ago when the republicans were in control. So now they don't have to print so much more money cause its already done..
Now were do you think all this money is gonna be covered from.. Why us people you fool!! Taxes and more taxes!! I think maybe we should go back to England..
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 5, 2011 4:26:14 GMT -5
The more of it they make the less it's worth, make sure uour wheel barrow is in good working order. Australia is the place to go, it's the only continent left that all hell ain't breaking loose.
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 7, 2011 16:55:51 GMT -5
"IMPO" In My Personal Opinion: ^DJI 04:03pm EST 12,196.37 this will be *The Top* this year... "&" if the Euro thing doesn't work out =*= ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE! =*= fOR Lu Lu GOLD = $1742 Palladium-679.00-^7.00 =Watch the market - you might want to go here!= Palladium Bullion One of the platinum group metals, palladium is used extensively as an industrial catalyst and is a key component in the manufacturing of automotive catalytic converters. Palladium is also essential in the jewelry industry...and is one of the three most used metals (along with nickel and silver) which can be alloyed with gold to produce "white gold." It is also used in dentistry, watch making, and in the production of surgical instruments and electrical contacts. Today 11/30/11 Palladium 613.00 $28.00 increase I'm watdhing it close, "R" "U"? 679 613 ___ 066=$66.00 in 7 days not bad Applications The Soviet 25-rouble commemorative palladium coin is a rare example of the monetary usage of palladium. The largest use of palladium today is in catalytic converters.[35] Palladium is also used in jewelry, in dentistry,[35][36] watch making, in blood sugar test strips, in aircraft spark plugs and in the production of surgical instruments and electrical contacts.[37] Palladium is also used to make professional transverse flutes.[38] As a commodity, palladium bullion has ISO currency codes of XPD and 964. Palladium is one of only four metals to have such codes, the others being gold, silver and platinum.[39
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 9, 2011 14:34:18 GMT -5
Palladium
684.00
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 11, 2011 7:19:33 GMT -5
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 11, 2011 7:26:23 GMT -5
Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 7, 2011, 5:55pm In My Personal Opinion: ^DJI 04:03pm EST 12,196.37 this will be *The Top* this year... "&" if the Euro thing doesn't work out =*= ALL HELL BREAKS LOOSE! =*= ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And it is a game which the euro looks set to lose. As Bloomberg reports, in the aftermath of the Telegraph's latest report confirming what has been said here all about the collateral crunch in Europe, Europe's CEO are now actively preparing for the worst case outcome: the end of the Euro ? DJI Dec 9 12,184.26 +186.56 AND~~~we're off!
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 12, 2011 12:27:15 GMT -5
Can Wall Street thrive again? December 12, 2011 The financial industry is besieged by protestors. It's also facing a slow-growth world and a wave of new regulation. In order to flourish again, the big firms must first change in painful ways. CNN By Geoff Colvin, senior editor-at-large FORTUNE -- The brighter side of financial cataclysm 'wash down' wasn't easy to see in late 2008 -- the crisis was at its most acute, and no one knew if Armageddon lay ahead -- but Barney Frank ((( the queer that initiated this credit fiasco to begin with by telling banks including Fanny and Freddie to keep lending money))) was upbeat. He told a consumer lobbying group, "Next year will be, I believe, the best year for public policy since the New Deal." (((which was right before the bottom fell out of everything))) For anyone on Wall Street, that cheery forecast from the proudly big-government chairman of the House Financial Services Committee was not good news. (((they saw thur what he had done))) Frank was wrong only on the timing: It took until 2010 to enact the Dodd-Frank law, the most sweeping regulation of Wall Street since the New Deal. **(With his crowning achievement in place, Frank recently announced he won't seek reelection next year.)** **sarcasm* The new law is so vast that it nearly equals all federal regulation of financial services from the previous 75 years. That alone would have transformed the industry, but it's only part one of a double whammy. The other element is an awful economic environment -- slow growth in the U.S., slowing growth in Asia, and a European crisis so severe that, for all we know, Armageddon could be creeping up on us again. Combine those forces, and Wall Street is a deeply different place from what it was three years ago. The changes are a mixed bag for investors and even for customers, who were supposed to benefit from the massive regulatory overhaul. Though the new rules are far from complete, Wall Street is already becoming smaller and less adventurous. It's obvious the bull has pulled in his horns but it doesn't mean you won't still get butted in the rear. It's also despised. The Occupiers may have begun to disperse, but the fury that fueled them hasn't. The latest Trust Barometer compiled by Edelman, a communications firm, finds that the three least trusted industries in the world are insurance, banking, and financial services -- Wall Street.
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 13, 2011 5:54:03 GMT -5
Last week, the European Central Bank cut its key interest rate and announced liquidity measures designed to help banks. “The reality is that the European debt crisis will only be over when private investors are happy to buy the bonds of any Euro Zone nation at a reasonable interest rate and European economies are growing again,” said David Kelly, chief market strategist at JP Morgan Funds. “To get this point, European nations will need to commit to achieving fiscal balance in the long-run, achieving economic growth in the short run, provide a pan-European guarantee that all buyers of sovereign debt will be paid in full and on time, and charge the ECB with intervening massively in debt markets in the short-run to hold yields to reasonable levels,” he added in a weekly outlook. “Despite an initially positive market reaction, we are no closer to this end goal than we were a week ago, and European markets could have a tough time this week as this reality sinks in.”
Last week, the European Central Bank cut its key interest rate and announced liquidity measures designed to help banks. “The reality is that the European debt crisis will only be over when private investors are happy to buy the bonds of any Euro Zone nation at a reasonable interest rate and European economies are growing again,” said David Kelly, chief market strategist at JP Morgan Funds. “To get this point, European nations will need to commit to achieving fiscal balance in the long-run, achieving economic growth in the short run, provide a pan-European guarantee that all buyers of sovereign debt will be paid in full and on time, and charge the ECB with intervening massively in debt markets in the short-run to hold yields to reasonable levels,” he added in a weekly outlook. “Despite an initially positive market reaction, we are no closer to this end goal than we were a week ago, and European markets could have a tough time this week as this reality sinks in.”
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 13, 2011 17:35:04 GMT -5
Gold $1631.00
DJI 04:03pm EST 11,954.94 -66.45 -0.55%
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 14, 2011 15:23:15 GMT -5
Gold - $1568.00
DJI - $11,800.28
3:00PM EST
So what's that telling me? "WE're" in a world of sh**! The market is falling and precious metals is inline with it - the world is =*= broke! =*= Somebody has got the money...but because they've horded it and are too greedy, corrupt, and selfish to give any of it up, they to will soon be broke! There will be 'nobody' to buy their merchandise, lavish homes and yachts. =*= "WE'll" all be back on the same playing level.=*= **Does that sound good to you?** It shouldn't!
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Post by Hoosier Hillbilly on Dec 16, 2011 16:00:31 GMT -5
Gold $1595.00 and it was shooting for $2000.00 oh well! DJI -$11,862.11 ... "&" not long ago it was pushing $12,500.00
Just like the snow 'shortly' watch both fall in-other-words short the market and watch it snow!
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